Wednesday, July 09, 2014

Wisconsin under attack by Union Activists : Prosperity Must be Stopped

Just give this a little thought in light of what Governor Scott Walker has done to bring this state back from the brink of disaster, $3.6 billion in debt caused by democrats, and how he has opened the state to new job creating industries, including the thousand of jobs that will be created by the mining operation in Northern Wisconsin that really needs the jobs, but this seems to have little or no effect in the polls showing Mary Burk running neck and neck.

Democrat Mary Burk says she will return the state back to where the state belongs, high unemployment and staggering debt. Act 10 will be repealed.

If these polls are any where near correct, and I hope they are not, polls always tighten closer to the election, but never the less turning the state back to the democrats would be a display of voter incompetence and staggering ignorance.

Can it happen in Wisconsin, of course, look what happened in 2012, Wisconsin voted for Mr Obama even in the face of his total incompetence on display for all to see.

Labor activist admits minimum-wage referendums are aimed at derailing Walker re-election



It’s not about giving Democratic candidates an advantage at the polls. It’s all about giving constituents a voice on one of the most talked-about issues in the country.

That’s the response of some Wisconsin public officials to the growing number of nonbinding minimum wage referendums popping up in counties and cities all over the state.

But Jennifer Epps-Addison, executive director of Wisconsin Jobs Now, a front group for the Service Employees International Union, told the Huffington Post in a story published Wednesday that her organization and other activists are hoping to use the referendums to entice more liberal voters to the polls in November.
And their ultimate goal? To help their Democratic gubernatorial candidate Mary Burke defeat Republican Gov. Scott Walker, who has repeatedly said he doesn’t support raising the hourly minimum wage from $7.25 to $10.10 because of the potential of killing jobs.
“This is a really close race, and what we think will happen is that it will force the issue to become a more central theme in both of the candidates’ campaigns,” Epps-Addison told the Huffington Post. “We want to make sure that folks who are most directly affected by the level of income inequality in Wisconsin have their say at the ballot box, and that will translate to some level of political power for them.”

Wisconsin Jobs Now’s Raise Wisconsin campaign has been instrumental in circulating petitions to place advisory minimum wage referendums on ballots throughout the state, including in Milwaukee and Dane counties, Appleton, Neenah and Menasha.

It’s easy to understand why Wisconsin Jobs Now is pushing for the minimum wage. If employees receive higher wages, the SEIU and other unions will be able to collect more dues, and thus, have more political power.

But they’ll say it’s only about supporting workers, creating jobs and improving the economy, claims that economists around the country have refuted. Maybe that’s why Wisconsin Jobs Now officials found it necessary to craft a scientific-looking report in conjunction with the University of Wisconsin’s Center on Wisconsin Strategy on the benefits of raising the minimum wage, according to an investigation by Mediatrackers.org.

Emails obtained by Mediatrackers.org through open records requests show that COWS Associate Director Laura Dresser, a self-described liberal activist, was receiving her marching orders from Wisconsin Jobs Now community organizer Peter Rickman, who also helped write the Milwaukee County “living wage” law that’s expected to be a boon to the SEIU.
“I’m gunning for a joint EPI/COWS report on raising the minimum wage to $10.10 – it would be part of a campaign stage-setting in calendar 2014, probably something in the first run of the legislative session” Rickman wrote in a Nov. 19, 2013, e-mail to Dresser and Economic Policy Institute analyst David Cooper.

The EPI, whose board of directors is chaired by American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations President Richard Trumka, has nearly 20 labor unions donating to its causes.

Cross Posted from the Wisconsin Reporter

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