The
Foundry...
Morning
Bell: A Historic Win for Reform in Wisconsin
by Mike
Brownfield
June 6,
2012
The state
of Wisconsin has once again lived up to its billing as a Midwestern
incubator
of Big Ideas. In yesterday’s case, when voters resoundingly defeated a
liberal
effort to recall Governor Scott Walker (R), the Big Idea was that
reformers who
come armed with the strength of their convictions can carry the
day–even
against mobs, labor unions, Hollywood, the media, academia and
everything else
the left throws up these days. All reformers need to do is lead.
In Walker’s
case, his weapon in the fight against out-of-control government was a
promise
to the voters of Wisconsin that, were he entrusted with their vote, he
would
bring sweeping reforms to state government. One year ago, Governor
Walker
fulfilled that promise, and last night the voters rewarded him for his
leadership by resoundingly rejecting an effort to remove him from power.
It was a
historic recall election that focused nationwide attention on what has
become
an existential threat to state governments — the problem of
public-sector
employee pensions and benefits running states into the red. Walker
unabashedly
confronted that threat without straddling a fence or tiptoeing around
Big
Labor’s Maginot Line. Facing a $3.6 billion deficit and the fourth
highest tax
burden in the country, Walker instituted policies designed to bring
some sanity
to state government. Those reforms included asking public sector
workers to
contribute a modest 5.8 percent of their salaries to their pensions and
at
least 12.6 percent of their health-care premiums while also limiting
the
collective bargaining power of public sector unions. (Even that is a
small
amount, as Heritage’s Jason Richwine shows in a new paper examining the
true
costs of public pensions.)
Those
moderate policies sent labor unions and their allies into full-on
crisis mode.
Tens of thousands of protesters stormed Wisconsin’s capitol last
spring,
Democratic state senators fled the state in hopes of blocking a vote on
the
measures, and lawsuits were filed to block the law from taking effect.
Ultimately, Walker’s reforms were upheld, yet a massive effort to
recall the
governor was undertaken.
In short
order, a massive campaign to unseat Walker was launched. Unions poured
millions
of dollars into the race to attack the governor, President Barack Obama
weighed
in on the eve of the election (albeit timidly, with a Tweet) and
endorsed
Walker’s opponent, and grassroots armies descended on the state to turn
out the
vote. Yesterday, the voters of Wisconsin had an opportunity to examine
the
governor’s reforms and render a verdict on whether they approved of the
direction he has taken their state.
One of
Governor Walker’s reforms included giving government workers the option
to
choose whether they wanted to pay union dues. When given the option,
tens of
thousands of members chose to leave the union. And according to exit
polls, a
third of union households backed Walker. But union leadership remains
out of
touch with the fiscal crisis Wisconsin, and our nation, faces. Yet as
the
people of Wisconsin know, Walker’s reforms have helped Wisconsin turn
the
corner. Since Walker took office, the state unemployment rate has
fallen from
7.7 percent to 6.8 percent— well below the national average of 8.2
percent. And
last year, Wisconsin employers actually created 23,000 jobs. In other
words,
Wisconsin’s economy is growing all while the rest of the country faces
very
troubled economic time.
Walker’s
victory will send shockwaves across the country. Last year, the
governor took a
strong stand for the proposition that public sector unions should not
negotiate
their taxpayer-funded benefits with politicians they helped elect using
mandatory dues. And he also stood for reforms that curbed spending and
got his
state’s budget under control — without raising taxes. Despite facing a
recall
election, Walker was ultimately rewarded for a job well done.
There
have only been three gubernatorial
recall elections in U.S. history, and Walker was the first one to
survive the
challenge. As Louisana Governor Bobby Jindal said last night on Fox
News, “What
Scott Walker has proved tonight is that good policy makes great
politics.”
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