Townhall
Finance
Federal
Court Upholds Wisconsin Law
on Unions
By Mike Shedlock
Those
looking for excellent news in
the midst of a clearly-souring global economy can find it in Wisconsin.
I
am pleased to report Federal appeals
court upholds Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker’s restrictions on public
unions
A
federal appeals court on Friday
upheld Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker’s contentious law stripping most
public
workers of nearly all of their collective bargaining rights in a
decision
hailed by Republicans but not undoing a state court ruling keeping much
of the
law from being in effect.
The
decision marks the latest twist
in a two-year battle over the law that Walker proposed in February 2011
and
passed a month later despite massive protests and Senate Democrats
leaving for
Illinois in a failed attempt to block a vote on the measure.
The
law forced public union members
to pay more for health insurance and pension benefits, which Walker
said was
needed to address a budget shortfall. It also took away nearly all
their
bargaining rights.
Walker
and Republican Senate
Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald, who fought for passage of the bill,
called
the ruling a win for Wisconsin taxpayers.
“As
we’ve said all along, Act 10 is
constitutional,” Walker said in a statement, referring to the law’s
official
designation.
While
Friday’s 2-1 ruling by a
panel of the 7th Circuit could influence the state appeals court and
others
hearing the cases, it’s not binding, said Paul Secunda, a Marquette
University
law professor. It certainly doesn’t signal the end of the legal fights,
he
said, and it could be appealed to the full federal appeals court and
the U.S.
Supreme Court
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