Wisconsin's Republican state Senate president, Scott Fitzgerald, made a big announcement Friday. As Right Wisconsin first reported, the Badger State's legislature will meet this week in an extraordinary session and pass a right-to-work law. Gov. Scott Walker, a Republican, is expected to sign it.
Right-to-work laws forbid making the payment of union dues a condition for getting or keeping one's job. It lets each worker decide whether he wants to be part of a union. Twenty-four states already have such laws on the books. A right-to-work bill also passed Missouri's state House earlier this month, but it will likely be vetoed by Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon.
Until recently, right-to-work was a dormant issue. Only two states adopted it in the 24 years between 1977 and 2011. But two more — Indiana and Michigan — have done so just since 2012. This is no coincidence. The movement of Midwestern states toward right-to-work comes just as they find a need to shield themselves and their employers from the aggressively pro-union policies of the Obama administration, which are aimed less at respecting workers' rights and more at propping up a dying source of Democratic political strength.
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It is truly inspiring to see some of the bastions of socialism falling to the will of the people!
ReplyDeleteWay to go Governor Walker!
Between this and POSOTUS thumbing his nose at the unions over Keystone, we may see this country recovering from this obviously failed attempt at Executive Affirmative Action!