It’s illegal in America now to buy or sell a human being, but a recorded telephone conversation between a Republican governor and a guy he thought was a billionaire benefactor shows that it’s still possible to own a politician.
Wisconsin’s Republican Gov. Scott Walker didn’t have time to talk to Democratic leaders or union officials about his anti-union legislation – a proposal that has incited protests by tens of thousands for more than a week in Madison. But he jumped on the phone for 20 minutes this week when told the caller was billionaire David Koch, who was Walker’s second largest campaign contributor, who provided $1 million to a GOP fund to attack Walker’s opponent and who bankrolls radical libertarian organizations and the Tea Party.
Republicans like Walker, owned by billionaires like Koch, are fulfilling demands from corporate interests that government “free” enterprise by slashing corporate taxes and regulation. Over the past three years, America has suffered the consequences of a government under-funded after tax breaks to the rich and under-performing after years of lax regulation. The result: a growing federal deficit, the Wall Street collapse, the BP oil spill and the deaths of 29 Upper Big Branch miners. Still, Republicans want more government atrophy. That would leave only one restraint on corporate control of the economy, environment and government.
That one restraint is labor unions. A union is workers using their constitutionally-guaranteed freedom to assemble, the right to get together as a group, in this case a labor organization, to negotiate collectively with employers for better wages, benefits and working conditions. . . .
Workers who gathered together in unions over two centuries in this country have succeeded in raising their wages, as well as the wages of non-union workers in competing industries. Union workers secured improved working conditions so fewer were killed on the job. And they achieved creation of the federal Occupational Health and Safety Administration, which protects the safety of all workers. Over the decades, unions played a major role is obtaining legislation barring child labor, standardizing the 40-hour work week, and creating both Social Security and Medicare.
Similarly, studies show union successes enhance the lives of all workers in a state. In anti-union states, the average worker earns $5,333 less a year, the proportion of people without health insurance is 21 percent higher and the rate of workplace death is 51 percent higher. In addition, there’s evidence that union workers improve quality. Currently, after receiving an education from union teachers, Wisconsin youngsters collectively score second highest in the nation on the ACT/SAT college admission tests. By contrast, the five states barring teacher unions rank at the bottom of the pack: South Carolina dead last at 50th; North Carolina, second last at 49th; Georgia third from last at 47th; Texas fourth from last at 47th, and Virginia ever so slightly better at 44th.
Still, Wisconsin Gov. Walker wants to destroy his state’s teachers unions. Two studies determined that public workers, that is those employed by governments such as teachers, firefighters and police officers, earn less than their counterparts in the private sector when both benefits and education are factored into the calculation. It wasn’t union workers, in the public or the private sector, who caused states’ financial crises. That was gambling on Wall Street, which ravaged the economy. Still, Republican governors across the country are demanding that government workers pay.
The government workers in Wisconsin already agreed to accept Walker’s financial demands – that they pay more for their pensions and health care. This negates Walker’s contention that this dispute is about the budget. The governor is demanding more than those financial concessions. He wants the legislature to cripple the unions’ ability to bargain for improvements in the future. In his “budget repair bill,” he would strip government workers of their right to negotiate over working conditions and benefits. They’d be able to discuss wages but could never get an increase above inflation.
This is union busting. At the demand of corporate interests. And Walker is joined by Republicans in Ohio, Indiana, Oklahoma, Tennessee and others in attempting to do it, both to private and public sector workers.
This is not about money. It’s about controlling America. Corporations have bought Republicans, who now chant the corporate mantra that government coddles its citizens with the likes of mine and food safety rules.
Walker’s eagerness to talk to David Koch illustrates this. Koch and his brother Charles own the second largest privately-held company in America. Only the fortunes of Warren Buffett and Bill Gates exceed the Kochs’ $35 billion. They’ve used that money to finance the supposedly-grassroots Tea Party and conservative groups like the Americans for Prosperity Foundation (APF) that have funneled money into anti-reform policies – including attempts to reverse environmental and health care legislation.
It’s a giant circle. Koch got Walker elected. The Koch-backed Tea Party now rallies in Madison against the public employees. The Koch-financed APF bought $320,000 in TV ads against the public workers. Other Koch-financed GOP governors are sending letters of support to Walker. In his few weeks as governor, Walker passed legislation to lower tax rates for and limit damage awards against businesses like the Kochs’. In addition, tucked into the anti-union bill is a provision that would enable Walker to sell the state’s power plants to the Kochs without bids or state agency review.
Corporations are accomplishing their goal of shriveling government to the point of ineffectiveness so “enterprise” is “free” to run rogue. Now with their purchased politicians, corporations are trying to do the same to unions – the only organization other than government that has traditionally effectively defended working Americans.
In the recorded conversation between Walker and a liberal blogger posing as Koch, Walker accepted an offer of a vacation trip from the “billionaire” if he “crushed” the public employee unions and said his effort was to get “our freedoms back.”
That’s exactly right. This is a contest between the excesses of “free” enterprise and the constitutionally-protected freedom of assembly. And getting “our freedoms back” means wresting them back from corporations.




11 Comments

Nothing really to add but, “Well said.”
Thank you, Raymond. Come to Wisconsin this weekend!
Hey, Leo, why don’t you take aim at all your buddies in the Dem party who act as enablers for rightwing policies, starting with President Pinocchio?
Maybe you can help him find his shoes so that he can go walk with protestors in Madison like he promised in his campaign. Or would reminding him of that endanger your invitation to too many cocktail weinie affairs?
X2
Leo, I’m disappointed in the unions for being just a little too cozy with the PTB. I’m old so I remember the days of John L. Lewis etc. and I just want the unions to increase their membership and their voices. We need people who are willing to stand up and pound the table if necessary. The unions and the Democrats play too nice.
Hey Leo I will come to Wisconsin but let’s get one thing straight…the National Democratic Party leadership don’t care about ordinary Americans.
Look,at the Prez he is trying to pass another NAFTA type agreement with South Korea..before you know it,the Union you represent will be gonzo courtesy of the DNC.We did not get to this point by just GOP creeps creating this crap many Democrats helped to sink us too.
Leo,I know the Prez won’t come to Wisconsin cuz Goldman Sacs won’t give him permission to.Stay away from the White House Leo they don’t care about you or your members.
“to negotiate collectively with employers for better wages, benefits and working conditions”
These people are PUBLIC, “taxpayer” employees. Their unions help elect certain parties to power (conflict of interest?). Better wages=tax increases. Better benefits= tax increases. Working conditions? What are the taxpayers getting together and treating them badly? I wholeheartedly agree with private sector unions, and there should be more and bigger ones. Public sector? Don’t think so. You don’t get any better job security than working for public sector. Nowhere. If everyone in the private sector has to deal with all these things, so too should taxpayer employees.
The problem with public sector unions isn’t that they bargain for rights and working conditions it’s that they get to have a huge say in electing the folks who are supposed to be on the other side of the table. Nobody represents the taxpayer. This is how we get into the pension situation we’re in. Neither the politicians (who in many cases were beholden to the unions) nor the union leadership wanted to level with the taxpayer about the future cost of all those pension bennies that we tossed around like candy in lieu of current wages. The problem was always pushed out to the future, but suddenly the future is now.
In the end it all comes down to not raising taxes on the rich to pay their fair share for public services and infrastructure. The Dems don’t want to do it any more than the Repugs do.
Another drive-by by Mr. Gerard. Seems he’s only too happy to agree with praise for his words, but disappears when challenged. Not unlike the Democratic Party leadership.
Being part of a community means partaking in complete conversations, Leo. I hope you’ll try it sometime, because you’ll find while we firepups barks, we seldom bite. We do demand accountability, and many, man of us are having a hard time understanding why unions don’t separate – rather than further associate – themselves from the
left wing of the RepublicanDemocratic Party.A large and growing number of Americans is awakening – and this is exemplified by the protests in WI, OH, IN, and elsewhere – to the fact that cooperating with “The Company,” regardless whether it is labeled “GE” or “Government” must stop, if individual rights are to be protected.
The right to work is foundational, and unions’ willingness compromise it away under the guise of the Democratic Party’s ersatz brand of progressivism is only serving to deepen the stark class divide which is now irrefutable by any standard, and is tearing this country apart.
left wing of the Republicanshould becentrist and not-batshit-crazy wing of the Republican.Agreed.