
When President Obama spoke to workers in Wisconsin last week, Politico accidentally made itself the story. The paper's reporter mistook the Wisconsin state flag for the seal of a local union, and cited it as an illustration of President Obama's pro-union bias.
Politico cleaned the egg off its face by wiping the story from the Internet. But the gaffe made the rounds among actual union officials in the state and now that the laughter's subsided, they've turned it into a membership drive.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (0)With the help of Senate Democrats, Congress took its final step Monday toward enactment of long-term FAA reauthorization legislation, despite an aggressive last-minute effort by organized labor to kill the package.
The final vote was 75-20, with -- not nearly enough Democratic opposition to prevent a supermajority from passing it and sending it off to President Obama for a signature.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (0)Senate Democrats and organized labor have reached a make or break moment over House-passed legislation that will make it harder for transportation workers to unionize.
One labor official said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Commerce Committee chairman Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) had "sold out" workers, by striking a deal with Republicans on a long-term reauthorization of Federal Aviation Administration programs -- and they have a brief window in which to set things right.
The issue goes back months.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (0)Republican legislators in Minnesota are now setting out to make their state the newest front in the push for "right-to-work" laws hindering labor union organization. But can they pull it off?
State Sen. Dave Thompson (R) and state Rep. Steve Drazkowski (R) announced the proposal Thursday, calling it the "Employee Freedom Constitutional Amendment."
In order to pass an amendment to the Minnesota constitution, both houses must pass the proposal under a simple majority threshold, then send it to the voters in November -- thus bypassing the state's Democratic Governor Mark Dayton, but also triggering what would likely be a very heated referendum campaign. The Republicans currently have a 72-62 majority in the House, and a 37-30 margin in the Senate.
Right-to-work laws are very common in the South and the West. This week, Indiana became the 23rd state -- and more importantly, the first Rust Belt state -- to adopt such a measure. Interestingly, Indiana Democrats had proposed a compromise of sending the bill to a referendum, which the majority Republicans rejected in favor of sending the bill directly to Gov. Mitch Daniels. In this case, Minnesota Republicans are seeking a referendum, in order to pass the bill over the head of a governor who opposes it.
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