WSJ: Obama's Badger State Blues
Doug Fiedor
[email protected] 
 
Why is Obama so interested in what's happening in Wisconsin that he's spending 
million of dollars in campaign funds to counter Governor Walker?  Follow the 
money trail, folks:  "Labor spent $400 million to elect Mr. Obama in 2008".  
These unions are always working against the best interests of the taxpayers:  
"Public-employee unions push to increase their numbers and get more benefits by 
expanding government's cost and size."   There's a synergistic relationship at 
work here.  Part of the public-employee's unions way of feathering their own 
nests is to contribute a lot of money to far-left candidates who will increase 
the size of government and approve wage increases for government workers.  This 
has gotten so far out of hand that taxpayers cannot afford to pay the bill 
anymore, so it's time for change! 
The problem is, liberals do not want anything to do with THAT type of change.  
Because, if this practice stops, the Socialist-Democrats could lose hundreds of 
millions of dollars in campaign funds every campaign cycle.     
 
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703529004576160370862157158.html?mod=djemEditorialPage_h

 
FEBRUARY 24, 2011
Obama's Badger State Blues 
A union defeat in Wisconsin could hurt the president's re-election bid.
By KARL ROVE 
During the past eight days, thousands of Wisconsin teachers walked out of 
classrooms, shutting down schools.  Tens of thousands of public employees 
staged an apparent wildcat strike, flooding Wisconsin's state capital in a 
round-the-clock protest.  And Democratic legislators engaged in a most 
undemocratic action, fleeing Wisconsin to deny the state Senate the 
supermajority required for a quorum. 
They did this to oppose Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker's efforts to require public 
employees to increase contributions to their retirement and health-insurance 
plans, and to rein in their collective-bargaining power to negotiate for higher 
benefits. 
President Barack Obama has joined labor's attacks, criticizing Mr. Walker's 
proposals as "an assault on unions." According to news reports, Mr. Obama's 
personal political machine, Organizing for America, was thrust into the battle, 
providing buses to transport striking government workers to the protests, 
mobilizing phone banks, and rallying protesters from nearby states.
Why is the president trying to bully the Wisconsin governor? After all, 
Arizona, Utah, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and West Virginia are 
among the states to explicitly prohibit collective bargaining for public 
employees, which is far beyond what Mr. Walker is seeking. The answer is found 
in four digits: 2012.
Unlike those states, Wisconsin is a 2012 battleground. Gerald McEntee, 
president of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, 
told a reporter from this newspaper last week that a union defeat in Wisconsin 
"can put [Mr. Obama] in some danger" of losing the next election.  Labor spent 
$400 million to elect Mr. Obama in 2008: Mr. McEntee was sending a 
not-so-subtle message that unions would be unable to spend so generously on his 
behalf in 2012 if they continue hemorrhaging members and dues money.
And hemorrhage they have. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), 
last year alone 612,000 U.S. workers dropped their union memberships, each 
representing as much as $500 in lost dues. While labor is still powerful, its 
decline has been precipitous among private- sector workers. According to the 
BLS, just 6.9% of private-sector workers (7.1 million) are unionized, while 
36.2% of public- sector workers (7.6 million) are. And the number of 
public-sector union members is rising.
The growth of public- employee unions has paid off handsomely for some. The BLS 
reports the average annual wage for a state-government employee is now $48,742, 
but $45,155 for a worker in the private sector. What's more, the Bureau says 
the cost of benefits for state and local government workers has risen 50% more 
than those for private-sector employees since 2001. 
This matters to taxpayers. Public-employee unions push to increase their 
numbers and get more benefits by expanding government's cost and size. This 
often puts them at odds with the citizens who pay the bills.
Union demands have helped produce an estimated $3.5 trillion in unfunded 
liabilities for state and local government pension and health-care plans. 
They've also led to personnel practices that tie the hands of local elected 
officials, often resulting in perverse outcomes. For example, union insistence 
on "Last In, First Out" often means the best and brightest teachers are let go 
when districts downsize or schools close.
Wisconsin's governor knows this firsthand. In 2003, during his first term as 
Milwaukee county executive, Mr. Walker faced a huge budget deficit. He could 
have either raised already astronomical property taxes or found savings in 
personnel costs, the biggest part of his budget. Collective bargaining tied his 
hands, and once unions refused concessions his only option was to fire people. 
He reduced the county government's work force by 20%. 
Seared by this episode, Mr. Walker now wants statewide local governments and 
school districts to have the management tools to avoid layoffs. Hence his 
proposals to limit collective-bargaining rights for benefits and to require 
public approval of pay raises greater than inflation.
Fortunately for Mr. Walker and others contemplating his course, there's a 
lesson in the experience of Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels. Upon entering office in 
2005, Mr. Daniels signed an executive order ending collective bargaining for 
state workers. This and other controversial actions caused his approval ratings 
to fall into the 30% range.
But by re-election time, Mr. Daniels's decisions had paid off. The state's 
finances were in good shape and Indiana's economy was doing better than its 
neighbors'. While Mr. Obama was carrying the state in 2008, Mr. Daniels won a 
second term with 58%, proving that the right policies are often the right 
politics.
Events in Wisconsin have offered a vivid contrast between two chief executives. 
One (Mr. Walker) is taking meaningful steps to achieve fiscal balance. The 
other (Mr. Obama) is encouraging public employees to violate their contracts 
while his policies cause record deficits and reckless spending. 
Let's hope the differences between the two won't be lost on Badger State 
residents or the rest of America.
Mr. Rove is the former senior adviser and deputy chief of staff to President 
George W. Bush. 

About Karl Rove
Karl Rove served as Senior Advisor to President George W. Bush from 2000–2007 
and Deputy Chief of Staff from 2004–2007. At the White House he oversaw the 
Offices of Strategic Initiatives, Political Affairs, Public Liaison, and 
Intergovernmental Affairs and was Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy, 
coordinating the White House policy-making process.
Before Karl became known as "The Architect" of President Bush's 2000 and 2004 
campaigns, he was president of Karl Rove + Company, an Austin-based public 
affairs firm that worked for Republican candidates, nonpartisan causes, and 
nonprofit groups. His clients included over 75 Republican U.S. Senate, 
Congressional and gubernatorial candidates in 24 states, as well as the 
Moderate Party of Sweden.
Karl writes a weekly op-ed for the Wall Street Journal, is a Newsweek columnist 
and is the author of the book "Courage and Consequence" (Threshold Editions).
Email the author [email protected] visit him on the web atRove.com. Or, you can 
send a Tweet to @karlrove.
Click here to order his book,Courage and Consequence.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100014240527487035290045761603708
62157158.html?mod=djemEditorialPage_h
 
 
Check out Doug's website
http://fiedorreport.blogspot.com/




 
Contact Your Govt
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Is the Constitution the Supreme Law of the Land or not? 
 
I GUESS THE SCOTUS HAS ANWERED THAT QUESTION



  
How does Obama expect to get re-elected?
http://www.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=255965
 
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Please be aware that Barack Hussein Obama’s grandfather was a highly respected 
witch doctor with the Luo tribe. His white grandmother was VP at the Bank of 
Hawaii and she worked with and for Peter Geithner on other projects, Peter is 
the father of Timothy Geithner, Obama's choice of Treasurer of  the US.



  




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