Tag Archives: Governor Scott Walker

State says Wisconsin Capitol Protesters have to leave Sunday

27 Feb

Thousands of demonstrators who have occupied the Capitol for nearly two weeks will have to leave by 4 p.m. Sunday, state Capitol Police Chief Charles Tubbs said Friday.

In a statement, Tubbs said the building will reopen on Monday at 8 a.m. The Capitol police will then more closely monitor the number of people in the building.

The statement said protest organizers agreed to remove items from the building, which has been cluttered with sleeping bags and mattresses as well as hundreds of signs and posters. Walls throughout the building have been plastered with signs denouncing Gov. Scott Walker and his budget-repair plan that on some days has drawn tens of thousands of protesters and counterdemonstrators to the Capitol.

“We are closing the Capitol for a short period of time for public health reasons, as well as for general building maintenance,” Tubbs said.

Walker shot down suggestions that he wanted to remove protesters as soon as possible.

“There’s an interest by Capitol police, by the end of the weekend, to consider start going back to normal business hours at the Capitol,” Walker said Friday.

The Capitol police are a division of the state Department of Administration, which Walker oversees.

The Tubbs statement said that protesters were asked to remove all large items from the rotunda Friday, although little had been moved by early evening. And several officers said they have not been told to order any type of removal. Starting Saturday, protesters will not be allowed to bring mattresses and blankets into the building.


Protesters have been sleeping in hallways and in various nooks and crannies throughout the ornate structure, a practice that police stopped Friday night. For Friday and Saturday nights, people were to remain on the ground and first floors. As of Saturday, people were not to bring in blankets or other sleeping gear. And beginning Sunday night, people will not be allowed to stay overnight.

Earlier Friday, a flier was distributed to police patrolling the building saying that “soft items” were to be removed beginning at 4 p.m. Among the items to be removed were tables, folding chairs, large boxes, mattresses, food, coolers, extension cords, easels and slow cookers and other cooking appliances. The flier also stated that “animals/snakes (exception: service animals)” were banned.

Throughout the day Friday, demonstrators were boisterous, although they were generally orderly and polite. Dozens of protesters were seen going through a revolving door single file while chanting anti-Walker slogans.

Before the announcement that the Capitol would close Sunday, Jim Palmer, executive director of the Wisconsin Professional Police Association, said Walker should keep the building open and allow the protesters to stay.

Palmer’s statement said “the protesters are cleaning up after themselves and have not caused any problems.”

Any items left in the building after 4 p.m. Sunday will be taken to a designated lost and found within the Capitol for people to claim before 6 p.m. March 4.

On Monday, the Capitol will return to its normal business hours, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on weekdays and 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturdays.

Source

Workers Stand Up to Wisconsin Union-Busting

26 Feb

Rallies were held across the country Saturday to support thousands of protesters holding steady at the Wisconsin Capitol in their fight against Republican-backed legislation aimed at weakening unions.

Union supporters organized rallies from New York to Los Angeles in a show of solidarity as the protest in Madison entered its 12th straight day and attracted its largest crowd yet: more than 70,000 people. Hundreds banged on drums and screamed into bullhorns inside, while others braved frigid weather and snowfall during a rally that spilled into city streets.

“I want to thank you for coming out here today to exercise those pesky First Amendment rights,” actor Bradley Whitford, who starred in television’s “The West Wing,” told his hometown crowd. “This governor has to understand Wisconsin is a stubborn constituency. We fish through ice!”

Republican Gov. Scott Walker has introduced a bill that includes stripping almost all public workers, from librarians to snow plow drivers, of their right to collectively bargain on benefits and work conditions. Walker has said the bill would help close a projected $3.6 billion deficit in the 2011-13 budget. He also argues that freeing local governments from collective bargaining would give them flexibility amid deep budget cuts.

The bill has sent Democrats and unions into an outrage nationwide. They see it as trampling on workers’ rights and as an attempt to destroy Democrats’ strongest campaign allies.

“Wisconsin is opening up people’s eyes a little bit,” said Jay Van Loenen, a teacher who attended a rally in Denver that attracted about 1,000 people. “So I think that the move is to try to get people more involved in their unions and create a stronger front so that if something happens here, we are prepared.”

Several thousand people gathered for a rally in Columbus, Ohio, where lawmakers are considering a similar bill. Indiana Democrats successfully blocked a Republican bill last week that would have prohibited union membership from being a condition of employment.

Large crowds of teachers, firefighters and public workers also gathered for rallies — holding American flags, wearing pro-union clothing and holding signs — in other capital cities including Topeka, Kan.; Harrisburg, Pa.; and Olympia, Wash.

In Los Angeles, public sector workers and others held signs that read “We are all Wisconsin.” Some wore foam “cheeseheads,” the familiar hats worn by Green Bay Packers fans.

Covered in layers of coats, scarves, hats and gloves, about 1,000 rally goers outside the Minnesota Capitol chanted “Workers’ rights are human rights” and waved signs, some reading “United we bargain, divided we beg.”

“The right to collectively bargain is an American right,” Eliot Seide, a local union leader, told the crowd in St. Paul. “You can’t have American democracy if you don’t have a strong trade union movement.”

The rallies were part of a campaign by the liberal online group MoveOn.org to hold demonstrations supporting Wisconsin workers in major cities across the country. Some of the demonstrations attracted counter-protests, though the pro-union rallies were larger.

Madison Police spokesman Joel DeSpain said he didn’t have a firm estimate on the Wisconsin capital’s crowd, but said it was larger than last weekend when nearly 70,000 people descended on the Capitol.

The crowd cheered as pilot Jeff Skiles, the first officer on the US Airways Flight that landed in New York City’s Hudson River in January 2009, told them that “justice and righteousness will always win out.” Skiles helped pilot Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger land the plane, whose 155 passengers and crew members were safely rescued.

Protesters jammed the Wisconsin Capitol steps, packed the ice-covered lawn — some sat in trees — and filled surrounding streets. Several thousand counter-protesters came out last Saturday to support Walker, but they were hardly visible this time.

Capitol police planned to let protesters stay overnight Saturday into Sunday, but plan to finally close the building Sunday afternoon to let crews clean it.

People held signs that called Walker a parasite and a dictator and demanded voters recall him. Michael Janairo, a 4-year-old of Sheboygan, held a sign that showed Green Bay Packers star linebacker Clay Matthews tackling Walker. Michael’s mother, Lisa Janairo, is not a public worker but drove to Madison to show support.

“For him to dictate and not negotiate is just wrong and we won’t stand for it,” the 45-year-old said.

Source

Glenn Beck Has Meltdown over Wisconsin Protests; Jon Stewart Throws Left under the Bus Again

22 Feb

Right-Wing and Phony Left Slander Protests

Who didn’t see this coming? Every time real-live working people show the slightest hint of independent thought media clowns come out the woodwork to belittle, insult and undermine the movement in any way they can.

On February 18th, Glenn Beck claimed on his show that the protests in Wisconsin are chiefly the work of “one-world government” agents, Islamic fundamentalists and communists. He accused each of these three groups of plotting to use the protests and revolutionary fervor to overthrow the existing order and create a “New World Order.” He also accused the protests of trying to create chaos and “provoke” martial law.

Despite the fact that protests were made up of workers and unions, he accused them of “trying to create chaos on the backs of the worker”:

“Unions claim the cuts will affect teachers but it’s not the everyday teacher that this story is really all about,” Beck said.

“There are three groups of people. They want a new world order. This is your choice. One world government. This is open society. This is United Nations, whatever you want to call it. One world government. They have lots of money and lots of power and they have NGOs, non-governmental organizations.”

“This is the United Islamic Nations, this is the one the Muslim Brotherhood is going for now. But it all looked like this, a new world order. They are organized, too. They have the religion and mosques and apparently help from Google as well… at least in Egypt.

“Then you have this one, workers union, they call it state capitalism. Really what it was good old-fashioned communism. They have unions and community organizing.”

Finally, the coup-de-grâce came today (Feb. 22nd) when Beck’s level of hysterics went up a notch.

“Is it a little hard to deny that radicals, Islamists, the communists, socialists will work together against Israel against capitalism, and they’ll try to work together to overturn stability? Who in the media is telling you this? Who? NAME THEM! Where are they? How can they possibly deny it at this point, and why wouldn’t they tell you these things?”

“Protests become contagious. Can you deny this anymore? They’ll cascade. They will sweep the Middle East, and they will begin to destabilize Europe and the rest of the world. Tell me what the hell Madison is? Show that picture up in front of New York right now. Tell me what this is? What the hell is this? It’s the unions poking, pushing, prodding. They will lose because they don’t know who you are.”

The reaction from the so-called moderates was not much better. Comedian and television personality Jon Stewart, who has a long history of riding the fence when push comes to shove, had this to say about the protesters’ comparison of themselves to the protesters in Egypt and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker to ousted Egyptian President Mubarak:

“The Egyptian protesters risked being shot. The Wisconsin protesters risked being caught in a drum circle,” Stewart said. “And as for protesters’ charge that [Gov. Scott] Walker is a tyrant, I will remind you that he was elected with 52 percent of the vote; tyrants tend to poll in the high-90s. C’mon, man, like 400 people died in those protests, reporters were brutally beaten, I’m sure you can come up with a more appropriate comparison” (1).

Not only did Stewart publically distort and minimize the very real threat posed to protesters by Gov. Scott Walker’s public threat to call in the National Guard if there were any unrest among state employees, he even went out of his way to reinforce the image of protesting workers as unwashed degenerates.

Clearly, such uprisings have flown in the face of the media, and can we honestly say this is a negative development? Despite the ignorant ramblings of media personalities, there are already people in the United States that think it’s high time we had an “Egypt Moment” in their own backyard.

Cited:

1) http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Global-News/2011/0223/Cheddar-revolution-Glenn-Beck-vs.-Jon-Stewart-on-Middle-East-Wisconsin-comparisons

Wisconsin Protests Continue

21 Feb

Wisconsin Protests Draw Thousands Of Workers Fighting For Key Union Rights

MADISON, Wis. — On Friday, February 11, at the same hour that the world watched the former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak resign his post, the newly appointed Republican Governor of Wisconsin quietly launched a ferocious attack on public sector unions — and the very notion of organized labor in America.

For nearly fifty years unions have sought to safeguard and advance their rights through a process known as collective bargaining, which is the most powerful tool labor has for peacefully resolving disputes and ensuring workers a voice in negotiations on everything from fair wages to safety conditions and sick leave.

The bill championed by Wisconsin’s governor takes dead aim at this process by stripping most state workers of many of their collective bargaining rights. Union leaders have responded uproariously, claiming that the bill effectively guts public unions of their most critical asset in a state that pioneered many of the fundamental fights for worker’s rights. Political chaos has ensued on both sides. State Democrats fled the state last week to prevent a vote on the legislation, while many Republican governors — some who already have similar bills on the table — watch carefully to see, if the bill succeeds, how they might pass anti-union legislature in their own states.

President Obama called the bill “an assault on unions.” On the ground in Wisconsin, the growing crowd of protesters portray their actions as part of a once-in-a generation struggle to shape the dynamic that determines what voice workers will have in the workplace. They feel the eyes of the world upon them. Last Friday as millions swarmed the streets of Egypt in a “Day of Victory” rally, a young man posted a picture on his Facebook page showing a sign reading “EGYPT Supports Wisconsin One World One Pain.”

Source

Solidarity with Wisconsin Workers!

Wisconsin Governor Threatens to call in National Guard against State Workers

14 Feb

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker made the dramatic announcement on the morning of 11 February that he is prepared to call in the Wisconsin National Guard to respond if there is any unrest among state employees. In the wake of his announcement that he wants to revoke nearly all of their collective bargaining rights. Walker said he has not called the National Guard into action, but he has briefed them and other state agencies in preparation of any labor problems. Walker’s attacks on the union workers violated a long-held state tradition of honest collective bargaining, and his threat to call the National Guard is an unnecessary insult to the state employees.

“Although this stunningly radical move is being cloaked as a budget necessity, it is a cruel hoax because Governor Walker and the Legislature have full authority to balance the state budget without attacking the fundamental rights of workers,” said Robert Kraig, executive director of Citizen Action of Wisconsin. “In reality this is a naked power grab by the large corporate interests that back Scott Walker and who seek unfettered control over Wisconsin politics.”

Indeed Robert Kraig is correct on this matter. Union workers losing the right to collectively bargain is not only an insult to the state workers in question, the very workers who teach the children, collect the trash, and keep the infrastructure intact; but is also an attack on all workers, including those in the private sector.

Should this measure be put into place, Wisconsin Unions will be effectively broken. Indeed, the fact that Governor Walker has already put the National Guard on alert demonstrates that should strikes break out the state will immediately use National Guard forces to break the union completely.

Given the history of times when the National Guards, or as they were called at the beginning of the 20th century, State Militia, have dealt with labor disputes, it would not surprise us if any such confrontation results in violence to the detriment of workers. Only 90 years ago, mine workers went on strike in Wyoming and West Virginia. As a result, the governments of both states called in the National Guard to wantonly murder strikers.

The American Party of Labor stands in solidarity with the public workers of Wisconsin!

Sources:

http://anonym.to/?http://www.biztimes.com/daily/2011/2/11/walker-says-he-will-call-in-national-guard-if-state-employees-balk-at-his-proposal

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