Posted on 02/19/2015 12:33:26 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
Amid depressed turnout and pent-up frustration with the Springfield status quo, Illinois voters last November ousted Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn, awarding billionaire venture capitalist Bruce Rauner a five-point victory. The five weeks since Rauner took office as Illinois first Republican governor in a dozen years have offered a vivid illustration of the truism that elections have consequences consequences that will be paid disproportionately by the states poor, working class, and middle-income citizens.
Rauner fired the opening salvo in his war on workers earlier this month, issuing an executive order that allows public employees to opt out of paying fees to unions that collectively bargain on their behalf. Under current state law, nonmembers who benefit from union contracts about 14 percent of unionized state employees must pay fair share fees to help fund collective bargaining and contract negotiations; those fees are lower than the dues paid by full members. Despite a 1977 Supreme Court ruling upholding the constitutionality of fair share fees, Rauner argues that theyre unconstitutional, forcing workers to support political speech with which they disagree. The governor makes this assertion even though, in accordance with that same Court ruling, public unions dont use fair share fees to fund political activities. Cognizant that hes on shaky legal ground, Rauner has retained the white-shoe law firm Winston & Strawn to defend his executive order in court.
While the governor recognizes that the political dynamics dont favor a statewide right-to-work law, he has expanded his fight against unions to include a proposal for right-to-work zones, in which workers would be allowed to opt out of paying union fees even if they benefitted from union-negotiated contracts. The inevitable consequence and deliberate aim would be a further erosion of unions bargaining power.
Another set of flaming volleys flew in the direction of the states working people on Wednesday, as Rauner delivered his first budget address before lawmakers in Springfield. Rauner called for an 11.5 percent cut in the states budget for the year beginning July 1, urging lawmakers to bring the budget down to $31.5 billion from its current level of $35.6 billion. Hardest hit would be health care for poor people, higher education, and mass transit.
The Chicago Tribune reports that the governors budget would slash Medicaid spending by $1.5 billion, cut higher education by $387 million, and reduce revenue-sharing with cities and towns by $600 million. Rauner also targets transportation, calling for an end to a state subsidy that helps fund reduced fares for the poor and disabled.
Moreover, Rauner would cut pensions for current state workers, moving them to the lower-benefit pension plan for recent hires, despite a state constitutional injunction against the diminishment of pension benefits. The governors budget would exempt police officers and firefighters from the change.
State Sen. Heather Steans, a Chicago Democrat, told the Tribune that she was particularly worried by the governors proposed cuts in mental health care not covered by Medicaid.
Cutting mental health at this point in time just does not seem like its viable or certainly not an intelligent long-term savings plan, she told the paper, citing fears that the cuts would lead more people to end up in jails and prisons. You end up having more expensive costs in other higher-cost settings. I think thats very sort of short-sighted.
Even neoliberal Chicago mayor Rahm Emanuel a close personal friend of Rauners raised significant concerns about the budget. Emanuel told a Tribune reporter that Rauner should emphasize closing corporate tax loopholes over spending cuts, and the mayor decried the idea that one can balance the states budget on the backs of the children of the city of Chicago.
For his part, Rauner insists war is peace, freedom is slavery, ignorance is strength, and his budget is a boon for working families.
Illinois government is currently designed to benefit those inside the system rather than those working families throughout our state, he told lawmakers. We must institute major reforms, or whatever balanced budget we craft together this year will be undone to put the peoples interests first and the special interests last.
In Rauners Illinois, the poor, the sick, students, and ordinary wage-earners constitute the special interests. Putting people first, meanwhile, requires gutting social services and ending hard-fought worker protections. This, in all its cruel Orwellianism, is what Republican governance looks like.
What a load of bullsh*t.
Not so crazy about that pen and phone when the shoe is on the other foot.
Communists Raus!
Lawmakers promised more and more benefits to retired teachers, police officers, firefighters, and other government workers over the past decade; meanwhile, the pool of money to pay these pledges was neglected. The estimated shortfall of nearly $100 billion between now and 2045 is, believe it or not, a rosy scenario, given that a) it assumes robust investment returns and b) doesnt include local pension disasters, like the estimated $20 billion hole in the City of Chicago system.
Quinn and Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel both urged the legislature to tackle the crisis during last years session. The day of reckoning has arrived, Emanuel warned. All sorts of repairs were floated: raising the retirement age for public employees, increasing employee contributions, freezing cost-of-living increases, shifting younger workers into 401-(k) style savings. Quinn even proposed that responsibility for teacher retirement plans should be shifted to local school boards. You can guess what the locals thought about that......
....The Pew Center on the States, which tracks the pension funding problem nationwide, says Illinois now faces the worst mess in the country, with less than half of its pension obligations currently covered. But other states are suffering from symptoms of the same disease. According to Pew, 34 states were short in 2010 of the recommended 80-percent funding level considered safe for pension systems. (That is the most recent year for which data is available; defenders of public pensions argue that 2010 figures exaggerate the problem because they collected near the bottom of the bad economy.) In all, Pew estimates the total shortfall in state pensions to be $1.38 trillion."............
Jan 2013: Why Illinois is Going Bankrupt
The writer asserts that cutting the government is “Orwellian”. How Orwellian of him.
What do we expect from socialists?
I think the writer believes “irony” means something tastes like iron.
It's merely an attack on heavily-entrenched union bullies who are squeezing non-members for "pseudo dues" against their will.
Legalizing such ridiculous systems is inherently corrupt.
It's unbelievable to me what these collectivist authoritarians think they are entitled to. And Salon wants to pretend this as an attack on workers?
It's an attack on workers' FREEDOM!
Every state should be right-to-work...
The readers of Salon are batscat crazy as evidenced by the comments. I am speechless at the vitriolic idiocy of their readers.
I have noticed a big uptick in these chicken little stories from libs since the election. While I enjoy their suffering, these stories make tiresome reading.
The Governor apparently realizes money is fungible. The money freed by the fees can and will go to support political activities, so, indirectly, the fees make that support possible.
The other cuts hit all the Liberal Sacred Cows, so no wonder they're having fits.
When North Dakota's budget contracted, Governor Ed Schafer placed the onus on State agencies to finish their year 5% under budget, and return that money to the general fund. By those incremenatal means, budgets were reduced across the board in the State, keeping the State out of debt.
What was decried by some as 'draconian' then, proved to be tremendous foresight, and kept the state fiscally healthier.
“Hardest hit would be health care for poor people, higher education, and mass transit.”
World to end tomorrow! Poor people hardest hit!
Being among Rauner’s harshest critics, I give him credit where credit’s due’
Never mistake Rauner for a conservative though. He’s still very much on my watch list.
Always a good idea.
I don't live in Chicago, why should I give a rat's a$$.
Curious that the background in this club scene shows no women.
If only the Republican US Congress would use its power of the purse to eliminate wasteful spending of taxpayer dollars going to progressive non-profits and public interest groups and from there being recycled into Democrat campaign coffers. Defund the grants, studies, consulting contracts, and subsidies to Planned Parenthood, environmental groups, foundations, education advocacy organizations, etc.
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