Dear nettime, 

This will probably be my last long report. After this, I'll only discuss 
selected aspects of the movement.

With links in the text, here:
http://prop-press.typepad.com/blog/2011/03/from-madison-third-report.html

enjoy,

dan

*

This third report from Madison is difficult to write. Since at least the middle 
of last week there are too many lines of development for one person to follow, 
much less explain. In that sense, the Wisconsin uprising has truly become a 
broad movement, complete with sub-fronts, fissures, and rumors swirling daily. 
Ten days ago I still had the security of knowing that I had a privileged view 
of the struggle by virtue of living here. Now, I get the feeling that I’m only 
seeing the close-up action, while larger forces with national reach, perhaps 
imperceptible to us inside the city limits, are somehow shaping the contest.

This feeling of disconnect, of the local movement having lost its monopoly on 
the narrative, was confirmed when I started receiving email blasts last week 
from MoveOn, Democracy for America, TrueMajority, and other national 
progressive groups. After about the third one (and there have been countless 
since) I cringed to see the creativity, humor, and outrage of a citizen and 
worker-driven, organically developing movement that has no central leadership, 
and variable demands, be reduced to a branded online petition and donation 
button. I’ll take the sectarian newspaper hawkers over the dumbness of a 
professionally marketed email cause (of the week, or until donations crest) any 
day. At least the sectarian leftists entertain with their inadvertant 
goofiness. 

Let’s talk about three fronts to this battle: the space of the Capitol, the 
April 5 election, and the possibility of a strike. Each one is a complicated 
tale in its own right.

Up until about last Sunday night, Feb 27, the Capitol building could be 
accurately described as occupied. Up until late this past Thursday there were 
still protestors inside. For their last four days they dwindled in number and 
were basically cut off from the outside. The attrition—once a person exited, 
they were not allowed back in—guaranteed that the authorities would retake the 
Capitol sooner or later.

The Capitol police had been boxing demonstrators out of various corridors and 
corners of the building all week long. The occupied space shrunk continuously 
through the simple tactic of clearing people out of a section “for cleaning” 
and then marking that section off with police tape and posting police to guard 
it. The order to vacate the building in whole was finally delivered on Sunday, 
but with several hundred demonstrators inside, the police chose to let people 
stay but locked newcomers out. And so the attrition began. Looking back, it was 
a very smart non-confrontational move on the part of the Capitol police.

This Wisconsin constitution specifies that the Capitol is to remain open to the 
public during all daytime hours. Scott Walker flouted this constitutional 
guarantee, thereby inviting a lawsuit. A Dane County judge quickly granted the 
demonstrators a temporary restraining order on Monday, preventing the governor 
from locking out the public. But he flouted that, too, and kept only one door 
unlocked and guarded, and set rules for who could come in—some vague 
requirement that it be “on official business.” The situation became so 
ridiculous that the Dane County sheriff, Jim Mahoney, took the extraordinary 
step of relieving his deputies of having to guard the entrances. Walker doesn’t 
control the sheriff, and Mahoney let him know it by quipping that the sheriff’s 
deputies “are not palace guards.” Thus continued the sub-plot of Scott Walker 
antagonizing even law enforcement. (Word from unnamed sources is, the Madison 
police—one of the best educated forces in the country—are resentful. He’s 
transferred into Madison a bunch of outstate cops to help, but their loyalty is 
questionable, too. Only the Capitol police are under his strict control.)

The Teaching Assistants Association ran the occupation—coordinated cleaning, 
managed the food, kept in contact with the police, etc—and they had the option 
on Sunday to end the occupation on their terms, in consultation with the 
police. They chose not to, and the lockout is what happened; after a few days 
of legal wrangling, the building was opened to the public again, but with 
shifting and possibly illegal conditions placed by the governor. No matter. 
Even with this setback and miscalculation, the occupation was a success. In 
America there have been only a handful of occupations of state capitol 
buildings historically, and all the rest were only for a day or part of day. 
The occupation in Madison went on day and night for thirteen days. Already it 
is widely acknowledged as an historic event. The longer term ramifications are 
unsettled, but clearly there will be some. As far as the governor bringing in 
the heavies goes, here again, as with this whole sorry tale to begin with, he 
overreached. The video of a Democrat lawmaker getting thrown to the ground 
while trying to enter the building has further hurt the standing of the 
governor. 

Equally important has been the nature of the occupation, what it proved to the 
demonstrators, and what the space became. During the day the rotunda was a 
cauldron of shared anger, the drumming and unison shouting so loud it made your 
ears ring, and kept the lawmakers hidden deep in their chambers and offices on 
edge all day long. By the second week, the occupied areas would turn into a 
social forum in the late evenings and nighttime, with people coming to read the 
hundreds of signs, to talk politics with strangers, to eat free food, and to 
perform music or speechify from the open mike center. It was quite a sight, and 
for anybody who entered during those days, one’s sense of possibility could not 
help but be enlarged—this was a co-op, a commune, a punk house (where everybody 
cleaned up after themselves, imagine that), a labor temple, a free speech 
zone…in the freakin’ state Capitol building! When does that ever happen?! This 
will not be erased from memory anytime soon. Also worth reiterating here is the 
way the occupation started. That first Tuesday night/early Wed morning, Feb 
15-16, when debate was cut off by the Republicans, those waiting to testify 
against Walker’s bill were so many and so livid with anger that the police 
couldn’t do anything. The cops were too scared. Those who weren’t scared were 
sympathetic.

Here is very good take on the occupation, how it evolved, what it served, what 
it meant. Sorry, you have to read it on Facebook.

Next: The April 5th election. The reality is, should Scott Walker ram through 
his bill—and all indications are that he still believes that he can—many of the 
provisions will be decided in the courts. The Wisconsin Supreme Court now has a 
4-3 conservative majority, but a sitting conservative judge is up for election 
on April 5, facing a liberal challenger, an environmental law attorney from 
lefty Madison. (In Wisconsin judges are an elected position. As in all other 
parts of American political life, what used to be a rather sedate, non-partisan 
affair has in recent years become yet another polarized fight zone.) This 
election will be treated as a referendum on the Walker agenda. One question is, 
then, how will the movement make the transition from street demonstrations to 
taking a side in an electoral campaign? Are there enough people with enough 
energy to keep Scott Walker embattled with large demonstrations at the Capitol 
for the next four weeks while also ramping up work on what is normally a 
low-key, low turnout, spring election? As well, there are now recall campaigns 
underway, targeting the eight eligible Republican state senators, ie who have 
been in office for at least a year already. The recall process is by design 
extremely demanding, and no matter how energized an electorate, requires a 
great deal of effort for even a chance of success. The movement only needs to 
recall and replace three senators to gain control of the Wisconsin Senate, but 
even this will require the dedicated attention of many activists, not to 
mention money, legal counsel, media work, etc.

In sum, since my last report, battles on the terrain of conventional electoral 
politics have emerged as another true front of the struggle. Here, too, as with 
the contest over control of the Capitol, there is a politics of space in play, 
but at the comparatively neglected scale of the state senate districts, 
typically encompassing an average population of 160k, some more and some less, 
and a ground area of about two or more counties. One by-product of all this 
mess is, thousands more state residents will learn for the first time what the 
size and shape of their senate district is, and, moreover, what it means to act 
politically at that scale of space. For nearly a generation now, the US left 
has permitted the right to act at this and other mid-level scales of governance 
with hardly any challenge. This newly sparked engagement cannot be a bad thing, 
especially in the long term—unless it drains movement attention and substantial 
bodies from the still-important demonstration spectacles on the Capitol square. 
To spell out the dilemma: the fourteen awol Democrat senators are the only 
thing standing between Scott Walker and his agenda being legally realized, but 
they can only stay away for as long as there are large daily and occasionally 
massive demonstrations of support, and realistically, can only stay away until 
the April 5 election. So the demonstrations must not dilute the campaign 
messaging, and ideally, need to echo it, but at the same time not be reduced to 
it. To lose the April 5th election and to fail on the most achieveable recall 
efforts would, unquestionably, be major defeats.

Finally, there is the spectre of a strike. The truism of labor’s ulimate power 
being that of withholding its work activity, which in the US context sounded 
practically meaningless only a month ago, rings with revitalized freshness, 
given the threats of force and firings being leveled by this governor. But how 
and when? Who and where? Teachers? Students? Those who are legally granted the 
right strike, or those who instantly run the risk of being fired? What is the 
strike supposed to communicate? How does it get organized, and what kinds of 
practicalities would be involved? Would it be a symbolic one-day strike or a 
true shut-down of business as usual? The South Central Federation Labor has 
already endorsed a general strike, so the language is getting out there and 
these questions coming into play.

Already there are two points of reference, generated by the movement itself. 
One, during the first week we saw the Madison Public School teachers 
essentially call a strike without using strike language, shutting down the 
schools for three days through a massive sick-out. It was a bet that paid off, 
but only because the message was not primarily about leaving work to protest 
the budget cuts and attacks on unions; rather, the message was one of love, as 
in, the teachers love their jobs, schools, and students so much, that they are 
walking out, and the students love their teachers so much, that they are 
joining them, and the parents love their children’s teachers so much, that they 
are supporting them. The message of love is what a proper and possibly general 
strike must convey—the conservatives have found it impossible to argue against 
it, and even have professed the same love, to the jeers of the public. And then 
two, to return to the occupied Capitol, there now exists an actual model of a 
self-organized society, an example of something that worked. Over the two weeks 
of occupation, food stations, childcare, clean-up crews, first aid and internal 
communication structures inside the Capitol were set up as needed. In 
contemporary America the term mutual aid is tossed around by radicals as a 
vague, dreamy concept, or else made real through slowly growing limited 
projects around a given focus of cooperative energy. Here mutual aid became 
real in a way that was entirely outside of our American experience, as a 
process of change, spontaneous giving, and practical adjustment, focused on 
meeting immediate and concrete needs that arose in new situations daily. What 
happened at the Capitol shows us that the many kinds of support that a strike 
beyond three days would require *will* materialize, even if in the end it’s 
neither perfect nor sustainable. Strikers will not be left high and dry by 
their fellow workers, their neighbors, their friends.

The who and when of a strike is the biggest question. If Scott Walker follows 
through on his threatened firings of state workers, 1500 or a thousand at a 
time, for no other reason than to pressure the absent Dem senators into 
returning from out of state for a vote, then the mood for striking will go up. 
I suspect the teachers’ union would be the first to declare; if and how other 
unions respond will be most important. If AFSCME turns scared in that moment 
and publicly dissociates itself from strike tactics, the battle may be lost. If 
they merely hold their cards, refusing to say one way or other, then I think 
the momentum towards a strike will build, especially if there are massive 
student strikes, too. If any other union joins the teachers with a sympathy 
strike that goes beyond a short symbolic gesture, then the general strike may 
indeed be on, especially if the governor reacts with aggression.

Other points:

1)   As expected, national media coverage has been atrocious. While utterly 
oblivious in some significant and surprising respects, Scott Walker has proven 
himself a skillful handler of journalists, and nearly impossible to shake from 
the script. While he’s managed to skew the national media discussion toward the 
smokescreen of budgetary matters by repeating the same script with each and 
every appearance, the non-corporate media (just one example: rotundaville) has 
been disseminated so widely, and the numerous media lies of Walker are so 
quickly debunked, that Walker’s single and well-practiced strategy is not 
enough to drive the narrative.

2)   After Walker unveiled his bi-annual state budget last Tuesday, new outrage 
arose from heretofore quiescent parts of the state—particularly in the rural 
areas and in the urban core. The massive cuts to schools and healthcare he had 
planned for the budget were based on the first bill passing, which would have 
freed up county and town governments to do away with their public sector union 
employee contracts as a way to make up the shortfall in state funding. The 
governor put off announcing his budget for two weeks, hoping the demonstrations 
over the “budget repair bill” would die down. They haven’t, and now he’s had to 
show the whole state exactly what he has in mind for them, thereby digging 
himself a deeper hole, politically. After three weeks, we can say definitively: 
Scott Walker has been the greatest gift to the American left since Richard 
Nixon, and maybe even since Bull Connor.

Here is a little video from Tuesday, March 1, outside the Capitol. At the very 
moment this was shot, Scott Walker is announcing details of his budget at a 
press conference inside the building. He packed the media room with a gallery 
of his corporate supporters, smuggled in through the steam tunnels. He 
illegally locked out the demonstrators, but couldn't lock out the noise; they 
could hear us inside.

http://www.vimeo.com/20579626 

3)   The rural and urban expressions of discontent arrive in Madison this 
coming weekend. A farmer-organized convoy of tractors is scheduled to 
demonstrate on the square on the same day that a march of high school students 
from Milwaukee arrives. These actions come just in time. Even though the past 
three Saturday demonstrations have turned out massive numbers of protestors, 
the energy that comes out of a new and unexpected movement is dissipating. The 
protracted struggle has begun and the anti-Walker constituencies must adjust to 
the reality of political work without the advantage of novelty. As with the 
convoy and march, coming up with new storylines is a necessity if we are to 
maintain visibility as proof of commitment.

4)   As the struggle has take a turn for the local, with thousands of activists 
diving into the minutiae of recall campaigns, dealing with the legalities 
concerning the fourteen absent Dem senators, and countless other details of 
hard-slog politicking, the international dimensions are fading from front-line 
consciousness. As it happens, the main battle from the other side of the globe 
is no longer a peaceful occupation of Tahrir Square, but a shooting civil war 
in Libya, complete with hundreds of gruesome deaths, displaced peoples, and a 
paralysis in international response. Thus, the comparisons no longer suit. But 
even without convenient parallels that insist on connection, I hope it is not 
lost to people both inside and outside of Wisconsin, inside and outside of the 
US—what’s happening in Wisconsin matters to the world, for the following 
reason. The election last November of Scott Walker along with Ron Johnson’s 
defeat of Russ Feingold for a Wisconsin US Senate seat were taken by the 
national GOP as a model and pathway to their future power, so much so that 
Wisconsin GOP head Reince Priebus was elected to lead the Republican National 
Committee shortly after, and then Janesville, Wisc., congressman Paul Ryan was 
granted the slot to respond to Obama’s State of the Union address. Walker is 
seen as the operations guy, Priebus the strategist, and Ryan the policy 
brains—the rising star triumvirate of the GOP. Because of their national 
prominence, if they manage to win the day in Wisconsin, the rest of the world 
will feel no doubt feel the effects. If we win, we will have struck a blow 
against all three. How to reinstall the internationalism of the movement's 
first week under these changed conditions is the challenge.

 

>>  http://prop-press.typepad.com/
http://www.midwestradicalculturecorridor.net/


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