It’s the Democrat way.
The protests centered on the Wisconsin State Capitol in Madison, with satellite protests also occurring at other municipalities throughout the state. Demonstrations took place at various college campuses, including the University of WisconsinMadison and the University of WisconsinMilwaukee.
After the collective bargaining bill was upheld by the Wisconsin Supreme Court on June 14, the number of protesters declined to about 1,000 within a couple days.
The protests were a major driving force for recall elections of state senators in 2011 and 2012, the failed recall of Governor Scott Walker in 2012 and a contentious Wisconsin Supreme Court election in 2011.
Before there was ever a Democrat party in Wisconsin, there were the Progressives. The Progressives were so badly infiltrated by Communist agitators during the 1930’s and through and after the Second World War, that even their own rank and file members had to turn to another venue to express any fealty to the United States. The Progressives, which once claimed kinship with the Republican party, but then openly broke away early in the 20th Century, were a major factor in supporting FDR and the New Deal, even dragging some of the more reluctant Democrats along. They were the foremost admirers of Mussolini and Stalin, and incorporated much of the programs of those two fine humanitarians into the New Deal, to “make the trains run on time”.
The Progressive Party is alive and still active in Wisconsin, but that state is gradually turning at least purple.
You want “more rights in your job”???
Cough up the $$$$$$ yourself & start your own business.
Those on the outside looking in & screaming about how much money a business owner is making need to have the experience for themselves. IMO.
As a life-long bookkeeper—mostly for small business, I can tell you the unions are NOT the path to go down.
The stranglehold that Unions have on some areas of American commerce are not helpful.