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Across the US, GOP Lawmakers Build States of Denial
Forced at gunpoint this weekend to clean out a lot of old paper files in anticipation of some home improvements, I ran across some articles and obituaries I had saved following the death, a little more than five and a half years ago, of the late, great Ann Richards, former governor of Texas.
One of them related the story of how Governor Richards was approached by the ACLU, which was disturbed by the presence of a Christmas crèche on the grounds of the state capitol in Austin. "You know," she replied, "that's probably as close as three wise men will ever get to the Texas Legislature, so why don't we just let them be."
Yet another late, great woman of Texas, journalist Molly Ivins once said of that same august body, "All anyone needs to enjoy the state legislature is a strong stomach and a complete insensitivity to the needs of the people. As long as you don’t think about what that peculiar body should be doing and what it actually is doing to the quality of life in Texas, then it’s all marvelous fun."
This comes to mind in the wake of this week’s release of "Texas on the Brink," a pamphlet published annually by the Texas Legislative Study Group, a group of Democratic state lawmakers. According to their research, much of it corroborated by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Texas Legislative Budget Board, in 2011, "Texas has the highest percentage of uninsured children in the nation. Texas is dead last in the percentage of residents with their high school diploma and near last in SAT scores. Texas has America’s dirtiest air... Those who value tax cuts over children and budget cuts over college have put Texas at risk in her ability to compete and succeed."
Over the years, such statistics and other damned shenanigans have led many to debate whether Texas is indeed the rightful landlord of the nation’s worst statehouse. As someone with a mother’s Lone Star blood flowing through his otherwise anemic northeastern veins, I write this with no small amount of perverse pride. But in the last couple of weeks a lot of other states have been giving Texans a run for their money.
Last week, the Utah Senate passed a bill that would make the Browning M1911 semiautomatic pistol the state’s official firearm. Senate President Michael Waddoups read a letter from a seventh grader praising the bill because the M1911 is used to kill Nazi zombies in the videogame "Call of Duty: Black Ops." Waddoups said the kid is "doing some thinking." You betcha. The Associated Press reported, "The letter closes with the child acknowledging that guns can cause violence when used in a bad way, but guns also show other countries who is the boss." American exceptionalism at its finest.
In Missouri, State Senator Jane Cunningham has introduced a bill that would, in the words of progressive website ThinkProgress, "dramatically claw back" state child labor restrictions, including the prohibition on employment of children under the age of fourteen and regulations on the number of hours a child may work during the day. South Dakota was contemplating -- but just tabled, thank goodness -- a bill that critics feared would expand the definition of justifiable homicide to include the murder of doctors who provide abortions. Idaho’s debating a bill to nullify Obama’s health care reform and in Arizona legislators are sponsoring one that would allow the state to nullify any Federal law it doesn’t particularly care for.
I would ask what’s gotten into them but I think we all know. As noted by Tim Storey, senior fellow of the National Conference of State Legislatures, since the midterm elections, "There are now more Republican state legislators (3,941) than at any point since they held 4,001 seats after the 1928 election... Twenty-two state legislative chambers changed majority control in the 2010 election cycle -- all in the direction of the GOP." Many of the newly elected members were endorsed by Tea Party organizations or have rushed to embrace the Tea Party’s inchoate, right wing agenda as a means to safeguard reelection.
In so doing they have opened a Pandora’s box of legislative mayhem that not only plays to the social conservatism that would return us to the days of Cotton Mather and the ducking stool but which also uses the Tea Partiers’ lust to slash spending as a dodge -- not to balance budgets and eliminate deficits, as they claim, but to further stifle government and other institutions dedicated to the common good.
This is supremely manifest in renewed efforts by governors and statehouses across the country to enact right-to-work laws and restrict wages and benefits for members of public service employee unions.
According to the AFL-CIO, legislators in at least 11 states, including Minnesota, Ohio, New Hampshire and Missouri are proposing anti-union laws that would cut pay and lower standards of living for workers. The labor organization claims,"Instead of creating jobs and solving the problems of middle-class working families, some state politicians are... saying 'Thank you' to the corporate CEOs who financed their 2010 election victories by pushing legislation to cut good jobs, lower wages, threaten job safety and weaken unions.' (Full disclosure: I am the president of a union affiliated with the AFL-CIO, albeit a small one that neither endorses candidates nor has a political action committee.)
This push most dramatically has come to a head in Wisconsin where, in the name of austerity, newly elected Republican Governor Scott Walker is attempting to stamp out public workers’ collective bargaining rights. His attack on the unions -- including a threat to call out the National Guard -- has been met by outrage and a mass exodus of Democratic legislators out of the state, thus denying Republicans a quorum at the Wisconsin Senate in Madison. (You may recall that Democrats in Texas pulled a similar ploy in 1979 and 2003 by hiding or going on the lam to nearby states, including Oklahoma and New Mexico. This prompted New Mexico’s then-Attorney General Patricia Madrid, a Democrat, to announce: "I have put out an all-points bulletin for law enforcement to be on the lookout for politicians in favor of health care for the needy and against tax cuts for the wealthy.")
Although Governor Walker claims Wisconsin is in desperate financial straits, the state had been coping better than most and, according to Madison’s Capital Times newspaper "has managed so well, in fact, that the nonpartisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau recently released a memo detailing how the state will end the 2009-2011 budget biennium with a budget surplus."
The paper editorialized, "To the extent that there is an imbalance -- Walker claims there is a $137 million deficit -- it is not because of a drop in revenues or increases in the cost of state employee contracts, benefits or pensions. It is because Walker and his allies pushed through $140 million in new spending for special-interest groups in January. If the Legislature were simply to rescind Walker’s new spending schemes -- or delay their implementation until they are offset by fresh revenues -- the 'crisis' would not exist... Unfortunately, Walker has a political agenda that relies on the fantasy that Wisconsin is teetering on the brink of bankruptcy."
It’s all part of that notorious separate reality in which Republicans and the right have taken up seemingly permanent residence. Democrats can hope the other side has overreached. The party will fight to win back the many seats they’ve lost in the states. But then again, as another wise elder of Texas politics once said, if you took all the fools out of the legislature, it would no longer be a representative body.
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18 Comments so far
Show AllI heard yesterday that there is a new play about Molly Ivins. I hope I get a chance to see it. When you read about what the right wing is up to, you have to laugh to keep from crying.
Got a proposal that might fluster the NRA. Free guns for everybody! If it's our right to have a gun, then why should we have to pay for one?
Visiting Professor,
You are 100% right. Hopefully, thanks to your words and those of others who have shown a light on the tag team duopoly scam that is politics in this sick country, more and more people will realize that our politicians are enemies of the state and can never be trusted or negotiated with. We are ruled by unindicted felons bereft of consciense or respect for the law. They will say or do ANYTHING to further enrich the elite criminal pigs.
Our system is broken. Thank you for helping more and more people understand that the system was broken by design.
So, to condemn the actions of Repubicans is to be a "shill for the Democrats? Right? Do you know what a non-sequitur is?
In my state, anyway, there are still substantial diffences between Republicans and Democrats. And apprently, this is true for Wisconsin as well.
Do you even know the name of your State Rep and and State Senator?
VP:
There is a difference between Dems and Repubs, though. Repubs generally work tirelessly to undermine the rights of workers. Dems just ignore issues. In my state (Michigan) that plays out like this: new tax burdens on the poor and seniors; tax breaks for business; an assault on public education, government workers, and teachers. The previous Democratic governor and legislature did not orchestrate such attacks, the present Republican leadership is presently doing just that. Your post has valid points, but it misses something important: the viciousness of Republicans versus the more moderate tone of Democrats. I cannot vote for Barack Obama in the next election, but I will vote to get rid of these sleazy SOBs that are destroying my state.
Indiana is no better. The governor, who clearly wants to run for president, has large enough majorities in both houses of the legislature that he can do anything he wants. And the thing he really wants is to destroy the teachers' union because it backs Democrats.
Meanwhile, the legislators, faced with a deficit, is passing laws to restrict abortions (even more than now) and working on a state constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriages (including civil unions) Deficit? What deficit?
Some of what the professor says is valid, but much of it is not. Obama spent two years listening to pragmatists who told him what could or could not be done.
Having a majority in both houses of congress does not mean you can pass anything. You need a substantial majority in the House and more than 60 votes in the Senate (to allow for people like Lieberman, Bayh and a few other so-called Democrats from the Midwest who really are Republicans).
Regardless of what Obama really wanted to do, he never had the solid majorities needed to pass what people who voted for him wanted him to do.
How come the Republicans can get everything they want with just 52 or so senators and the Dems can't do a damn thing unless they have 60?
I am REALLY tired of this argument (as well as the one that is stuck in the "Dems ARE different than Repubs" loop). Yes, we all know that on a myriad of social issues the (D) party more often aligns with progressive values than the (R). So?
And you gotta know that even if Obama had 100 clones of himself sitting in the Senate and 435 in the House, we'd still be looking at imperial war crimes in Iraq & Afghanistan, arrests and persecution of anti-war and other progressive groups, bank bail-outs, buckets of dollars being poured onto highways and pennies tossed onto rail tracks, ad nausem.
How did congress affect Obama's selection of people like Gates, Geitner, Summers, Holder, and Jeffrey R. Immelt (GE's CEO) - to head Obama's Economic Advisory Panel and "Job Creation Wizards Group"! This is the guy who
sent more US jobs overseas than any one else (I don't know if that's actually true, but I do know that under his direction GE has slashed tens of thousands of US jobs as they moved operations overseas where they weren't troubled with pesky environmental and labor laws.)
Here's my main point: a president is supposed to lead, not imitate Edvard Munch's "Scream" and immediately begin collaborating with the enemy to sign away our own Czechoslovakia in order to get people to sit together. He's supposed to lead! That means going door-to-door (figuratively) if necessary to teach, cajole, and LEAD the American people to do the right thing. And if the people don't listen, then I expect him to live up to his word ("I'd rather be a one-term blah blah blah") and do the right thing anyway.
Where were the lectures about single-payer? What does the Israeli government have on him, anyway? Why aren't we seeing Bush-era and Wall Street criminals on trial?
Because Obama was never about that; he does NOT embrace progressive and humane values or beliefs. He is a calculating, ambitious (D) politician who will continue to build his legacy on the debris of hundreds of thousands of American families' lives; the ghetto-ized lives, and bleak future, of the Palestinians; the corpses of tens of thousands of Iraqi, Afghan and Pakistan civilians; and the tattered remains of FDR's, Abe Fortas', and Saul Alinski's legacies.
I'd rather have a McCain who at least would have served to swell the ranks of those willing to take to the streets and demonstrate to the intellectually lazy and indecisive "independents" exactly WHAT tax cuts, smaller government, and "market forces" are really all about.
I think the fights have to be re-fought, I'm sorry to say, because too many of us have been taking the fruit of our forbears' struggles - labor, reproductive, civil liberties, etc. - for granted.
What in the world is going on here?
My thoughts too. Why have the gloves come off all over the world on social programs and the ramp up of the war against us versus the elites. Letting the banks steal money and homes. Going after teachers and others pensions and giving billions of dollars in aid to other countries while the US ramps up off shoring of jobs. It seems they are making the US a 3rd world country. Cutting aid for heating fir the poor, raising tutions so no one can even get an education for the jobs that are not there. It baffles me.
The probably Mormon kid playing Call of Duty which is made by the MIC will no doubt join up and forget the christian model Thou Shalt not kill.
Beats the hell out of me what is going on, but we better put a stop to it soon. Obama's rant of allowing people have a right to protest without brutallity will go away. Hell. It already has. Remember the police brutality at the RNC a few years ago.? Something is definetly up.
joecool9--You ask "why now?" I would answer "because it's time". They have been at this for at least 40 years, 75 if you track it from the attempted coup d'etat against Roosevelt in the 30's, and 97 years if you track it from the start of the Federal Reserve. They have used the resources of this country and the people in it to establish world domination. Now, they have China to suck dry, altho they may be surprised that the Chinese (learning well by example), actually suck them dry.
In January of 2008 I read an article, I think was on CD, about what Republican strategists are saying. What they said was that they were going to lose in November, and wanted to lose because the financial s**t would hit the fan in 2009 or 10 and they could blame it all on the Democrats and by 2012 could establish their one party state. The fact that it hit under their watch apparently made no difference to their plan.
Surely, if we read it, Dems knew about it. Visiting Professor is right. This is theater and we are close to the final curtain. The Dems are totally complicit, altho there are probably more clueless Dems than Rs.
We have been dumbed down, tricked out and infantalized so that we the people have no power. They have been very successful.
Don't worry too much about the billions of $'s going in aid to other countries, Joecool9. The US ranks lowest in the world per capita, amongst the industrialized countries, together with Japan, in the aid it gives out to the world. Most of that aid is military, most of it goes to poor, needy little Israel, most of the rest to what was once Egypt (the tear gas and F16s that failed to disperse the crowds in Tarhir Square).
Third word? Sure. Visit us here on the Res in NM. It ain't Scandinavia, that's for sure.
Visiting Professor- You give the voters too much credit for recognizing political intricacies. You may be right but the logic of ousting "bad" to elect "worse" is also stupid. The answer is that the conservative strategy has been in place for many decades, it is working as planned.
WYSO-FM out of Antioch at Yellow Springs OH had a brief interview with Ohio Public Radio's Karen (Kessler?) who is HQ in the basement of the Columbus State House (or used to be...).
Noting that Ohio is now attempting to limit rights of public employees in ways similar to the Wisconsin Governor Walker model, the WYSO person asked OPR's Karen, did she expect similar demonstrations in Ohio?
No. "There's a lot more blue in Wisconsin," I paraphrase Karen (who has a statewide PBS half hour show of her own on weekends). The GOP swept every Ohio elective executive branch office in the last election and controls the legislature and the State Supreme Court (elected), she noted.
Ohio had a pretty good governor (Dem Strickland) who tried to hold the state together through the Great Recession, but "populist" (Tea Party?) backlash put GOP former U.S. Congressman John Kasich in the gubernatorial seat. Before being elected governor and after his stint as a Congressman, Kasich had worked for Goldman-Sachs.
Strangely, many weeks ago, Kasich gave a speech at some political function during which he told a story about being pulled over by a cop for not slowing down while passing an accident scene. The cop was "an idiot," said Kasich. He used the word three times, according to a report on NPR. At first, few noticed his remarks, but then his speech went viral and the governor apologized.
Perhaps a bit late. Evidently, the FOP is pissed off, and their wages, benefits, and working conditions are as much under assault in Ohio as are those of the teacher unions and all the AFSCME people in the state.
I recall the Madison Firefighter strike in Madison, Wis. when their union head, Ed Durkin, seeing that union-busters were trying to divide the firefighters from the cops, spoke eloquently to the point that they were all union workers and stood together for the working people one and all.
Back then, in the late 1960s, U of Wis/Madison students were "rioting" over Nixon's secret bombing of Cambodia, and the Draft of course, the cops were all decked out in riot gear and using tear gas liberally, arsons were calling the firefighters into areas where there was a fear of snipers.
*****
Visiting Prof and others earlier here are correct to note a new level of assault on the Middle Class here. The goal is to kill the last vestiges of the Union Movement that actually created the American Middle Class by demanding and obtaining the legal right to "bargain" with respect to conditions of Labor.
Meanwhile, those privileged corporate "management" types who have a "salary" instead of an hourly wage, might want to recall how under Dubya, "management" could be required to work 60 to 80 hours a week with no increase in compensation (unless through such secondary devices as stock options or 401(k) plans: how's that working out?). The primary tactic in this country has always been Divide and Conquer. White sharecropper versus Freed slave during "Reconstruction" for example.
Wisconsin has a far richer history of Populism-Progressivism than does Ohio, the latter being a most regressive state responsible for more idiot GOP presidents than any other state. I am reminded of politically-related Northern-tier politicians such as Walter Mondale and Hubert Humphrey. And that in the early 20th century the influence of their Farmer-Labor coalition roots descended down to Texas, and Texas back up to the Sandinavian influence to the north, producing the likes of Molly Ivins and the late great Ann Richards. (Probably, most CD readers know more about the labor side here than the farmer side, and FDR's instituting agricultural price supports so dairy farmers would no longer need to dump milk into the streets to make a point!)
(The people were producing a surfeit of consumable wealth, threatening what economists term "deflation," which can be translated to lower prices [God forbid!] while the Capitalists needed Scarcity. War would consume the surfeit and impose the Scarcity.) (Yoeman farmers understood this: if I own my farm free and clear, I am not beholden to the usury of the banks, which back in the 19th century produced one financial crisis after another---again, because of the surfeit of goods and services, as well as too many idle minds with nothing better to do than subvert the Common Good in hopes of personal gain.)
Looks like the money changers have put themselves back in charge of the temple.
Meanwhile, one final point: it seems that few here have posted on the counter-Keynesian thrust of the state-by-state GOP assault on unions. Reduce worker capacity to consume and you reduce taxes on such consumption to the coffers of the state. It becomes a vicious cycle leading to poverty and increasing desperation.
Blood sweat and tears. Love and joy and may the Wisconsin rebellion spread across the land and thence to Washington D.C. The only reason ANYBODY has a "minimum wage" at Wal*Mart or anywhere else goes to the demands of unions. Destroy them, and you will die too young.
-30-
"According to the AFL-CIO, legislators in at least 11 states, including Minnesota, Ohio, New Hampshire and Missouri are proposing anti-union laws that would cut pay and lower standards of living for workers."
Cutting pay and lowering standards is exactly what is the definition of business "competition."
But, I am sure most of the workers think that competition is a good like in basketball or football.
"We are number one."