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 Protesters stay in Wisconsin Capitol as defiant governor digs in
By *the CNN Wire Staff*
 February 27, 2011 7:17 p.m. EST
  [image: Gov. Scott Walker's legislation limits the collective bargaining
rights of unions.]
Gov. Scott Walker's legislation limits the collective bargaining rights of
unions.
 *STORY HIGHLIGHTS*

   - NEW: A deadline officials set to close the Capitol building to
   protesters passes
   - NEW: Demonstrators remain in the building and say they are willing to
   risk arrest
   - Governor Walker says layoffs could come soon if the budget bill is not
   passed
   - AFL-CIO president: "This isn't about the budget crisis"

*Check out CNN iReport to see
photos<http://ireport.cnn.com/ir-topic-stories.jspa?secondarySortBy=last24hours&sortBy=oncnn&sortOrder=2&numResults=12&filterBy=oncnn&topicId=557473>from
the protests and read
personal 
stories<http://ireport.cnn.com/ir-topic-stories.jspa?secondarySortBy=last24hours&sortBy=oncnn&sortOrder=2&numResults=12&filterBy=oncnn&topicId=557473>from
Wisconsin residents. If you're participating in the rallies, be sure
to
share your story<http://ireport.cnn.com/ir-topic-stories.jspa?topicId=557473>!
*

*(CNN)* -- Union workers and activists refused to leave the Wisconsin
Capitol building Sunday, against police orders, raising the stakes in a
standoff with the state governor who has called to limit collective
bargaining rights.

While many protesters left, hundreds of demonstrators remained inside the
building as the 4 p.m. CST deadline passed. Some say they are willing to
risk arrest.

Police, meanwhile, say they are still trying to convince people to leave
voluntarily so that authorities can clean the building, which has been
occupied by demonstrators for some two weeks.

"We have the right to be here. This is the people's house. This is a house
of labor. This is a house that Wisconsin built," Mahlon Mitchell, president
of the Professional Fire Fighters of Wisconsin, said from inside the
Capitol.

Protesters are upset with Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, who has so far
not shown any sign of backing down from a conflict that has become a flash
point in the nation's debate around labor unions.

Wisconsin is "broke," and unions use their power to block necessary
cost-saving measures, the embattled first-term Republican argued Sunday on
NBC's "Meet the Press."

"It's about time somebody stood up and told the truth in this state, and
said, 'Here's our problem, here's the solution,' and acted on it," he said.
"Because if we don't, we fail to make a commitment to the future."

Minutes later on the program, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka assailed
Walker.
   Tackling deficits with two governors
   Wisconsin's collective bargaining battle
   Gov. Scott Walker: 'About the future'
   *RELATED TOPICS*

   -  Wisconsin <http://topics.cnn.com/topics/Wisconsin>
   -  Scott Walker <http://topics.cnn.com/topics/Scott_Walker>
   -  Labor Unions <http://topics.cnn.com/topics/Labor_Unions>

"This isn't about the budget crisis," Trumka said, adding that Walker's
arguments have "migrated" as his justifications have been refuted.

"Governors that are willing to sit down and work with their employees can
work out problems," Trumka said. "We can solve them. But that's not what
Governor Walker is doing. He says, 'I won't talk to you.' "

Walker will talk to big contributors, but he "won't talk to employees,"
Trumka added.

Earlier on CNN, another union head also accused the governor of using
financial arguments as a deceit.

"Walker is saying it's a budget crisis when it isn't a budget crisis," said
Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers. "The
workers have already said publicly, because he refuses to meet with them,
that they would take the cuts to take-home pay that he has asked for here.
So this is a ruse to shift power to his friends, because at the same time
what he said was that he wanted to give tax breaks to the friends who put
him into power."

The Wisconsin Assembly has passed a Republican bill that would strip most
state workers of the bulk of their collective-bargaining rights. Among other
things, the measure would require workers -- with the exception of police
and firefighters -- to cover more of their health care premiums and pension
contributions.

Collective bargaining would be limited to wages, though any pay increases
beyond the inflation rate would be subject to voter approval.

The bill must now clear the Wisconsin Senate. However, 14 Democratic
senators have fled to neighboring Illinois to prevent a quorum from voting
on the issue.

Walker called on the lawmakers to "come back and do their job."

"If we fail to pass this bill by Tuesday, we lose $165 million worth of
savings. If we continue down that path we start seeing layoffs," he warned.

Walker repeatedly cited his experience as a local official in explaining his
call to curtail bargaining rights for government. As a county executive, he
tried "modest" changes in pensions and health care, and tried to implement a
35-hour work week "to avoid massive layoffs and furloughs," Walker said.
"And the unions said, 'Forget it.' Emboldened by the fact that they had
collective bargaining agreements, they said, 'Go ahead, literally lay off
400 or 500 people.' "

Asked why the exemption for firefighters and police, Walker responded the
decision "boils down to public safety." If any firefighters or police were
to walk off the job in protest, "I can't afford to have a fire or crime
committed where there's a gap in service."

Walker also defended himself against attacks stemming from a prank call in
which he thought he was speaking privately to a wealthy conservative
activist. The caller was in fact liberal blogger Ian Murphy, who posted the
call online.

At one point in the call, Walker said, "This is our time to change the
course of history."

Critics say his comment is a sign that he is an ideologue looking to reshape
the system and end collective bargaining power rather than a pragmatic
governor looking to balance a budget.

"I do believe that. This is our moment in Wisconsin's history," Walker told
NBC. He added that "legislatures before have kicked the can" by not
providing long-term fixes. "I make no apology for the fact this is an
important moment in time," he said.

In the prank call, Murphy suggested "planting some troublemakers" among
people protesting the measure in Madison. "We thought about that," Walker
replied in the call.

Asked Sunday whether he had really thought about such an idea, he responded,
"We rejected that." Government officials looked at "all sorts" of
suggestions, and rejected that idea "because we've had a civil discourse,"
he said.

Weingarten, speaking to CNN, said workers in Wisconsin have sent a message
to Walker that "'we understand and we will do our fair share.'" But Walker
is sending a different message, Weingarten said: "'I'm just taking away your
voice at work.'"

In the long term, that message "is ridiculous because collective bargaining
is the way to increase quality," she said.

When President Barack Obama was campaigning in 2007, he made a promise: "If
American workers are being denied their right to organize and collectively
bargain when I'm in the White House, I'll put on a comfortable pair of shoes
myself. I'll walk with you on the picket line as president of the United
States of America because workers deserve to know that somebody is standing
in their corner," he said during a speech in Spartanburg, South Carolina, on
November 3, 2007.

While the president has publicly expressed support for those fighting to
keep collective bargaining in Wisconsin, he has not joined them at protests.

But Trumka of the AFL-CIO insisted that Obama, who faces federal budget
challenges, is "doing it the right way."

"He's not taking on workers like Scott Walker is and trying to take away
their ability to come together and negotiate a middle-class way of life,"
Trumka said.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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