http://www.alternet.org/story/151305/seven_ways_scott_walker_and_the_gop_are
_still_trying_to_screw_wisconsin%27s_poor%2C_working_class%2C_and_just_about
_everybody_else?page=1

 

 

Seven Ways Scott Walker and the GOP Are Still Trying to Screw Wisconsin's
Poor, Working Class, and Just About Everybody Else

Wisconsin erupted in protest in February over an attempt to ban collective
bargaining, but Gov. Scott Walker didn't stop there in his war on the people
of his state. 

Alternet: June 15, 2011    

 

Wisconsin governor Scott Walker has taken a machete to the state's budget
and has clearly relished every swipe he's taken to social programs and civil
rights. The spirit of the enormous protests that sprang to life in February
over Walker's proposal to ban collective bargaining is stronger than ever.
Thousands of people descended upon the Capitol this week to protest both
Monday's State Supreme Court decision to reinstate the collective bargaining
ban and the governor's proposed two-year budget, which includes hundreds of
millions of dollars in cuts and is currently moving through the legislature.


Everything from health care to the right to vote is under attack, and with
the next two-year budget currently under debate and a slew of controversial
bills at different legislative stages, terrifying changes loom for 5.5
million Wisconsinites. Here are seven ways Wisconsin Republicans are waging
war against the poor and working class people of Wisconsin. 

1. The proposed budget contains so many terrible changes to BadgerCare,
Wisconsin's low-income health care program, that they could almost have
their own list. Among the worst is a proposal to
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/06/02/scott-walker-wisconsin-men-badgerc
are-family-planning_n_870430.html> drop men from the program entirely, and a
proposal to require parental consent before minors can get birth control
pills. How are these two things connected? A representative for Pro-Life
Wisconsin argued that the 7,000 men currently on BadgerCare don't need
subsidized access to STD testing and condoms because BadgerCare already
provides contraception to women.

If young, poor women are discouraged from getting birth control because of
parental consent laws and young, poor men have no access to low-cost medical
care, there will be more sexually transmitted diseases and unplanned
pregnancies. It's not a surprise that state-funded health care is at risk,
but it's much more common to see women's reproductive care attacked than
men's.

2. A program to help adults with disabilities live independently faces an
<http://host.madison.com/ct/news/local/health_med_fit/vital_signs/article_2a
7fb376-92e4-11e0-b160-001cc4c03286.html> enrollment freeze in the new
budget, which will leave nearly 17,000 men and women throughout the state
without vital resources over the next two years.
<http://www.dhs.wisconsin.gov/LTcare/generalinfo/Serve.htm> Family Care
helps provide a wide range of services such as in-home care, supported
living communities, meal delivery, and job training to help keep more than
31,000 people integrated with their communities; waiting lists for private
resources like housing can be well over a decade. Cutting off enrollment in
Family Care is a message from Scott Walker to men and women already
disproportionately affected by poverty and discrimination that in his eyes
they're less than human.

3. Different cities have different housing needs, right? Not according to a
bill introduced by the State Senate. The measure would prohibit local
governments from making laws related to landlord-tenant relationships.
According to Madison's
<http://host.madison.com/ct/news/local/govt-and-politics/article_56455c8c-d8
a0-565d-b482-3998980cb5ce.html> Capitol Times, the bill would void a law
that prevents landlords from discriminating against potential tenants
because they are on public assistance. The bill's lead author, Sen. Frank
Lasee, has made no statements about what low-income families are supposed to
do for housing when landlords are free to discriminate against them and the
state budget has no money to help the homeless.

4. Scott Walker isn't just targeting the city-dwelling poor; a budget
provision would force the University of Wisconsin System to return
<http://host.madison.com/news/local/education/university/article_b3d58d46-90
a8-11e0-8fdf-001cc4c002e0.html> $37 million in grant money that was intended
to provide broadband access to rural communities. It would also prohibit the
UW System from funding WiscNet, the cooperative that provides high-speed
internet to most of the state's schools and libraries. WiscNet could shut
down without UW support, forcing towns that are already struggling to deal
the governor's other budget cuts to get service through private companies.

While it now looks like broadband access will be protected in some form
thanks to last minute maneuvering in the Assembly, the budget amendment only
postpones the planned restrictions until the next budget. If the amendment
survives the Senate, it will be a temporary reprieve.

5. It makes sense that Wisconsin's child labor laws would be stronger than
the federal government's; the state has a long and proud history of
protecting workers' rights. It's also no surprise that Walker and company
are looking to repeal those laws. The legislature is set to vote on a bill
that would roll back limits to the number of hours teenagers are allowed to
work. The bill would bring Wisconsin in line with federal limits, but it's
hard to argue that allowing employers to have 16- and 17-year-olds work an
unlimited number of hours up to seven days a week is really going to help
young people.

Without these limits, bill supporters like the Wisconsin Grocers Association
would be able to avoid all the headaches that come with hiring older,
experienced workers who might demand perks like consistent hours or
flexibility to care for family members and staff stores with low-paid
teenagers who are likely to be unfamiliar with their workplace rights.

6. The Voter ID law that Scott Walker signed at the end of May is his evil
genius masterpiece. What does a wildly unpopular governor facing a recall by
thousands of highly motivated voters do? Pass a law disenfranchising the
people planning to vote against you! Wisconsin used to have some of the most
liberal voting requirements in the nation: same-day registration, no ID
required. Starting in 2012, voters will have to present a valid driver's
license or approved photo ID before being allowed to vote.

According to a University of Milwaukee
<http://www.inclusionist.org/files/wistatusdrivers.pdf> study, non-white
Wisconsin voters are far less likely to have a valid driver's license than
white voters, and nearly a quarter of voters older than 65 lack one. This
means thousands of elderly and men and women of color will be required to
pay for new identification cards before they will be allowed to exercise
their right to vote. There are four times as many people of color living in
poverty as there are white people. Democratic State Senator Lena Taylor
called it a poll tax, and she's right.

7. Craft beer? What do the thousands of people without broadband, health
care and voting rights care about craft beer? This is still Wisconsin, after
all, and everyone deserves access to the good stuff. Why make it harder for
small Wisconsin-based breweries to sell their beer? Small breweries are
facing new obstacles to growth because of a turf war between two of the
world's biggest beer companies. MillerCoors asked for help defending against
Anheuser-Busch's attempts to do more business in Wisconsin, and the
legislature obliged. A proposal in the budget would change state law to
forbid brewers from owning a wholesale distribution business, which would
slow Anheuser-Busch's expansion, but it could also make it harder for
smaller local companies to increase their sales around the state. Apparently
Wisconsin is only open for MillerCoors' business.

Opposition to Walker's plans is strong enough that six Republican State
Senators will face recall elections later this summer, and Democrats and
progressive groups like  <http://www.defendwisconsin.org/> Defend Wisconsin
are already planning for a recall drive against Walker when he becomes
eligible in January 2012. The Republican party's stranglehold on Wisconsin's
state government means that Walker's budget will almost surely pass, but the
protests will not stop, and there is hope. If Democrats can win just three
of those summer recall elections -- a totally plausible scenario -- they
would regain control of the Senate and could stop further damage to the
lives of Wisconsin's citizens.

Meredith Clark writes about politics and lives in Brooklyn. Find her on
Twitter at @MeredithLClark.

 

 

 

 



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



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