A plague of Walker

To paraphrase an old bumper sticker: "When the people lead, leaders will follow. Or not."

You're currently reading an archived version of Jim Hightower's work.

The latest (and greatest?) observations from Jim Hightower are only now available at our Substack website. Join us there!

Jim Hightower's Radio Lowdown
Jim Hightower's Radio Lowdown
A plague of Walker
Loading
/

To paraphrase an old bumper sticker: “When the people lead, leaders will follow. Or not.”

Not when the “leaders” are in the pocket of corporate interests that don’t like where the people are leading. Take Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin, who never met a corporate pocket too grungy to climb into. The story starts in 2008, when the people of Milwaukee took the lead on the crying need for workers to receive paid sick leave. Without paid leave, employees feel compelled to go to work when ill, which spreads their illness. Seven out of 10 voters approved that measure in a citywide referendum.

Enjoying Hightower's work? Join us over at our new home on Substack:

Corporate interests, however, sued to stall the people’s will, tying the sick leave provision up in court until 2011. By then, corporations had put up big bucks to put Walker into the governorship… and right into their pocket. Sure enough, Walker dutifully nullified the Milwaukee vote by passing a “state preemption” law, autocratically banning local governments from requiring sick leave benefits for employees.

Just three months later, Walker’s preemption ploy was the star at a meeting of ALEC, the corporate front group that brings state legislators into secret sessions with CEOs and lobbyists. There, legislators are handed model laws to benefit corporations – then sent home to pass them. At a session overseen by Taco Bell, attendees got copies of Walker’s no-paid-sick-leave law, along with a how-to lecture by the National Restaurant Association. “Go forth and preempt local democracy,” was the message.

And, lo, they did. Bills outlawing paid-sick-leave ordinances are being considered in at least 12 states this year, and nine have already passed theirs, including Arizona, Florida, Indiana, Louisiana, and Kansas.

By spreading Walker’s nastiness from state to state, money-grubbing fast food chains are spreading illness all across our land.

“Forced to Work Sick? That’s Fine With Disney, Red Lobster, and Their Friends at ALEC,” www.motherjones.com, June 27, 2013.

“Efforts to Deliver “Kill Shot” to Paid Sick Leave Tied to ALEC,” www.prwatch.org, April 3, 2013.

“Sick? The GOP Wants You To Come To Work Anyway,” www.alternet.org, June 26, 2013.

I’m making moves!

We’re pleased to announce that we’ve started a Substack newsletter for all of our content. You’ll still find our older, archived materials here at hightowerlowdown.org, but the latest (and greatest?) observations from Jim Hightower are only now available at our new Substack website.

Check out jimhightower.substack.com »

Send this to a friend