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In Wisconsin, governor-elect
Scott Walker is in a showdown with state
employee unions.
"Anything from the
decertify all the way through modifications of the current laws in
place," Walker said at a luncheon sponsored by the Milwaukee Press Club
at the Newsroom Pub.
"The bottom line is that we are going to look at every legal means we
have to try to put that balance more on the side of taxpayers and the people
who care about services."
Union supporters did not
like the idea one bit and sought legislation in the lame-duck session that
would tie Walker's hands.
It was a done deal. The votes were there in the house. In the Senate it was
18-14 in favor. Or so everyone thought. Amazingly, at the last moment, two
democrats including Senate Majority Leader Russ Decker switched votes sending
the bills up in flames.
Please consider Dems end lame duck
session after failure to pass union contracts
Democratic Gov. Jim Doyle's
administration announced last week it had completed negotiations on 17
contracts covering 39,000 state workers ranging from teachers to janitors.
The deals included no pay increases, factored in 16 furlough days Doyle
ordered state employees to take in the current state budget and called for 5
percent increases in health care contributions.
The contracts have been a hot issue for Walker. He demanded Doyle's staff
stop work on the agreements last month, saying they could hamstring him as he
grapples with a $150 million deficit in the current fiscal year and a $3.3
billion shortfall in the next two-year budget.
He wants state workers to make deeper concessions and even suggested he would
consider abolishing state employee unions after he takes office.
Democrats pushed on despite Walker's demands, saying he's not the governor
yet. But no one realized that former Senate Majority Leader Russ Decker,
D-Weston, wasn't on board.
Assembly Democrats convened first Wednesday evening and barely got the
contracts through, approving 16 of them by one vote and the last by three
votes. The swing voter was Rep. Jeff Wood, who convinced a judge to release
him from jail long enough to travel to Madison and vote. Wood, a Chippewa
Falls independent who often sides with Democrats, is serving 60 days for
impaired driving in Marathon County.
The Senate convened moments later, with Republicans complaining that
Democrats were so desperate to tie Walker's hands that they pulled a lawmaker
out of jail.
Then, moments before the vote on the first contract, Decker got up and said
he couldn't support any of the deals. He said Doyle should have had the
contracts ready months ago and the next Legislature should deal with them.
He and Sen. Jeff Plale, D-Milwaukee, voted against the contract, creating a
16-16 tie with Republicans. A tie vote meant the contract failed.
Enraged Democrats immediately recessed to a closed door meeting, stomping
angrily out of the chamber. Decker seemed in good spirits on his way into the
meeting, laughing when a trailing reporter joked he was getting more media
attention than Wood.
When Democrats remerged they had stripped Decker of his leadership post and
handed it to Hansen. They returned to the floor and voted on the remaining 16
contracts, but Decker and Plale didn't change their minds and every one of
the agreements failed, 16-16. Decker, a 20-year Senate veteran, sat in his
chair as the votes went on, looking unaffected. He had nothing to lose; he
lost his re-election bid in November and will be out of the Legislature in
three weeks anyway.
I
am not sure exactly what happened but I would not be surprised to see either
Russ Decker or Jeff Plale, both who lost reelection bids, find jobs with the
new administration.
Regardless of what did happen, I definitely look forward to some hardball
from governor Jim Doyle. Specifically, I want to see him decertify public
unions. If he can get that done, I would support him for president.
Nationally, we need to kill collective bargaining for all public unions,
scrap Davis-Bacon and all prevailing wage laws, mandate Right-to-Work laws,
and do something to cleanup untenable public union pension promises, not just
going forward, but existing benefits as well.
To do the latter, I propose taxing public union pension benefits above
$120,000 at 90%, returning the excess to the pension plans until the plans
are fully funded using a reasonable rate of return estimate of the long-term T-Bill
rate. That rate is
currently 4.25%.
Mish
GlobalEconomicAnalysis.blogspot.com
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