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Gov. Walker Changes Attitudes On Public Employee Unions


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governor-walker-shows-public-employee-unions-can-be-challenged.htmInvestors Business Daily:

The results are in, and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker has beaten Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett in the recall election. That's in line with pre-election polling, though not the Election Day exit poll.

Even before the results came in, we knew one thing: that the Democrats and the public employee unions had already lost the battle of ideas over the issue that sparked the recall — Walker's legislation to restrict the bargaining powers of public employee unions.

That's supported by a Marquette University poll showing 75% of Wisconsin voters favoring increases in public employees' contributions for health care and pensions. It also showed 55% for limiting collective bargaining for public employees and only 41% opposed.

But the strongest evidence is that Barrett and the Democrats avoided the issue. They had tried to make the election about anything else, such as an investigation of staffers for Walker when he was Milwaukee county executive.

A defeat in a state where public employee union bargaining was authorized in 1959 has national implications.

Unions spent $400 million in the 2008 election cycle to elect Barack Obama and other Democrats. More than half of all union members nationally are public employees.

Public employee unions insist that dues money be deducted from members' paychecks and sent directly to union treasuries. So in practice, public employee unions are a mechanism for the involuntary transfer of taxpayers' money to the Democratic Party.

Walker's law ended this practice and gave public employees the choice of whether to pay union dues. The membership of AFSCME, the big union of state employees, fell from 62,818 to 28,785.

That's what liberal columnist E.J. Dionne was referring to when he wrote last week that Walker's laws "sought to undermine one of the Democratic Party's main sources of organization." Dionne wants continued taxpayer financing of campaigns — for his side only.

The battle of ideas in Wisconsin may have affected opinion nationally. The annual Education Next poll of opinion on teacher unions showed little change between 2009 and 2011, but this year, the percentage with a positive view dropped from 29% to 21%. Among teachers themselves, it dropped from 58% to 43%.Scissors-32x32.png

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