Posted on 02/04/2016 5:33:08 AM PST by MichCapCon
After the appointment of a Republican to fill a vacancy in the state Senate, West Virginia looks increasingly likely to become the 26th right-to-work state. That would give West Virginia the same status as Indiana, Michigan, and Wisconsin, the three states that have enacted right-to-work laws in the last four years.
Senate Bill 1, a right-to-work bill to prevent unions from having workers fired for refusing to pay union fees, is under consideration in the West Virginia House of Delegates after it was approved on Jan. 21 by the West Virginia Senate.
If passed by the House, the bill is expected to be vetoed by Democrat Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin. Senate Majority Leader Bill Cole, a Republican, would need 18 votes to override a veto, but SB 1 passed in the Senate with only 17 votes.
The West Virginia Supreme Court ruled on Jan. 22 that Republicans must provide Tomblin with a list of three potential replacements for former Sen. Dan Hall, a Republican who resigned before the West Virginia Legislatureâs session began Jan. 13. Sue Cline was sworn in as Hallâs replacement on Jan. 25 and is expected to join her fellow Republicans in voting to override a gubernatorial veto.
West Virginia Democratic Party leaders sued for the right to pick Hallâs replacement, since Hall was elected as a Democrat in 2012 before switching parties in 2014. State law, the party argued, suggested a Democrat should be chosen because a Democrat was most recently elected to the Senate seat.
With one justice abstaining, the state Supreme Court ruled 3-1 that the law is unambiguous in calling for Republicans to select the resigning Republican senatorâs replacement.
âWe reject petitionersâ reasoning because their reading of the statute is profoundly strained and constitutes a misreading of statutory language that is clear in its meaning,â Justice Margaret Workman wrote in the majority opinion.
The courtâs ruling prevented a 17-17 deadlock in the state Senate, which would have likely killed any possibility of implementing right-to-work during this yearâs 60-day legislative session.
With the question of the Senate appointment settled and with Sen. Cline seated, House approval seems to be the last remaining hurdle to right-to-work in West Virginia. Activists in favor of making their state a right-to-work state are proceeding accordingly.
âWe will be focusing our grass roots on the House of Delegates, continuing to call lawmakers, send letters and use social media to encourage them to support worker freedom,â said Jason Huffman, state director of Americans for Prosperity for West Virginia. More than 60 percent of West Virginians support right-to-work, he said.
WV unemployment is almost 50%. A local radio show stated 50% of WV have no job.
A step in the right direction, obviously.
The unions are mounting the most half-hearted opposition campaign in history, trotting out the usual propaganda that even they don’t believe anymore.
They’ve got two problems. Actually, one problem in two parts:
1) They dutifully voted for the Democrat. Except the Democrat was a radical anti-coal Marxist.
2) The radical anti-coal Marxist put them out of work, with or without right-to-work. Now they don’t have the employees or the money to stage any significant opposition.
The spectacular, myopic failure of unions to make good on any of their claims combined with the spectacular, myopic failure of their candidates to help “the werkin’ man” means they are destined to be idled along with the mines.
Well done, unions!
What percentage of that 50% is on “disability?”
Teamsters are suing Univ. West Va. for issuing the results of a study on the economic impact RTW would have on W. Va. Also, they are dragging the bill’s sponsor into the suit as well. Mr. Cole. I don’t expect much to come out of this suit.
Which is amusing because WVU has gone ultra-left-wing thanks to a huge influx of Jerseyites and other chancers.
The state’s population, especially school-aged children, continues to dwindle yet WVU’s self-interested administrators keep claiming they want 35,000 enrollment. Obviously, it’s all about $$$ for them but the only way to achieve that number is to import anyone and everyone. It’s no coincidence that out-of-state tuition to WVU is cheaper than in-state for students in VA, PA, MD, DE and NJ. Interestingly and perhaps unsurprisingly, those same states feature prominently in every weekend’s police arrest record.
HOORAY West Virginia
WVU’s enrollment passed 50% for students from out of state years ago.
May as well. The unions just stood by as Obama’s regime destroyed the coal industry.
West Virginia now a Right to Work State! Both houses voted just now to override Democrat Governor’s veto!
Beautiful.
Tomblin is just another political hack but he does his job in such an obvious ham-fisted manner that it’s easy to see who’s pulling his strings.
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