If recent Wisconsin politics is not your cup-of-tea,  (or tea party), please
disregard the following off-topic public service announcement: As they say:
"Move along. nothing to see here...."

 

 

<LEGAL MANEUVERING BEGINS>

 

A recent right-wing conservative republican lead "Shock and Awe" agenda
aimed at trying to destroy public unions democratic right to bargain
collectively has pretty much been completed at this point. I suspect
conservative groups feel they have won the battle, that they have
successfully destroyed collective bargaining. I suspect they are also hoping
everyone will now just settle back and accept the new status quo with no
more questions asked. 

 

However, there is a wrinkle to the plan. The "Budget Repair Bill", which now
includes the highly contentious removal of collective bargaining is supposed
to be officially implemented no later than March 25, with the official
publication of the measure. After the measure had been voted on and passed
Governor Walker quickly signed it. He then requested that the measure he had
just signed be published as soon as possible - meaning immediately. That
would cause the measure to take effect immediately - today. Curiously, that
hasn't happened. The last official date when the measure must be published
is still being scrupulously observed, that being March 25. In the meantime,
an insurgency of legal maneuvers has now begun to surface, such as:

 

Thursday, March 17, "DA files open meetings complaint over budget session"

 

http://host.madison.com/wsj/news/local/govt-and-politics/article_19b9492e-50
0b-11e0-911b-001cc4c03286.html

 

http://tinyurl.com/62a7mxt

 

Friday, March 18, a judge ruled:

 

"Judge blocks contentious Wisconsin union law"

 

http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2011-03-18-wisconsin-union_N.htm

 

http://tinyurl.com/5roh82p

 

 

These articles do a pretty good job of describing the technical problems
pertaining to the republican's parliamentary maneuver as perceived in the
eyes of many. Republicans relied a debatable parliamentary maneuver to split
out the not-agreed-to non-fiscal collective bargaining portions from
Walker's "Budget Repair Bill". (Weeks ago public unions had already agreed
to all the fiscal concessions demanded from the governor.) Nevertheless,
relying on this obscure parliamentary maneuver, the republicans then
convened a hastily arranged meeting with little notice in order to
specifically vote out collective bargaining. Such an "emergency" meeting, it
was alleged, didn't require the presence of the 14 AWOL democratic senators
in order to constitute a legally binding vote. Legally, if such a meeting is
declared an "emergency" it can be convened which just two hours notice - IF
it's an emergency. WHO determines if the meeting was an emergency? It's
debatable. Regardless of whether the meeting was an emergency or not, that
observance was not technically followed. The "emergency" meeting was
convened in just one hour, forty minutes notice. Typically a meeting of this
sort necessitates a full 24 hours notice. In other words, emergency or not
the letter of the law was flagrantly disregarded. In less than two hours
notice the right to bargain collectively was "voted" out of existence along
with all of the fiscal concessions for which the unions had already agreed
to. 

 

Within hours after this hastily arranged parliamentary maneuver had been
completed I witnessed one of the most hastily assembled counter protest
demonstrations that I can think of, as twitter and Facebook accounts spread
the news across Wisconsin like wildfire. Twitter and Facebook were largely
responsible for alerting many who were deeply concerned about what had been
going down in their state over the past month. Those who were alerted
responded by rushing as fast as they could to the capital in order to
express their outrage. I saw people literally running up State Street to get
to the capita. The following You Tube video I shot on the evening of March 9
documents some of those masses as they quickly assembled around the capital
building. Eventually thousands were allowed to enter the capital. This was
one of the most dramatic moments of active democracy I've ever experienced
in my life. I was fortunate to have been in the right place and right time
to document portions of the spontaneous event as it developed. See:

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UJBbdVJ9G0U

 

 

The DA filing followed by the Judge's temporary ruling might actually have a
chance of stopping efforts to remove collective bargaining from being
implemented - at least for a while longer. The ultimate aim is to get some
kind of democratic debate started pertaining to the wisdom of removing
collective bargaining. The point being: removing collective bargaining does
nothing to help solve Wisconsin's financial crisis. IMO, it has far more to
do with Wisconsin's gubernatorial branch consolidating an overreach of its
power base. As the old saying goes: absolute power corrupts absolutely.

 

</ LEGAL MANEUVERING BEGINS>

 

 

We now return you  back to Rossi & Focardi, Japan's recovery, and other Vort
news.

 

Regards,

 

Steven Vincent Johnson

www.OrionWorks.com

www.zazzle.com/orionworks 

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