“SEIU, for example, was one of the Wisconsin unions in 2011 that got their teeth kicked in.”
....and they filed and unfair labor practice lawsuit because kicking teeth in is THEIR job.
This union activist, aka a journalist, is trying to mimic and roll back Ronald Reagan's success.
This is a good read: The GE Years: What Made Reagan Reagan ".....A slick monthly magazine often tied Reagans GE Theater news to ideological messages. And a defense quarterly, featuring GEs efforts in the field, was enhanced by commentary from leading experts (e.g. well-known academics and occasional Cabinet officials) on military and geopolitical matters. The evidence is compelling that Reagan read all of these. The frequent question periods after his talks with GE workers insured that he would be asked about them. They influenced his foreign policy as well as his domestic views. An article in the defense quarterly presaged the Reagan Doctrine and contains the earliest mention of what later became the strategic defense initiative.
The subject matter of the publications ranged from narrow employment issues (How Big Are General Electric Profits Are They Too Big? Why the company can expect union officials to demand a strike from them) to broader economic concerns (Lets Learn from Britain--which concerned the failures of socialism and a government-run medical profession--and What is Communism? What is Capitalism? What is the Difference to You?). The folly of many government programs and the negative consequences of burdensome taxation were frequent topics. The book clubs of employees and their spouses spent thirteen weeks discussing Economics in One Lesson by Henry Hazlitt or How You Really Earn Your Living by Lewis Haney and other conservative offerings.
In time, Lemuel Boulware and GE CEO Ralph Cordiner mounted a national grass roots campaign, recruiting major corporate allies, creating schools where GE employees and others could learn the fundamental political skills to win elections, developing shareholder lists for political mailings, and turning GE workers into communicators and mass communicators (Boulwares words) who could spread the message of free persons and free markets to a decisive number of local voters. In the course of this Ronald Reagan was taken out of the plants and put on what he called the mashed potato circuit of civic forums largely in the south and smaller states, often towns where GE dominated the economy, where he would be most effective. In due course, the great communicator was born. In todays parlance, most of these states turned from blue to red......"