Tuesday, June 5, 2012, will be remembered as the beginning of the long decline of the public-sector union. It will follow, and parallel, the shrinking of private-sector unions, now down to less than 7 percent of American workers. The abject failure of the unions to recall Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker — the first such failure in U.S. history — marks the Icarus moment of government-union power. Wax wings melted, there’s nowhere to go but down.

The ultimate significance of Walker’s union reforms has been largely misunderstood. At first, the issue was curtailing outrageous union benefits, far beyond those of the ordinary Wisconsin taxpayer. That became a nonissue when the unions quickly realized that trying to defend the indefensible would render them toxic for the real fight to come.

So they made the fight about the “right” to collective bargaining, which the reforms severely curtailed. In a state as historically progressive as Wisconsin — in 1959, it was the first to legalize the government-worker union — they thought they could win as a matter of ideological fealty.

But as the recall campaign progressed, the Democrats stopped talking about bargaining rights. It was a losing issue. Walker was able to make the case that years of corrupt union-politician back-scratching had been bankrupting the state. And he had just enough time to demonstrate the beneficial effects of overturning that arrangement: a huge budget deficit closed without raising taxes, significant school-district savings from ending cozy insider health-insurance contracts and a modest growth in jobs.

But the real threat behind all this was that the new law ended automatic government collection of union dues. That was the unexpressed and politically inexpressible issue. Without the thumb of the state tilting the scale by coerced collection, union membership became truly voluntary. Result? Newly freed members rushed for the exits. In less than one year, AFSCME, the second largest public-sector union in Wisconsin, has lost more than 50 percent of its membership.

It was predictable. In Indiana, where Gov. Mitch Daniels instituted by executive order a similar reform seven years ago, government-worker unions have since lost 91 percent of their dues-paying membership. In Wisconsin, Democratic and union bosses (a redundancy) understood what was at stake if Walker prevailed: not benefits, not “rights,” but the very existence of the unions.

So they fought and they lost. Repeatedly. Tuesday was their third and last shot at reversing Walker’s reforms. In April 2011, they ran a candidate for chief justice of the state Supreme Court who was widely expected to strike down the law. She lost.

In July and August 2011, they ran recall elections of state senators, needing three to reclaim Democratic — i.e., union — control. They failed. (The likely flipping of one Senate seat to the Democrats on June 5 is insignificant. The Senate is not in session and won’t be until after yet another round of elections in November.)

And then, Tuesday, their Waterloo. Walker defeated their gubernatorial candidate by a wider margin than he had two years ago.

The unions’ defeat marks a historical inflection point. They set out to make an example of Walker. He succeeded in making an example of them as a classic case of reactionary liberalism. An institution founded to protect its members grew in size, wealth, power and arrogance. A half-century later these unions were exercising essential control of everything from wages to work rules in the running of government — something that, in a system of republican governance, is properly the sovereign province of the citizenry.

Why did the unions lose? Because Norma Rae nostalgia is not enough, and it hardly applied to government workers living better than the average taxpayer who supports them.

And because of the rise of a new constitutional conservatism — committed to limited government and a more robust civil society — of the kind that swept away Democrats in the 2010 midterm shellacking.

Most important, however, because in the end reality prevails. As economist Herb Stein once put it: Something that can’t go on, won’t. These public-sector unions, acting, as FDR had feared, with an inherent conflict of interest regarding their own duties, were devouring the institution they were supposed to serve, rendering state government as economically unsustainable as the collapsing entitlement states of southern Europe.

It couldn’t go on. Now it won’t. All that was missing was a political leader willing to risk his career to make it stop. Because, time being infinite, even the inevitable doesn’t happen on its own.

Charles Krauthammer is a columnist for The Washington Post. Readers may contact him at letters@charleskrauthammer. com.

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86 Comments

  1. Scott Walker to the Wisconsin Unions,” Come smell the dairy air of the new regime”…Brats and beer for everyone.

    1. He is gonna have to savour the smell for a long time, I here they are picking out a jail cell for him!

      Jail # 10 Perjury lane

      1. One does have to admit that Walker is both creative and long-lived. To date he’s the only Governor that has an active CRIMINAL DEFENSE FUND that working to keep him outta jail. But what’s really interesting is that the Local, not the DC, U.S. Attorney has an on-going Grand Jury that has called every member of Walker’s Cabinet, and Staff (who are the one’s that see it ALL). Walker can cry to the media that the DC Democrats are after him for beating up on them all he want’s. When the Grand Jury votes to indict, well, the crying is over. So far as it looks right now Walker is looking at campaign finance question’s, ala John Edwards, selling his office, and given the number of folk’s that have been subpoenaed more than once, witness tampering if not outright obstruction of justice. Naw, Walker can have his little party right now. But when the Grand Jury indicts, his party is gonna be about the only thing that’s gonna be remembered as far as the re-call is concerned.

        1. Do you actually know what “indict” means? Of course, Gov. Walker’s enemies will use every avenue possible to destroy him. So far…it’s all back-fired…..and back-fired in a nationwide way…for all to see from coast to coast.

          In 2010, Wisconsin voters spoke. They spoke again on June 5, 2012. The weary and worn voters of Wisconsin, who support Scott Walker, and how he has faithfully fulfilled his promises to get Wisconsin back in fiscal health could ask Gov. Walker’s ominous enemies…”what part of NO don’t you understand?”  Do they dare to keep digging the hole….they’re a long way down in that hole now.

          As far this next scheme of indictments and investigations….the voters of Wisconsin will make the call on this one also.

          1. A Federal Indictment is voted on by a Grand Jury of 26. All that’s required is a 2/3rd’s vote. Such is the justice system. But the more the vote is to a 100 % vote the greater the power that the US Attorney has toward a conviction. And under Federal, and Wisconsin State law, a sitting Governor must step down until their legal position has been resolved by either a trial or a dismissal of the charges for lack of evidence. With a Grand Jury voting to indict, I’d say that the evidence issue is pretty much settled, don’t you ?

            As far as the voter’s of Wisconsin go, well, if they believed all of the crap that the Koch Brother’s and the rest of them fed them then they deserve what they get. Was Barrett a good candidate ? Probably not. But the fact that a recall was required, and met the State statute requirement’s in record time, should give fair warning that the voter’s are running outta’ patience with politician’s, of either side, who make hoopla speeches and then go and ‘gaslight’ the voters with press releases that are nothing more, when investigated, that Charmin coming off a GOP paid for printing press. The Democrat’s have in place a jobs plan now, ready to go. That the House GOP refuses to even hear it, much less vote on it, is all the public demonstration I need to see just who’s screwing the Country and for what purpose. And when Romney tells us all that it’s the ‘bad Gov’t worker’s’ who are screwing up the Country, well, it’s not hard to see where he’s going, now is it ? Nor is it hard to see who’s paying him, now is it ? No, Mitt’s made his bed. But he’s gonna have to be the one to both sleep in it and make it up since you can be assured that no one’s gonna be there for maid service anytime soon…………

          2. [With a Grand Jury voting to indict, I’d say that the evidence issue is pretty much settled, don’t you ?]   NO
            *************************
            Koch Brothers ?  George Soros.  Koch Brothers ?  George Soros. 
            Koch Brothers ?  George Soros.  Koch Brothers ?  George Soros. 
            Koch Brothers ?  George Soros.  Koch Brothers ?  George Soros.

            Even George Soros knew not to throw his millions down this rat-hole recall.  And the great and powerful Barack Obama knew not to waste his money on this reckless and brainless recall. However, just between you and me, Mike……we know Obama will pay for keeping his distance from this Wisconsin union fight.  OK..OK….OK….he tweeted support for Barrett on the eve of the election.

            Word of good advice to Mike Kiernan…….”don’t worry, be happy”    

          3. The only thing gonna make me happy is common sense and reality returning to the GOP. So far all I’m seeing is a bad clone of a Star Trek episode. And it was also interesting to note the no where did the Tea Party open their mouth’s in Wisconsin for Walker. The smart one’s there see the writing on the wall. The more that that the Tea Party gets associated with the Koch Brothers and the Crossroad’s money, the worse it’s gonna get when it all gets exposed. Even Adelson is seeing that much. The oly one high diving into the empty pool left is Trump. Is it a wonder ?

  2. “the power of public sector unions among Democrats is a power that inhibits Democrats from putting forward innovative, future-facing ideas (about schools, health care, and so on) and keeps them focused firmly on the defense of the past.” Reducing that power frees Democrats to get really serious about making sure government delivers on its promises”

  3. Tuesday, June 5, 2012, a day that went down in infamy , will forever be remembered as the beginning of the second Labor Revolution in America!

    Obama 2012

    1. You are going to actually have to find some members though. Could be a tough go. :)

        1. Maine used to be they home of Yankee ingenuity and a place for a particular kind of independence. That appear to be gone now.  I am not sure I would call these people communists as much as I would “entitled”. It’s like everyone grew up being told everything had to be fair or equitable and it was ok to take from someone else to make it so.

          I think it is Elmo from Sesame Streets fault.  :)

          1. No. I’m proud to be from Maine and don’t consider myself to be better than everyone else. And isn’t it funny that those constantly harping about personal responsibility are generally of the generation that bore the exact generation they complain about? Some might call that scapegoating. ;)

          2. My family has been here for 250 years. You probably showed up with the hippie wave in the late 60’s.

            Edit:
            Well done. You edit your post AFTER I respond to you.

          3. Didn’t see your response, but how typical of you to assume the worst in people!

            And girl please. I’m Acadian and Miqmaq, was here before you. So, well done! You show up AFTER I was here ;)

          4. Funny then you haven’t seen the decline in Yankee ingenuity and independence and increased dependence. How did you miss it?

  4. What does Wisconsin mean? Walker got less than 1% more of the votes than he did in 2010. That means the cookie crumbled exactly the same way. So as usual, the rabble rouser Krauthammer is going on and on about nothing — certainly nothing based in reality at least. 

    1.  Funny that Barrett and for that matter Falk, the Dem primary opponent, didn’t dare campaign on the union issue. Don’t you find that curious at all?

      1. No, because unions have been vilified and demonized. Union has been turned into a dirty word, much like liberal or progressive have. If you harp and obsess on them enough, of course you can turn people against them. Do you find it curious that Romney doesn’t talk about his work on health care? Same thing, it’s been demonized. It’s politics of fear and division — it’s so far beyond actual real policy concerns.

        But like I said, the cookie crumbled the exact same way, so trying to extract this doom and gloom narrative out of it just makes the author look ridiculous, but that’s not new.

        1.  Yes and the fact that the new Wisconsin law saved taxpayers millions of dollars without having to lay people off had absolutely nothing to do with it.

          1. That’s it, just ignore what I said. Maybe you and Krauthammer would have an actual point had Walker won by a landslide, but he didn’t even get a full percentage point more of the votes than he did in 2010.

            But yeah, whatever you say, millions spent demonizing opponents to get a sliver more of the votes — that’s a true mark of the end of unions and Obama as we know them. Spot on analysis! 

          2. What you say about the results is irrelevant. The Liberals and the unions set out to destroy him, and they failed, plain and simple. The people spoke. 

          3. I sleep well knowing my positions are based upon principles. I know you can’t say the same. 

          4. Then it looks like by going after Walker the unions committed suicide. 

            It seems to me that for most of two years Walker has been demonized by the press… from Maine to Wisconsin and beyond. The Democrats have tried in multiple venues to overturn the law. They failed in past recall elections and court cases and even lost on a Judicial election. It seems to be hypocritical that when a Democrat outspends a Republican that is “democracy in action” but when a Republican outspends a Democrat that is “stealing an election”.

            By the way… Where were all the Democratic 1%’ers? Why didn’t George Soros cough up some money or the Hollywood elite? Where was the campaigner in chief? The fact that the rich left abandoned Barrett and the rich conservatives backed Walker should tell you something.

            Public sector unions are on the way out. They can’t even collect dues from their own members without extortion enforcing the collection.

          5. zzzzzzzzzzzz, nothing changed. 

            If you want to go on tangents, post a new comment. Don’t reply to mine with your irrelevant non-points. It’s just obvious that you’re desperate to change the subject when your unnecessary hyperpartisanship is highlighted.

          6. You funny. I directly responded to your post.
             
            You spoke of demonizing…. I spoke of demonizing.

            If you can’t handle my response ignore it.

          7. LOL! You said NOTHING of demonizing and you ignored my question. Then you quoted some non-person, cited George Soros, alluded to OWS, and then talked about “extortion.” Those are called tangents and you appear to love them.  The only thing direct about your response is that it’s directly under mine and that’s about it.

          8. I thought you were more literate than that.
            I quote me.
            “It seems to me that for most of two years Walker has been demonized by the press… from Maine to Wisconsin and beyond. “

          9. You made a swift claim with no support and then went on your tangent tirade. I just find it ridiculous that you make these claims, I respond, you ignore them and then just change the subject. It’s constant.

            Nothing has changed. The vote was nearly identical, despite millions being spent. I spoke of demonization because you tried to claim that no one wanted to mention unions because they were over as we know it, like somehow buzzwords don’t exist anymore. Why the hell would a candidate mention an issue that was just distorted and dragged through the mud? God, come on.

            But whatever. Keep going on your tangents and regurgitating all the same far right talking points. Democrats are all bad and unions want to steal your money. Liberals want a generation of lazy people that only use solar energy. The President was born gay in Kenya and thinks there was 57 states and blah blah. Anything to keep from having an actual discussion about actual things. 

          10. Cheesecake’s “hyperpartisanship” is sooooo highlighted, and I never would have guessed what side of the partisan dividing line you fall on.  Thanks for pointing that out for us.  Kettle, pot, black.

          11. There is a difference between having an opinion based upon principle and one based upon who the critique applies to. 

    2. Spin much? 

      Walker’s margin of victory increased by 37%, up from 124,638 votes to 171,665 votes.  

      This was the Union’s Armageddon.  They threw everything they had at it and were repudiated loud and clear. 

      Attemps to interpret the outcome any differently are delusional at best.

      1. HAHAHAHA!!! Nice try. You’re the one spinning. If Walker’s “margin of victory” increased then so did Barrett’s because he got 160,000 more votes than last time.

        Your spin is pathetic. Walker got 52.25% of the vote last time and 53.1% this time. That’s less than 1%. You’re the only one that is delusional here.

        1. LOL.  “If Walker’s ‘margin of victory’ increased then so did Barrett’s because he got 160,000 more votes than last time.”

          Ummmm…Barrett didn’t have a “margin of victory.”   He lost.  Big time.

          You’re the one claiming that Barrett won when he lost – I’ll leave that for the others here to determine who’s delusional…

          1. Oh come on, you can’t be serious. It’s an election, you compare votes against the other candidate, not themselves. You really think that Walker saw a 37% increase? There was a general increase and that was the turn out. Proportionally, Walker only saw a 1% increase in votes.

            You’re even worse than I thought if you side with the 37% increase claim.

          2.  Like I said Math. Let me give you a hint. You are starting from the wrong data. It was explained once to you.

          3.  You know this whole election has traumatized you. Your side lost. You need to accept it and move on.

          4. I’m not asking about who won or lost. Do you honestly buy the 37% increase or do you agree he only saw a 1% increase? I want your honest answer. Can you stop with the petty personal attacks for a second and just answer it?

            I’m not traumatized. I’m just stunned by how ridiculous the response to all this is. If Walker saw a 37% increase, then his opponent saw a similar increase. That’s a spin. The 1% increase is reality.

          5. I didn’t claim Barrett won! I said things largely remained the same. Walker may have gotten more votes, but there was a general increase in turn-out, so Barrett saw an increase in votes as well. Proportionally, Walker saw only a 1% increase. Your 37% claim is ridiculous and makes you look like the partisan hack that you are. 

    3.  The whole point was that the unions had a recall election forcing Wisconsin to elect their governor for a second time.  One would have to believe that unions saw no way that they could lose yet they did, by more than they lost the first time.  It was a crippling defeat for BIG LABOR and a huge victory for the people of Wisconsin.

  5. What it means is that the taxpayer who pays these
    salaries and benefits does not mind paying a nominal
    wage increase to people who work for US but are sick and tired
    and fed up paying lifelong benefits with little or in some cases
    no contribution by public sector employees. People are fed up
    with people able to retire with a lot less time on the job than
    the person in the private sector. People are fed up with paying
    for these folks to have paid healthcare benefits, pensions and more
    for the rest of their lives at OUR expense when many of us do not
    see anything close while we are PAYING FOR THEM TO HAVE
    these wonderful bennies.People are fed up with how they can pad
    their salary to obtain a pension that is close to if not more than
    what their average salary was. Not all states are the same in what and
    how they work these things out but they are all pretty close. What Wisconsin
    means is that the TAXPAYER has finally awoken and has said NO MAS!
    Heck even the “union members” in Wisconsin saw the handwriting and
    since they aren’t forced to pay dues have stopped paying by the thousands.
    Wisconsin also showed that the average citizen who pays taxes won’t condone
    their unions getting in bed with anarchists and radical zealots who want to
    intimidate, bully and rape the taxpayer.

    1. You obviously like being raped by your broker, your bank, your realtor and other various Wall Street minions instead.  Everything you listed above would not be a problem if you had the guts to elect people who would take the people’s side when contract negotiations with the public sector unions come around.  Take it from someone who has spent many hours on the “management” side of that table, has faced strike threats and has replaced a few tires during contract negotiations.  But we just continue to send political geniuses to Augusta, who are economic and labor morons.     

      1. I do pretty good dealing with brokers banks realtors insurance companies and wall street minions.
         What is tough to deal with is an intransigent government that thinks they not only know what’s in my best interest, but are going to give it to me whether I want it or not.

      2. Actually I have never been raped my broker or any bank
        I have dealt with. I have had very good interaction with
        real estate people and have done very well by the Wall St “minions”.
        Also my broker has been very instrumental in keeping my finances
        growing and investing smartly and wisely. I thank him every night
        before I go to sleep.
        I don’t quite understand what you are saying by having someone
        “take the people’s side”. If you mean having someone actually
        negotiate for the taxpayer instead of negotiating for union support to be re-elected,
        I would agree with that. If you are also implying that you have
        negotiated contracts and have had problems with union negotiators
        or strikers, then where do you find that I am saying I condone that?
        Unlike you, I have actually been on BOTH sides of contract negotiations,
        as a union official and as management. But this was in the PRIVATE sector
        and between a corporation and it’s union. It wasn’t politicians negotiating
        on behalf of their next election and trying to garner union support by giving
        away our tax money for the sake of a vote. In the private sector if you didn’t
        like a company for negotiating a contract, then you didn’t have to buy
        their product or service and could take your business and money elsewhere.
        With public sector contracts, the taxpayer is paying the salaries and benefits
        of these union employees yet have no say in the negotiations but are told
        they will pay whatever the elected officials deem is wonderful to give.
        So to say it once again…Wisconsin said ENOUGH and the elected officials
        did just that.

        1.  You’re lucky.  I lost 22% of my retirement funds during the so-called recession while Goldman/Sachs and the major banks played with depositors’ money.  All done in the open playing field that developed under the Bush administration’s “relaxation” of regulations that formerly prevented such gambling.  Ah – the wonders of unfettered capitalism ! When the boundaries are removed, natural underlying greed takes over.

          And yes – actual tough, straight up negotiation is required with public unions, just as in the private sector.  I also have been on both sides of the table, having paid 3% of my gross income to a subsidiary of the AFL-CIO for about 20 years.  Union members understand negotiation but not sudden and complete removal of their benefits, obtained over many years, by political fiat.  This will create a new playing field and I foresee some really nasty times in the future.  We can survive garbage strikes but walkouts of police and fire personnel, EMTs and other critical public employees are another whole ballgame.  The times – they are becoming interesting.

          1.  If you sold your retirement during the downturn. YOU made a mistake. If you left it alone. You are way up. Either you don’t know how to handle money, (get an adviser) or you don’t know how to read a statement. The only other way to loose money is if you were over weighted in financial stocks. (specialized fund)

  6. I really wouldn’t extrapolate this into some kind of “rise of a new constitutional conservatism.

    Google “overreach” and you’ll soon find a link to this story. 

  7. Once upon a time, some workers joined forces to advocate for better pay and working conditions. Through negotiations, they and their bosses reached agreements.
     
    Later, other workers noticed that they themselves were paid less and their own benefits, such as pensions, were not this good. Either they had jobs that forbade forming a union, or they could have unionized but had not bothered to do so.
     
    They envied the workers who had advocated for themselves.
     
    To make themselves feel better, they decided to reduce the other workers’ pensions and do their best to make sure no more workers could ever join forces to better their pay and working conditions.

    1. Agreed Liz. The real story here is that the strategy of rechanneling all that
      post-crash, populist angst and anger away from the malefactors of the financial
      crisis and directing it back at the larger middle-class community worked like a
      charm in Wisconsin. Scott Walker performed to his patrons’ (you know – the infamous Koch brothers, etc.) expectations, successfully creating a zero-sum game in which one group of have-nots was pitted against another group of have-nots. You can distill Scott Walker’s message down to this: “The reason you are suffering is because your neighbor takes home a pension and a health benefit.”

      1. What an arrogant statement!! You really believe people are unable to make up their minds? Did you know that 90%+ of voters had made up their mind at least 30 days before the election? Are you so arrogant as to believe that peoples property taxes played no role in their decision. Do you really think that the Unions side deal with insurance companies played no role?  

        Just like a left winger to think that people don’t know whats in their own best interest!!

        1.  And you’re telling me that advertising played no role in those decisions ?  The constant repetition of negative images had no effect ?  Obviously voters have to make up their own minds – in order to vote.  What influences that vote is the point.  I’m sure that the super pacs who put some $70M into that advertising – $20M in the last week alone – will be disappointed to learn that it had no effect. 

          1. According to CNN and their polling most money on advertising was spent in the last 30 days. People had made up their minds long before that. My recollection from election night was CNN reported some thing less than 3 % made up their minds in the last week. 10% in the last month.

            Wolfe Blitzer made that comment several times that night that the PACS wasted their money. The money that counted was the organization that got people to the polls.

            This isn’t me speaking  just my recollection from CNN election night.

          2. Not just the advertising–there were typical Republican dirty tricks, as well–such as jamming pro-recall phone lines and advising potential voters that, if they’d signed the petition, there was no need to vote.

          3. Gosh, well, Fox and Rush forgot to mention these things, so I had to (gulp!) get info elsewhere. I know it’s (eek!) illegal for Americans to think for themselves, but I did, so… let’s see…

            “complaints about robocalls allegedly telling recipients that they didn’t need to vote if they’d signed a recall petition” http://elections.wispolitics.com/2012/06/kennedy-said-usual-issues-with-election.html and several other sites.

            “reports of other campaign antics surfaced, including an attempt by Walker supporters to disable the Barrett campaign’s phone lines by flooding their call centers with spam phone calls.” http://ontd-political.livejournal.com/9732526.html#ixzz1xNKt9rnT and several other sites.

      2. Very well said. It amazes me that more people don’t see through this tactic–but of course that’s because Republican politicians are skilled at switching the playing field from logic to emotion (mainly envy, fear, and hate).

  8. And Charles Krauthammer nails the issue….right down to the last mumbling wimper of these sanctimonious, arrogant and self-seeking union members. They asked for it…..they got it…..right between their unbelieving eyes on June 5, 2012.  (Stand by….more to come….previews of coming attractions)

    BTW……where was the big-mouth of Jimmy Hoffa in all this? He howled at a Labor Day rally in Michigan how Conservatives and Republicans need to be “taken out” ….while calling them SOB’s.   LOL…Gov. Scott Walker is one Conservative that won’t be taken out…and that’s only the beginning. Lesson learned, Mr. Jimmy Hoof-Mouth?

    1.  Tell me why did all the big left wing donors Soros etc. sit this one out?

      Happy MY money went to beating you.

      1. I wasn’t in the election, so you didn’t beat me by any stretch of the imagination. I am a staunch Independent who thinks anyone that follows a parties platform rather than the candidate is a mindless sheeple. My comment was to illustrate that this recall election distilled down to pure financing. It’s too bad those fools (of both parties) could’nt have put the money ($18 mil in ads alone) toward the states deficit, but that would have made too much sense.

      1. Too bad the republocrats of both parties could’nt have put that money toward the states deficit, but that would have made too much sense.

  9. Please excuse the length, but here’s a little thought experiment:

    Number of teachers in Wisconsin: 59,552

    Number of millionaires in Wisconsin: 89,977

    Yes, it’s amazing, but true: Wisconsin by far has more millionaires than
    school teachers. Suffice to say, the two categories do not appreciably
    overlap.

    Average Wisconsin teacher salary: $46,390 (US rank: 28th among all states)

    Typical wage cut faced by a Wisconsin school teacher when Gov. Scott
    Walker’s non- negotiable give-backs are enacted: $5,567 to 6,958 per year
    (based on net total compensation reduction caused by Walker’s
    plan).

    Continuing average income boost for millionaires in Wisconsin and
    elsewhere, thanks to the extension of  2001 Bush-era federal tax cuts:
    Approximately $100,000 per year.

     

    So here’s the bottom line:

    If the State of Wisconsin increased taxes on resident millionaires
    to take back just one-twentieth of the extra money they’ve been keeping
    in their pockets thanks to the Bush tax cuts, that would totally wipe out the
    need to slash teacher salaries under Walker’s scheme. Totally.

    Would Wisconsin millionaires walking around with an extra $100K in their
    pockets every year notice the loss of five or six grand apiece? Unlikely.

    Will hard-working school teachers notice the loss of five or six grand from
    each of their pockets, thanks to Gov. Walker?  Damn right they will.

    Incidentally – Krauthammer is a millionaire.

    1.  Irrelevant though because property taxes not income taxes pay the lions share of education/public sector wages. Your entire post was meaningless.

      1.  So you’re telling me that you believe that the state does not (or perhaps you mean “should not”), in any way, subsidize education in Wisconsin (or Maine) beyond local property taxes ?  Well, I guess that you fall well in line behind what our governor would like to see with that one.  Incidentially,  you do like to use that word “meaningless”.  Perhaps it’s overuse is indicative ?

        1.  Oh it does. But the Lions share always comes from property taxes. I just voted for the Bangor school budget increase by early voting. BUT I would have had more confidence in my vote had I known for certain that the union was not pocketing a part of the tax increase in their sweetheart insurance deal like they did in Wisconsin…. did I just scr*w myself here with a property tax increase that goes direct to the union?

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