Note—Two years ago this week in the opening gambit of what turned out to be
a tsunami of attacks on working people, labor, and democracy itself, Wisconsin
Governor Scott Walker also triggered a new people’s movement. That movement would spread to other states—Ohio,
Michigan, Indiana among others.
A few months later the Occupy Movement would spread a people’s movement
in the streets across the country.
Together these actions and these events dramatically changed the political
and social conversation in the nation that had been almost completely dominated
by the radical right and its Tea Party sock puppets. The national media entranced by that shiny bauble,
was slow to understand what was happening.
But in less than two years it was clear that the American people had
rejected austerity, punishing the poor and working class, unrestrained looting
by the wealthy and powerful, stripping government of every authority save that
of closely regulating women’s bodies and life choices. Barack Obama owes his re-election as much to
this sea change as his vaunted organization or the disarray of the Right.
Everything is not well. Walker and the other Republican governors in
the Rust Belt states backed by heavy majorities in their gerrymander
legislatures generally were able to pass most of their draconian legislation
over sustained protests. Often the
courts have blocked the worst of the provisions. In fact the avalanche of horrible legislation
was brought on by the Right’s realization that they might have only a short
time to set their “reforms” in concrete before they are swept away. That’s all that the paymaster behind them
wanted anyway.
The left has hardly understood what has happened. Many in the Occupy Movement seem perplexed
and disappointed that their demands for radical and fundamental change seems to
have translated into votes for Democrats who they find cowardly and hardly less
creatures of the oligarchy than the Republicans. And that is true as far as it goes. But it was the people rising up and using the
weapon of defense—the vote and using it in defiance of every plot and scheme to
prevent them from exercising it.
Much more needs to be done.
Defense must shift to offense.
The battles must be fought on our terms, as the Chicago Teachers’ Strike
last fall show. We will need to take
again to the streets. And most
importantly we will have to forge new organs, new organizations, new alliances
that employ fresh ideas and tactics suitable for the age of Twitter and
Facebook.
But history is will look back to what happened in the snows of Madison
two years ago as the tipping point.
What follows is my blog post exactly two years ago today, written as
events were unfolding. Let’s refresh our
memories.
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker is a hero in his own mind. He sees himself as a swashbuckling avenger
taking down the “sacred cow” of public employee unionism. Elected along with rabid Republican majorities in both houses of the state Legislature in the Tea Party Tsunami last November he believed he had a mandate for
revolutionary change in a state with a long and proud Progressive tradition and a healthy Labor Movement.
Wisconsin, like many states, was
undergoing a fiscal crisis as the Recession-that-will-not-die-no-matter-what-the-economists-say
simultaneously sapped tax revenues and placed new demands on human services and safety net programs. The
crisis would have to be addressed. Tax
increases, like those just adopted in neighboring Illinois, were off the table, not even to be considered by tax
allergic Republicans. Every one knew big
budget cuts were coming. The question
was who would get hit, and how bad.
Typically, Walker and the
Republicans focused on social services and “entitlements”, seeing an
opportunity to shrink government. But
Walker dared go further—he declared war on the state’s own employees and did it
with strutting bravado. His base eats
that sort of thing up. He may have even
imagined that his actions could catapult him overnight from a nationally
obscure freshman governor to a new hero of the Right. Maybe he could leap over New Jersey Governor Chris Christie the darling get-tough executive,
Sara Palin, or Michele Bachman to the top of red
meat and hair-on-fire ranks.
Walker’s plan was nothing if not
sweeping and radical. He did not even
bother to offer to meet with public employee unions. He declared, there will be no
negotiations. Instead he advanced a plan
that would slash or virtually eliminate public employee pensions and shift
almost all of the cost of health insurance onto employees. This was necessary, he said, to balance the
budget without massive layoffs. Because
“rationalizing” the state’s work force would naturally reduce the number of
workers needed any way, Walker decided to skip the hassle of negotiating
changes in job descriptions, work loads, and conditions by stripping public
employee unions of the right to bargain over any issues other than base
salary. He would also gut grievance
procedures giving him and agency heads carte-blanche
to ride roughshod over individual employees. The public employees were not just
state employees either--they included county, municipal, school, and other
local government workers.
The Governor sensed that his
might not go over too well with government workers. He attempted to split them by exempting local police and fire employees and State
Patrolmen from the harshest provisions.
Some of those unions had actually foolishly supported his
candidacy. Besides, he had the feeling
he might need that police protection.
In retrospect, I wonder if Gov.
Walker wishes he had picked a better moment to announce his plan. He picked the very day Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was being
toppled by Cairo street
demonstrators. Maybe he thought it would
get lost in the shuffle. But he boldly
stepped up to microphones and announced his sweeping plan. He also declared that Republican majorities
in both houses were sure to rapidly adopt the necessary legislation with out as
much as disturbing a comma of his proposals.
Oh, and by the way, he said, if public employees dared protest or “cause
disruptions” he was fully prepared to mobilize the National Guard.
In fact, he said, he had already consulted with Guard commanders about
the possibility of deployment.
Threatening military action
against his own employees before the fact may just have pushed the envelope a
bit too far. Word of the threat spread
like wildfire. The words were hardly out
of his mouth before he was being compared to Mubarak and workers were planning
their own demonstrations.
These days with Facebook, Twitter, and blogs it does not take long to organize a
response. Even before top labor leaders
could call outraged news conferences, public workers were making their own
plans to descend on the Capitol.
Yesterday, tens of thousands did
just that surrounding the public spaces around the Capital and jamming the
corridors inside. Chants compared Walker
to Mubarak and called for his ouster.
Many carried homemade signs say “I’m Not Afraid of the Guard.” Hundreds of firefighters marched to join the
demonstrators lending their support despite the preferential treatment that
their union had received. In Milwaukee thousands protested outside the
Governor’s home and teachers walked off the job to join the protest causing
some schools to close. In Madison and elsewhere high school students walked out in support of their
teachers. Unionized private employer
workers joined the fight as well.
Last night hundreds, led mostly
by university teaching assistants and other staff, occupied the capital
building over night demanding to be heard in public hearings being held. Hundreds who signed up to speak at the
hearing refused to leave until they were heard.
Shortly after 2 AM Republican legislators conducting the hearing left
the Capitol by a side door to avoid being seen by the crowds. Democrats kept the committee hearings in
session all night as angry testimony continued.
Today the throngs around the
Capitol have only grown. Madison schools
were officially closed due to a massive teacher sick-in. Students from the nearby University of Wisconsin campus have
been joined by high school and even middle school students supporting the
workers. Progressive, liberal, and
radical organizations of all stripes and their members have joined a united
stand against this naked power grab.
Reports on the
scene indicate that the mood of the crowds is buoyant and determined. Everyone declares a willingness to stay “as
long as necessary.”
The governor
has been lying low, but issuing defiant statements. So far he has called for no police action nor
alerted the Guard. Perhaps he realizes
if he does so the powder keg might literally explode.
The nation is
just now becoming dimly aware of what is happening. The major media, as always barely aware of
developments in “flyover” country have been slow to pick up the story. That is beginning to change. Workers in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Minnesota—all states with huge blue collar
communities—are keeping a close eye on developments as their own governors have
been making noises similar to Walker.
This could spread rapidly if they make good on those noises.
It you are in
Wisconsin today, or can get there, I urge you, drop what you are doing and find
a protest to join.
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