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Rep. Jim McDermott

Rep. Jim McDermott

Posted: March 9, 2011 02:24 PM

Crushing Workers Won't Solve Deficits


While millions of ordinary Americans have been struggling to cope with the harsh economic realities of the last two years, Republican elected officials have focused their attention on ways to take political advantage of widespread hardship. Republicans have decided that ongoing economic turmoil offers a perfect opportunity to go after their political opponents.

So, every Democratic proposal is a "job-killing" bill -- even a measure to assure continuing medical treatment to 9/11 first responders was somehow a job killer. Our economy's free fall was the result of "unreasonably high taxes" -- never mind the high-flying Wall Street speculators who gambled with our housing market and lost. And, now, when state and local governments are trying desperately to rebuild their crumbling budgets, the Republican Party is ready to assign blame for the catastrophe: unions.

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie got the ball rolling by blaming that state's budget shortfalls on overpaid state employees and their underfunded pensions. Let's not forget that New Jersey has failed to make 13 of its last 17 scheduled payments to its pension trust fund, and the good Governor has missed every payment since taking office. Governor Christie is robbing the public employees' bank account and then blaming those employees for not keeping enough in the safe.

Then, Governor Scott Walker of Wisconsin stepped up, insisting that Wisconsin's budget deficit was caused by extravagant public employee compensation packages, driven by rapacious and irresponsible unions. But we know that public employee unions are not the cause of Wisconsin's deficits. Compared to the rest of the country, Wisconsin provides its public employees only average salaries and benefits -- its state employees make roughly 5% less than its private sector workers. And the pension system that Governor Walker says will sink the state? It's very healthy and poses no looming threat to the state's solvency.

But Wisconsin does have a deficit and, in a genuine effort to help overcome that shortfall, Wisconsin's public employee unions agreed to Governor Walker's proposed wage and benefit reductions. Not good enough for Governor Walker: he demanded that Wisconsin's public employee unions relinquish their decades-old collective bargaining rights. Governor Walker's goal is not to eliminate Wisconsin's deficit; it is to eliminate Wisconsin's public employee unions.

Eliminating collective bargaining doesn't help state budgets or restore fiscal balance; rather, it punishes workers and invites abuse. Texas, a right-to-work state with a deficit 10 times that of Wisconsin, is a poster child for poor governance and fiscal ineptitude. But for Republicans like Governors Walker and Christie, strangling the public employee unions is a "twofer": it weakens the bargaining power of labor, an important check and counterbalance to big business, and it shuts off a significant funding source to candidates, traditionally Democrats, who champion ordinary working families.

Using a crisis for political advantage is a risky game. Although the Republican Party successfully has capitalized on the economic turbulence created by the recession, in Wisconsin, it badly overplayed its hand. Governor Walker and his fellow Republicans underestimated Wisconsinites' commitment to fairness and balance. They dismissed the sturdy common sense of the American people, who know when they're being sold on something, and who are not buying the argument that treating workers fairly is bad for the economy. Indeed, a new Pew Center poll shows that support of the unions has increased since Governor Walker sought to cripple them, while his approval ratings have declined.

Is there a solution to the stalemate in Wisconsin? Recent indications that Governor Walker is modifying his demands is welcome news. All effective leaders must compromise, and Governor Walker has the good fortune to be facing state workers who already have affirmed their willingness to sacrifice to help Wisconsin remain a vibrant state. Now, after a month of passionate public outcry against his union-busting strategy, Governor Walker has an opportunity to demonstrate his ability to govern with reason and moderation. I urge him to seize it.

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09:48 AM on 04/02/2011
Is this the same McDermott who said, "I’m tired of reading the Constitution and all of the silly things we’ve done over the last 13 weeks.†Or the one who said this, "I think ultimately the decision about how much we spend (on healthcare) is going to be decided by the government.†I was just wondering.
11:09 AM on 03/12/2011
Crushing the unions won't help with the deficits. Unions help middle class workers have decent paying jobs, and then they can pay taxes which will help with the deficit. The Republicans have chosen the side of the lobbyists and billionaires and are trying to kill the middle class. Republican plan...lay-off thousands of middle class workers by indiscriminately slashing spending..check...cripple our country's education system so we can't compete globally...check...tax breaks for big corporations and billionaires...check.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheThumb
Take the money out of politics!
09:03 AM on 03/11/2011
If so called deficit hawks were honest, they would admit that crushing the unions & cutting grannie's Medicare benefits won't be enough to fill hole we are in. It is the big banks & corporate fraud abetted & enabled by politicians, mostly Republican, who caused this mess. If corporations paid the taxes they should and the top 2% paid their fair share of income taxes, folks on mainstreet might be a bit more willing to tighten their belts & share the pain. Tax cuts for the rich will cost the tax payer and estimated three trillion in additional debt. Republicans will tell you that the tax cuts are necessary to stimulate the economy & create jobs. Not so! Taxes on the rich are lower than they have been in 50 years and corporations & banks are sitting on trillions in cash. So where are the jobs? & where is the shared pain? In the last 10 years 40,000 manufacturing plants have closed in the U.S, decimating middle class jobs, while corporations who exported those jobs are more profitable than ever. And,they fraudulently hide much of the profit in offshore tax sheltered accounts. When are middle class conservative voters going to realize they are being duped and join the chorus of those of us who want to throw the bums out? All of them! On both sides of the aisle!
11:22 AM on 03/10/2011
Jim, you have been a major part of the "massive" bankruptcy of the United States. You and all the progressives in Congress (Republicans & Democrats) are to blame for the situation we now find ourselves in and you are lecturing us?

The laws and regulations of the past thirty plus years have virtually destroyed our economy and you should be ashamed!

We voted in November for “drasticâ€, emergency measures and endorsed those elected to take charge and fortunately, some of them have listened.

If more don’t listen, they too will be thrown out in the next cycle.
maumeeone
...Not that there's anything wrong with that!
12:10 PM on 03/10/2011
Go ahead, throw out as many as you want. Just be careful what you wish for. You might just end up with something you weren't bargaining for...
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10:46 AM on 03/10/2011
Making government simpler is perceived as simplistic by simplistic minds. What Walker has done could be risky politics in an earlier era - but in 2012 will be remembered as bold and necessary leadership.
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ugly american
Just say "No!" But to What?
09:25 AM on 03/10/2011
The idea here is not to balance the budget and never was. The idea is a takeover by Republicans (read as "Big Business") of the government as a whole. If they wanted to reduce the deficit they could just forget the tax breaks for millionaires and corporations. the idea here is permanent corporate control.
Witness not just Wisconsin but Michigan. There the governor is trying to make way to privatize entire sections of the state.
Eliminating the unions is for corporate interests, not to help the states. But the rush in Washington and elsewhere is to privatize everything. There are many functions that government does that should be left to them because profit motive would pervert their purpose. The agenda the republicans are following is a very advanced form of fascism and they would like for the people not to be able to interfere with it.
They are really not interested in Democracy or even a republic. When they are finished we would essentially be a dictatorship under corporate rule.
Idiocracy here we are!
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Hadriel
State Employee, Michigan
10:52 AM on 03/10/2011
Well said sir, well said. Fanned and Fav'd.
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Willie12345
09:18 AM on 03/10/2011
Union folks aren't the only ones that work. The rest of us workers can't afford to pay for the union workers. Enough said.
10:29 AM on 03/10/2011
If they break the unions, you aren't going to be able to afford to pay for toilet paper. Unions stand between you and no breaks, no minimum wage, no overtime, no paid vacation, and no benefits. You'd better get on board and support these guys or your future and your kids' future is toast.
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cornedog
AA+
10:45 PM on 03/10/2011
Really? I doubt it. Willie said it right, we can't afford you.
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10:43 AM on 03/10/2011
That is not a factious comment. That is a *very real* statement.
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Skeptical Patriot
09:07 AM on 03/10/2011
I agree that playing politics by the Republicans is vile and should not be tolerate. By the same token, characterizing every attempt to shift long-term government spending to a rational playing field and to reset the obligation of government from self-preservation back to the tax payers first as "crushing the workers" is just as vile. Government and politicians have placed this country in enormous jeopardy through policies of massive gov't spending growth in all categories and not balancing the budget.

McDermott like so many on both sides of the aisle chooses words meant to create a culture war rather than actually getting to the core issues. Our country is in a world of hurt and this kind of partisan politicking does not help
09:23 AM on 03/10/2011
Generally I agree with much in your post - but as to the "vile" politics, the Wi GOP outmaneuvering the Dems is merely a matter of beating the Dems at their OWN game. Wisconsin may for the moment be the epicenter of the earthquake for public unions, but the biggest tremors will eventually be felt in the bluest states in the union - Ca and NY where Democratic governors already realize that the direction Walker is heading is also where they must head. As Walter Russel Mead illustrates, "the Old One Horse Shay" known as the "blue model" is not just falling apart in pieces, it is collapsing en masse.

http://blogs.the-american-interest.com/wrm/2011/03/07/paul-krugman-gets-it-half-right/
08:40 AM on 03/10/2011
Crushing workers make the ultra rich even more wealthy and Congress will get larger paychecks from them.
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Trepasky
Sanity is neither free nor easy
09:13 AM on 03/10/2011
Dream on. The wealthy pay a lower percentage in taxes than you do, it you make more then $40,000.
The net will be less revenue which will cause the state to raise taxes and fees and you will pay more.

Cut jobs --- loose tax revenue---- cut services ---- loose jobs----loose tax revenue --- cut business taxes ---- loose tax revenue.

SOme one will have to make up the difference and guess who that will be?
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den1953
The best politicians are for free!
08:29 AM on 03/10/2011
Your right Congressman crushing workers rights won't solve the budget problem, but allowing Wall Street to fleece those pensions, to save their azzes over bad mortgages sure did ruin labor rights, funny how law makers from the Republican party think, get the very people tax payers to bail out Wall Street while they rob them of collective bargaining rights. Bail the wealthy out by hitting the working class twice MR President you really need to step up to the plate on this one!
08:29 AM on 03/10/2011
Surely you dont believe Obama cares for anything but being reelected. He is Republican lite in actuality. Matt Damon called it right. Obama never fights for anything. He talks a good game,but his measures are half baked.He knows his base. Dems,would never vote Republican,so he abuses us.
The Republic is sinking under the weight of corrupt moneyed interests and reelection self interest.The South is already under the heel of the rich and they are targeting the Northern blue state unions.
08:04 AM on 03/10/2011
It's time to use the word fascist to describe Walker and his band. Republican? Not since Lincoln, TR and Ike!
07:53 AM on 03/10/2011
Unfortunately, the democrats have refused to prosecute the wall street crime syndicate that caused all of this ... not that the republicans will either. So it the political and financial crime waves continue rolling in ...
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07:26 AM on 03/10/2011
U.S. infrastructure is built on a $20 barrel of oil. Not on a $75 barrel.

For many reasons, oil will remain above $75 per barrel for ever.
07:17 AM on 03/10/2011
Don't trust any state or federal politician who talks about "deficits" and "balancing budgets" on the back of working people. These are the same guys who just voted for Bush Tax Cuts for the Rich and voted over and over to extend the $2 billion/day wars. Ignore all politicians right now.
Power to the People!