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(Cross-posted from Pelto's Point (New Haven Advocate)
(As the Malloy Administration and Connecticut State Employee Unions prepare to meet today... )
Connecticut is not Wisconsin, right? Right,
Connecticut is not Wisconsin. But let's not fool ourselves - read on...
Unlike Wisconsin, Connecticut has a Democratic Governor who supports the right of people to join unions and collectively bargain and we have a Republican Party that is not following in the footsteps of the ultra-right, ultra-crazy tea-baggers and their post-modern Republican converts.
That is good news for Connecticut's unions, their members and society as a whole.
But recognizing the American right to join unions is not a progressive or liberal position.
As has been widely reported in recent days, when Ronald Reagan stood up for the people of Poland in 1991, he reminded that world that "one of the most elemental human rights [is] the right to belong to a free trade union"
American leaders across the political spectrum have recognized that the right to collectively bargain is truly a requirement for a civilized society.
So Governor Malloy does deserve credit for attending the recent State Capitol Rally in support of Wisconsin's state employees. He deserves credit for doing something that every reasonable American politician should be doing.
But before we think that Connecticut and Wisconsin have nothing in common when it comes to the rights of workers, let us remember that efforts to undercut unions and the rights of employees to join together for their common good come in a variety of forms.
Like bullying, anti-union efforts can be overt, covert or both.
Bullying occurs when a "person intentionally inflicts injury or discomfort upon another person, through physical contact, through words or in other ways". It is behavior that seeks to intimidate, offend, denigrate or humiliate a person or group of persons.
As we know, now more than ever, bullying is a form of abuse that is often perpetrated on another as a way to intimidate someone to take some particular action.
Governor Malloy's entire budget is based on state employees agreeing to make $2 billion dollars in wage and benefit concessions.
Anyone familiar with Connecticut's state budget knows it is a number that literally cannot be achieved and the Governor purposely put out a number that is designed to fail. |