Wisconsin Senate Republicans Admit Budget was Never the Issue, Vote Exclusively to Eliminate Collective Bargaining Rights
Thursday, March 10, 2011(National Federation of Federal Employees)
Last
night, Wisconsin’s 19 Republican State
Senator’s revealed their true intentions by
passing a bill with an 18 to 1 vote that would
strip collective bargaining rights from public
sector workers. Governor Walker and his
Republican colleagues in the Statehouse
initially argued these provisions were
necessary to close the state’s $137 million
budget shortfall. However, their true
intentions were exposed last night when they
isolated anti-union measures from the bill and
voted to strip collective bargaining rights
from public employees.
This
maneuver only adds more evidence to the fact
that this struggle was never about fixing
Wisconsin’s budget problems. In fact, just
before Wisconsin’s workers made Walker’s
radical proposal national news, there was
hardly any problem with the state budget.
Governor Walker had been in office less than
two months before he signed $117 million in
corporate tax breaks. As a result of this, the
state now has a budget shortfall of $137
million.
It is
apparent that Walker and his Republican
colleagues created this so-called “fiscal
crisis” by their own volition, and are now
making middle class Wisconsinites pay the
price.
State employees and their unions had
offered to pay more for their health benefits
and retirement security to close the gap, but
we now know that Walker was never interested in
making a deal. Instead, he has taken away
workers’ very ability to bargain, while
simultaneously pushing for and achieving
unnecessary tax breaks for business
interests.
Three
weeks ago, Wisconsin’s 14 State Senate
Democrats fled the state to prevent a vote on
Governor Walker’s budget proposal, which
included these union-busting provisions. A vote
on Walker’s budget proposal would have required
a quorum of at least 20 members, and with only
19 Republican Senators, the absence of the 14
Democrats could have indefinitely prevented a
vote. However, Republicans discovered an
obscure parliamentary rule whereby legislation
not related to the appropriation of funds
requires a smaller quorum. Under this rule the
19 Republicans could reach a quorum by removing
all fiscal provisions in the legislation,
stripping it down to only those provision that
target public employees. Doing just that, the
Senate passed the bill with no debate and
without a single Democrat present.
Where
Wisconsin’s workers go from here, we cannot
tell just yet. But rest assured if there is
anything we have learned in the last three
weeks, it is that Wisconsinites will not take
this assault lying down. NFFE pledges to
continue supporting the fight for workers’
rights in Wisconsin, and throughout the nation.
