FYI,
Mike B)

By Joshua Holland
 42 COMMENTS
12 Things You Need to Know About the Uprising in Wisconsin

What's happening in Wisconsin is not complicated. At the beginning of this 
year, the state was on course to end 2011 with a budget surplus of $120 
million. As Ezra Klein explained, newly elected GOP Governor Scott Walker then 
" signed two business tax breaks and a conservative health-care policy 
experiment that lowers overall tax revenues (among other things). The new 
legislation was not offset, and it turned a surplus into a deficit."
 
Walker then used the deficit he'd created as the justification for assaulting 
his state's public employees. He used a law cooked up by a right-wing advocacy 
group called the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). ALEC likes to 
fly beneath the radar, but I described the organization in a 2005 article as 
"the connective tissue that links state legislators with right-wing think 
tanks, leading anti-tax activists and corporate money." Similar laws are on the 
table in Ohio and Indiana.
 
Walker's bill would strip public employees of the right to bargain collectively 
for anything but higher pay (and would cap the amount of wage hikes they might 
end up gaining in negotiations). His intentions are clear -- before assuming 
office, Walker threatened to decertify the state's employees' unions (until he 
discovered that the governor doesn't have that power).
But he's spinning the measure as something else -- a bitter pill state workers 
must swallow in order to save Wisconsin's government. So the first things you 
need to know are:
 
1. Wisconsin's public workers  have already "made sacrifices to help balance 
the budget, through 16 unpaid furlough days and no pay increases the past two 
years," according to the Associated Press. The unions know their members are 
going to have to make concessions on benefits, but they rightly see the assault 
on their fundamental right to negotiate as an act of war.
 
2. There are already 13 states that restrict public workers' bargaining rights 
and it hasn't helped their bottom lines. As Ed Kilgore notes,  "eight 
non-collective-bargaining states face larger budget shortfalls than either 
Wisconsin or Ohio," and " three of the 13 non-collective bargaining states are 
among the eleven states facing budget shortfalls at or above 20%." 
 
3. This isn't just about public employees. What even a majority of the 
protesters don't know is that Walker's law would also place all of the state's 
Medicaid funding in the hands of the governor.  State senator Jon Erpenbach, 
D-Middleton -- one of the Dem law-makers who fled the state to block a vote on 
the bill -- told local media that this amounted to "substantial Medicaid 
changes" that put "the governor, all of a sudden... in charge of Medicaid, 
which is SeniorCare, which is BadgerCare ...and he has never once said what he 
intends to do” with those programs. But the provision led journalist Suzie 
Madrak to conclude that "the end game for all this is to defund state Medicaid 
programs and make it impossible to serve as part of the new health care safety 
net."
 
4. Health-care costs, rather than workers' greed, are what has driven up the 
price of employees' benefits. But generally speaking, those public sector 
health-care costs have grown at a slower clip than in the private sector.
 
5. Public employees' pensions account for just 6 percent of state budgets.
This has nothing to do with the state's fiscal picture. Aside from potentially 
undermining Wisconsin's public health-care system, it's really about destroying 
the last bastion of unionism in the American economy: public employees. As 
Addie Stan wrote on AlterNet's front page:
Walker is carrying out the wishes of his corporate master, David Koch, who 
calls the tune these days for Wisconsin Republicans. Walker is just one among 
many Wisconsin Republicans supported by Koch Industries -- run by David Koch 
and his brother, Charles -- and Americans For Prosperity, the astroturf group 
founded and funded by David Koch. The Koch brothers are hell-bent on destroying 
the labor movement once and for all.
Consider these facts:
6. Last year, more working people belonged to a union in the public sector (7.9 
million) than in the private (7.4 million), despite the fact that corporate 
America employs five times the number of wage-earners.  37 percent of 
government workers belong to a union, compared with just 7 percent of 
private-sector employees.
 
7. Whether in the public or private sector, union workers earn, on average, 20 
percent more than their non-unionized counterparts. They also have richer 
retirement and health benefits -- the “union compensation premium” rises to 
almost 30 percent when you include those bennies.
That workers can still negotiate from a position of strength somewhere in the 
US is simply unacceptable to the right, and that's what this is about. As you 
might expect, the tool they're using in their campaign is a pack full of lies 
and distortions about public employees. Here are some answers to those 
falsehoods:
 
8. Public sector workers have, on average, more experience and higher levels of 
education than their counterparts in the private sector (they are twice as 
likely to have a college degree).
 
9. When you adjust for those factors, they make, on average, 4 percent less 
than their private-sector counterparts.
 
10. Like any group of workers with a high union density, they have better 
benefits, on average. But even including those benefits,   state and local 
employees still make less in total compensation than they would doing the same 
work in the private sector.
 
11. In 2007, the average pension for a public sector worker was $22,000. Not 
exactly caviar dreams.
 
12. Many public employees are not eligible for Social Security -- those 
pensions, and whatever they can put away on their own, is all that they'll have 
in their golden years.
(Unless otherwise indicated, you can find links to the data for all of the 
above in my piece, "Right-Wingers Using Public Employees as 21st-Century 
Welfare Queens.")
The Right has made great political progress getting Americans to ask the 
question: "How come that guy’s getting what I don’t have?" It’s the crux of the 
politics of grievance. Progressives need to get Americans to ask a different 
question: "What’s keeping me from getting what that guy has?" At least part of 
the answer is the Right’s decades-long assault on private sector workers’ 
ability to organize, and the latest battle is being waged in Wisconsin.
 
TomThumbsBlues:
Kudos for fact-based journalism! It's important to remember that the 'crisis' 
in Wisconsin is artificially induced, but the right will use it to bust unions 
anyway. The labor movement is the last organized block against corporate 
domination, for better or worse. And often worse. With their lack of democracy 
and lack of struggle, unions have nearly self-destructed. But no one else 
speaks for working people. The Democrats ignore workers and the left has 
forgotten them. When union members walk the streets for candidates, or tax 
themselves to lobby or contribute to campaigns, the politicians know where 
their support comes from. Slim comfort, but it's true. And under federal law, 
union members can get refunds on portions of their dues that go to candidates 
they don't support. How many of the Koch bros. customers can say the same?

 



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Equal political power between men and women. Abolition of wage-labour and 
commodity production with distribution of goods and services based on useful 
labour time.  Grassroots democracy.
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