http://host.madison.com/ct/news/opinion/column/john_nichols/article_9d9e9377-486a-5a45-b202-8d3d398718e9.html


Tell me what democracy looks like,” chant the hundreds of thousands of
Wisconsinites who have rallied to block Gov. Scott Walker’s assault on
basic rights, public services and local schools and communities.

“This is what democracy looks like!” comes the reply.

Never in Wisconsin history have so many citizens rallied in such
numbers and for so long against political corruption and the
concentration of power in the hands of an unaccountable executive.

This is the ultimate democracy struggle.

If Walker and his corporate paymasters prevail, Wisconsin workers will
be denied the collective bargaining rights their ancestors fought and
died to establish, Wisconsin towns will be denied the authority to
determine their own budgets, and Wisconsin school boards will lose
their ability to defend educational quality and make smart choices
regarding charter schools.

And as power is grabbed from citizens and communities and shifted to
the governor and his appointed cronies, the ability of out-of-state
corporations to promote privatization schemes, divert public dollars
into their treasuries and generally profit at the expense of Wisconsin
taxpayers is increased.

Wisconsinites have said “No!”

In the streets of our towns, villages and cities.

In the Capitol, despite attempts by Walker and his allies to shut down
the building.

In the courts, where judges have refused to sanction the governor’s power grab.

And, on April 5, Wisconsinites can say “No” with their votes.

The race for state Supreme Court will be the highest-profile test. The
grass-roots energy associated with Assistant Attorney General JoAnne
Kloppenburg’s independence-and-integrity challenge to Justice David
Prosser — whose re-election campaign was launched with a pledge that
Prosser would serve as a judicial activist “complement” to Walker’s
agenda — suggests democracy is on the march.

In Madison and Dane County, voters will also be able to signal their
commitment to clean elections, open government and local control by
voting “yes” and “yes” on a pair of advisory referendums that address
the threat posed to democracy by the U.S. Supreme Court’s Citizens
United v. Federal Election Commission ruling, which allows
corporations to spend freely and without accountability to buy
elections. The 2010 election results reflected that influence — in
Wisconsin and nationally.

These “reclaiming democracy” referendums declare that “only human
beings, not corporations, are entitled to constitutional rights” and
they put our communities on record in support of free speech and free
elections.

This year’s remarkable grass-roots activism has shown that
Wisconsinites are waking up to the reality that we are in a critical
struggle to answer the question posed by former Chief Justice Edward
Ryan and asked so frequently by Robert M. La Follette: “Which shall
rule, wealth or man; which shall lead, money or intellect; who shall
fill public stations — educated and patriotic free men (and women) or
the feudal serfs of corporate capital?”

The feudal serfs of corporate capital want to take away our rights in
the workplace and in the public square, to shout down our voices and
to increase their power.

To counter them, patriotic free men and women can vote “yes” and “yes”
on Madison and Dane County’s democracy referendums.

John Nichols is the associate editor of The Capital Times. [email protected].
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