Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and his crew of country club conservatives this week brutalized the nation’s democratic traditions to secure legislation demanded by big corporations and billionaire conservative financiers like the Koch brothers – legislation stripping workers of collective bargaining rights.
Walker & Crew succeeded in terminating workers’ rights – but they achieved that only by violating traditional American democratic values. They positioned themselves with dictators who act against the will of the people, deny free speech rights and suppress protests.
They violated the state’s open meetings law, breached the right of Wisconsin residents to rally in their own state capitol building, and contravened conventional standards of fairness by voting to deny workers their rights without assembling a quorum of senators.
Free speech and free access to government protect America’s democracy. Walker & Crew disregarded First Amendment rights repeatedly.
Just this week, Walker & Crew locked protesters out of their own capitol building in Madison. They locked the few protesters already in the building out of the meeting rooms where senate and house members voted. They denied access even to progressive Wisconsin Assembly members, one of whom climbed through a colleague’s window to gain access to his workplace.
In the weeks since Wisconsin’s 14 progressive senators fled to Illinois to prevent the chamber from achieving the quorum needed to vote on a measure spending the people’s money, Walker & Crew also shut down access from the capitol to a web site posted by protesters. And they severely restricted protesters’ access to the capitol where a sit-in and sleep-in began in mid-February.
Protesters, who peacefully gathered in Madison in the tens of thousands, began chanting, “Whose house is it?” referring to the capitol. “It’s our house,” they responded.
That’s not the way Walker & Crew saw it. They said voters gave them control of the people’s house in last fall’s elections. That, apparently, means to them that they don’t have to listen to the will of the people anymore. Polls show a large majority – more than 60 percent – of Wisconsinites oppose stripping workers of collective bargaining rights.
Walker & Crew didn’t listen to the people. And they repeatedly attempted to shut the people up. The First Amendment was written and adopted to protect the people from that kind of oppression by political leaders.
In addition to shutting the people up, Walker & Crew attempted to shut them out. On Wednesday, without providing proper notice, the state’s conservative senators conducted a meeting to consider a newly-written measure to strip workers of their collective bargaining rights. Notice is required by states’ open meetings laws, sometimes called sunshine acts. These guarantee citizens access to government meetings and documents. They’re intended to prevent governments from conducting the people’s business in secret. These laws also require notice of meetings so that citizens can exercise their access rights.
Walker & Crew ignored the notice requirements so that they could ram through their legislation terminating workers’ rights before citizens could comment on or protest the new measure. The conservatives deliberately disregarded citizens’ right in a democracy to participate in the political process that directly affects their lives.
In addition, by clandestinely arranging the vote to be conducted without a quorum of senators, Walker & Crew asserted that although state law prohibits spending the people’s money without a quorum, they feel it is fine to strip citizens of their rights without a quorum. This is the stuff of oligarchy.
Throughout the first two years of the Obama administration, conservatives in the U.S. Senate repeatedly used the filibuster maneuver to prevent votes on legislation that would otherwise have been approved by a majority. The progressives in Wisconsin essentially performed a filibuster with their feet – by going to another state to prevent a vote. What Walker & Co. did this week was exploit a loophole to circumvent the filibuster-by-foot. They damaged the democratic process in a way the progressives in the U.S. Senate never even considered when thwarted repeatedly by filibusters.
Walker & Crew got what they wanted. They commandeered from workers the right to collectively bargain for a better life. They did it with nefarious methods that disrespect the Constitution, disrespect democracy and disrespect workers. They did it in a way that heaps dishonor on them.



8 Comments

If Prosser is reelected to the Supreme Ct. all of the illegal behavior engaged in over the last couple of days will stand. Hell, even if Prosser loses to the Democrat, Kloppenburg, it still may stand since one or more of the Democratic justices may decide that undoing it months after the fact is too problematic.
Just as important as the Supreme Ct election, which really can’t be counted on to change anything, is a general strike of ALL local and state public sector employees.
Let Wanker try to fire and rehire all 100,000 of them.
“…only by violating traditional American democratic values.”
Traditional American democratic values are based on the myth that America is a democracy. We are not and never have been. We are a constitutional republic set up deliberately from the onset to thwart the will of the majority.
The Senate, even without rules like holds and fillibusters, was designed to give low population states the ability to block the will of the more populous states. States had complete freedom to restrict who was allowed to vote, frequently restricted to white men of property, and Senators were appointed, not elected, positions.
Who thinks that the repugs in WI, MI, UT, etc. are interested in democracy. Democracy would be one person, one vote. Now it is who controls the black box key to the voting results. These repugs do not like democracy, they like fascist authoritarianism: the “unitary executive.” In other words, a dictator intertwined with big corporations. If they can finally break the unions and gain control of “education,” we will wind up with a society going backwards even faster than it is now.
I attended, with seventy other people, a very small town WI Democratic party meeting last night. This was the part of the meeting that was open to the general voting public. Intense motivation and agreement on Kloppenburg winning April 5 WI Supreme Court Race. The candidate, JoAnn Kloppenburg is running as an independent, NOT a Democrat, and both candidates have accepted public financing. Neither are taking money contributions anymore and Kloppenburg is not seeking official party endorsements in order to remain neutral.
Contrary to your opinion, it is essential that Prosser be defeated. Your apparent defeatist attitude about Kloppenburg not affecting anything is uniformed, wrong and will not help anything. Your desire for a general strike plays right into Governot ™ Walker’s hand. Walker is incapable of caring about even 100K people, haven’t you seen that yet? That’s part of his plan for 250K new jobs, replacing all state workers with private sector employees. Walker is arguably a delusional religious zealot in his persecution of the working class, on a mission from god here:
http://www.progressive.org/wx030711.html
Download election flyers if you are in WI, get your facts straight and get to work on insuring her victory.
http://www.kloppenburgforjustice.com/index.html
this was meant for boxfetish, sorry.
So, what’s to be done about it? We know what the problem is, but all we do is complain about it. Words are no longer deeds, and Liberals/Progressives continue to get punked, even by Democrats! So, how long do we get spit in the eye and shoved in the face before we respond in kind? Who will we vote for instead of Obama and the current slate of corporate Dempublicans?
I never said Prosser shouldn’t be defeated. In fact, I said the opposite. I also never said anything even close to “Kloppenburg won’t affect anything.”
I misspoke when I called her a Democrat, but I hardly think that warrants such animosity and condescension on your part.
I have been at the Capitol protesting most days over the last few weeks and have also spent the night there several times, so in my view I have already “gotten to work”.
I am actively campaigning for Kloppenburg in that I have handed out or posted dozens of window signs (so far) as well as educated friends, coworkers, and family members about the importance of her getting her elected (for a host of reasons). I have also been in contact her campaign about making phone calls and driving voters to the polls.
Please don’t assume that others aren’t as well informed as you or aren’t working toward a particular goal when you know nothing about them.
Cheers!
P.S. I still believe that a general strike is *AS* important as electing Kloppenburg. I think unions are always too afraid to use the strike as an viable option and that hurts them in the long run. I guess we will just have to disagree on that point.
Leo,
thanks for all your support; enjoy hearing your analysis on WTDY in Madison with Sly.
One day longer!