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Right-To-Work Bills Divide GOP In Midwest

Right To Work

PATRICK CONDON   04/ 6/12 03:36 PM ET  AP

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Fifteen months after taking control of Minnesota's Legislature, Republicans have put a gay marriage ban on this November's ballot, moved to expand gun rights and cast dozens of votes to cut state spending. But there's one issue where they failed to get traction: watering down the strength of organized labor with a right-to-work law.

The problem isn't so much opposition from Democrats. And it isn't a lack of enthusiasm for the idea, which many conservatives consider essential for creating a business-friendly economic climate. The problem lies with Republicans who fear triggering a huge rebellion among opposition labor unions and sending a surge of sympathetic voters to the polls in November to vote Democratic.

In Minnesota and elsewhere across the Midwest, the question of what to do about the right-to-work issue is pitting Republican against Republican, straining relationships among longtime allies and weighing cherished ideals against political tactics.

"We wait and we wait and we wait, and then if we get the opportunity and we fail to take it, then the issue is done," said Michelle Benson, a frustrated Republican state senator from suburban Minneapolis who sounded off after House and Senate leaders' recently decided not to move on the issue.

The passage of a right-to-work measure in Indiana this year emboldened supporters in Minnesota, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin and Missouri to try to carry the initiative across across the Rust Belt. But many GOP leaders were instead more impressed by the furor that the unions kicked up in defeat. Throngs of protestors mobbed the state capitol in Indianapolis and Democratic lawmakers periodically disrupted the legislative session with boycotts. Huge demonstrations also came after Wisconsin Republicans stripped public employees of collective bargaining rights last year.

"Whether you agree with right to work or not, you've got to agree there'll be millions of dollars coming in from other states, and thousands of people," said Minnesota state Rep. Tony Cornish, a Republican who opposes trying to pass a bill. "Buses emptying out, banners, people camping."

The Minnesota proposal had one committee hearing last month – provoking a labor protest and AFL-CIO sponsored TV ads. Although union membership has declined nationally in recent decades, organized labor remains a political force in Minnesota, with the AFL-CIO boasting about 300,000 members. A big Democratic turnout this November could make it more difficult for Minnesota's GOP to defend the more than 30 state House and Senate seats they seized from Democrats in the 2010 election.

But some conservatives respond with another question: If not now, when? Republicans hold more legislative sway in the Midwest than they have in years as a result of that 2010 landslide. Their ability to pass right to work might never be greater, especially if they lose seats this November.

The GOP's tea party flank also tends to favor action. Last weekend, Benson triumphed in a party endorsement battle with fellow Republican Sen. Mike Jungbauer, a right to work skeptic.

For many conservatives, it's a deeply felt goal. When Steve Drazkowski began serving in the Minnesota House in 2007, Democrats had controlled at least one chamber of the Legislature for a full generation. "Four decades, right there," in which they couldn't achieve their policy goals, Drazkowski said.

After Republicans finally won control in 2010, he put right-to-work state at the top of his to-do list.

His measure, which would preclude unions from collecting dues from workers in union shops who did not want to be union members, would make Minnesota a more attractive place for people to work and businesses to locate, he said. Opponents argue that workers who benefit from the better wages and workplace conditions that unions negotiate should share the costs.

The Minnesota measure would actually be a constitutional amendment that would go before voters – a necessity to get around a certain veto from Democratic Gov. Mark Dayton. But now it is moot.

GOP leaders also fear the political consequences of right-to-work in Ohio and Wisconsin, where the presidential race could be close and where Republicans will also be defending legislative majorities.

In Wisconsin, where GOP Gov. Scott Walker faces a recall election in June as the result of last year's anti-union legislation, Republicans did nothing with right to work this year.

In Ohio, a coalition that includes some tea party groups is collecting signatures to get a right-to-work amendment on the statewide ballot but Republican Gov. John Kasich has publically dismissed the effort. In Michigan, Republican House Speaker Jase Bolger has been leaning toward supporting a right to work measure, but Republican Gov. Rick Snyder has said he wants no part of it.

"Right-to-work is such a divisive issue," said Amber McCann, a spokeswoman for GOP Senate Majority Leader Randy Richardville, who has said he would consider Senate passage unlikely.

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Associated Press writers Tim Martin in Lansing, Mich., Scott Bauer and Todd Richmond in Madison, Wis., and Ann Sanner in Columbus contributed to this report.

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ST. PAUL, Minn. — Fifteen months after taking control of Minnesota's Legislature, Republicans have put a gay marriage ban on this November's ballot, moved to expand gun rights and cast dozens of...
ST. PAUL, Minn. — Fifteen months after taking control of Minnesota's Legislature, Republicans have put a gay marriage ban on this November's ballot, moved to expand gun rights and cast dozens of...
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ProgressivesLoveAmerica
Former disciple of Mises, Hayek & Milton Friedman
03:48 PM on 04/09/2012
The Midwest is not the South:

It's harder to convince them that deceptively named "right to work laws" are actually going to help the economy! If anything they'll weaken the economy over the long term. An underpaid workforce is also a weakened consumer. That's very devastating in a consumer-based economy such as our own!

Just look at Texas:
Wages that are lower than the national average. Lack of health care coverage. Bad education. etc. etc. etc. Low wages = Low taxes or no tax revenue = lower living standards overall.

"Right to work" should be more properly renamed "right to shoot yourself in the foot" or "right to work for slave wages"
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ernestkp
Plant more hardwoods!!
03:02 PM on 04/09/2012
Appears to be a small glitch in ALEC's plan to disenfranchise workers' rights in order to assure the lowest wages possible while continuing to guarantee outrageous executive compensation. The glitch is called "voters".
08:45 AM on 04/09/2012
The Republican drive to disenfranchise workers and destroy their ability to negotiate for livable wages is destined to destroy capitalism as we know it. A middle class with disposable income is necessary in order to sustain our economic system. The GOP desire for the 99 percent to be barefooted, naked, homeless, hungry and willing to work for the scraps that fall from the table of the rich is not a blueprint for a healthy, vibrant economy.
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Snarky McSnarkster
Opposed to hypocritical Christians
07:17 AM on 04/09/2012
Just like with govenrment regulations there should be no need for unions. But there is.
whochi
Liberals think 2 + 2 = Bush
08:13 AM on 04/09/2012
Rubbish. Government regulations are implied under our Constutition that guarantees us a repbulican form of goverment, fair and free trade and commerce between the States, and other rights and priviletes, etc. so obviously some form of rational regulations are neeed to enforce those rights.

Unions, like religion, are guaranteed the right to exist under that same Constitiuion but no one should be forced or compelled into joining a religion or paying dues into a Union etc. That should always be the decision of people not government. Government should not be suing American companies who choose to locate their businesses in another State.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
clearasmud
Obama Is Nothing More Than A Moderate Republican
05:15 AM on 04/09/2012
First they give huge tax breaks to Corporations to move to their state. Then they reduce wages by busting unions. Have they ever thought how much tax money they are losing?

There is no data that supports RTW as a job creator. There is no data that shows RTW keeps Corporations from moving overseas.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CPAwADD
Always look on the bright side of life.
07:52 AM on 04/09/2012
When have conservatives cared about evidence?
01:08 AM on 04/09/2012
Republicans keep trying to convince the working people that 'right to work' laws are good for them, just like the old slave owners used to try to convince the northerners that they take real good care of their slaves, and that all but a few trouble makers like it that way. I moved out of a right to work state 30 years ago, Arizona, because wages, benefits and opportunities were abysmal then, and they have not gotten any better. Most of those states have employment figures lower than the average, and definitely lower wages. If it was gonna work, it would have worked by now, but it doesnt, it's just a con game to broaden corporate and republican power and leverage, and to get rid of any democratic money that might compete with all that super-pac cash ala Citizens United. More Unions! More democrats! Obama 2012!
07:02 AM on 04/09/2012
Great post, Indy! You've said it all.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rnl52
Where is the next one coming from?
08:26 AM on 04/09/2012
Well put. F&F
keithdengenis
Thinking... It's Patriotic
12:24 AM on 04/09/2012
Right To Work For Less.

Because our 70% consumer driven economy doesn't need a monied Middle Class; Fairer Wage and Asset Distribution; any decline in the amount TAKEN by Corporate Officers (74.8% of all Corporate Profits go to Executive Wages and Other Compensations). Nope, we'll just keep humming right along.
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cobraxus
Defend The Innocent_Protect The Weak
11:32 PM on 04/08/2012
Mitch Daniels pushed "Right To Work(harder for less money)" to shore up his conservative bona fides but all it really did was create the lunchpail republicans.
11:16 PM on 04/08/2012
I taught in a right-to-work state. I have a dear friend who teaches in a strongly unionized one.
When I would tell her about the way teachers are treated in Texas, such as my own shock at finding out that my young colleagues had NO paid maternity leave, she was shocked. She would always ask me, "But don't their unions have something to say about that?" I had to remind her that unions have no voice in Texas.
The school district where I worked did not pay into Social Security. I had paid into it when I worked in other states. Now I'm disabled, but thanks to Texas and it's "right to work" I don't have enough paid into SS to qualify for any payments now that I can't teach.
I am strongly for unions in every profession. We need to protect workers and protect the middle class.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rnl52
Where is the next one coming from?
08:37 AM on 04/09/2012
I agree with you and I am sorry for your situation. But there is no way on Gods green earth that I would ever even consider living in Texas, or anywhere in the south. Even if I were born there I would work only long enough to buy a greyhound ticket to get the hell out of that "do y'all know jeasus" tent revival preacher-man atmosphere. It is poison.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mowprincess
I must be cheerful and obedient...
11:12 PM on 04/08/2012
Now that they have pandered to the right... they need to pander to the left.. They are taking their game right out of Romney's playbook..”
10:56 PM on 04/08/2012
Raise your hand if you want a new refinery built by the lowest non union bidder.
Raise the other hand if you want the same company to build a nuclear power plant.
One more time if you'd like places like BIW and Electric Boat to be non-union, lowest bid contract.
THen if you won't vote for the above, why would you vote to cut the heart out of the unions that trains the skilled craftspeople who will work there and in other essential industries?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rnl52
Where is the next one coming from?
08:41 AM on 04/09/2012
F&F buddy. Nicely phrased.
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KOSMOCITIZEN
2b1leaderLearn2obey1st
10:35 PM on 04/08/2012
i am living in Florida for the past ten years and I am working as middle level manager ...

i had to re-invent my management philosophy and style to be able to do my job when I move to Florida , (right to work state )
ignorant, clueless , undisciplined , unmotivated, whiners, complainers ......
that's some of my workers SKILLS when i hired them
i had to be a mentor ,a coach or a father figure first and then to be their manager.

any state that will become'' a right to work state '' their work force will become a disadvantaged one just in few years only
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jim Pasterczyk
Banned!
11:29 PM on 04/08/2012
I seem to notice most "right to work" states are also former Confederate states. Guess they never learned that the best way to motivate its work force is not to force the work.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rnl52
Where is the next one coming from?
08:47 AM on 04/09/2012
I work for Boeing and management in Seattle was horrified upon hearing that, in their new S. Carolina facility workers were observed trying to hammer rivets in to precision composite assemblys. You get what you pay for, and when you are cruising at 40,000 feet you want that to be damn good.
marilyn 63
LEVEL ONE NETWORKER
09:45 PM on 04/08/2012
Tea-Republicans realize that they have fallen over the cliff and everybody wants them to STAY there even their own hilarious.
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upacreek2012
get your paddle and head left
09:41 PM on 04/08/2012
So lets see, the repubs think that we should work for low pay with no benefits, no insurance or retirement, no SS. They call it right to work, but what it is is right to fire, and right to pit worker against worker to see who will work for the least amount of money. People have forgotten what unions did for this country. Look back at our history see where we were, now look at where we are. Its not the unions that screwed us, its the politicians and there big business owners.
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swengnikaerb
47% Never ASKED for a Tax Cut!
10:48 PM on 04/08/2012
And all those gains can be erased with the stroke of a pen.
11:42 PM on 04/08/2012
We are a pendulum society. As voters, we overreact to everything.

Many union contracts are clearly poor deals negotiated by kick-the-can-down-the-road politicians. Critics have used resentment of those deals to completely go the other way.

Unfortunately, there are many voters who don't understand that the demonization of unions and government workers is resulting in worker rights being eroded at a record pace. The fact is that, overall, unions have been needed to help keep a healthy balance of the employer/employee relationship. Union wages help lift all worker salaries.

The union contracts that are one-sided should be brought back into balance. On that, we should all agree. Now despite the disinformation being spread, most unions have made considerable concessions in contracts. Those who still cling to unrealistic contracts negotiated in the past must come back to the table and deal in good faith.

But, understand this. Republican lawmakers are not trying to bring about a balance. They are interested only in eliminating unions and weakening worker rights in order to give more economic power to big business.
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upacreek2012
get your paddle and head left
11:50 PM on 04/08/2012
I could not agree more, everyone needs to compromise. Find the balance and it will work for everyone. The politicians need to do their part and stop the incentives for moving jobs offshore. Put the progressive tax schedule back in place. Unions need to police them selves and make their contracts realistic as well as making sure that any dead wood is cut out of their membership. Everyone need to do their part.
07:14 AM on 04/09/2012
Well said, Centrist. The key IS balance of power. Workers do not have it unless they unite. Hard to imagine what those who are duped into believing unions are the enemy of the common man are placing their hopes in. Benevolent capitalists are few and far between.
IMOPINIONH8D
because I want it empty...
09:30 PM on 04/08/2012
The repubs have already shot themselves in the foot with their attack on women, dont see any reason why they shouldnt go ahead and shoot themselves in the other.