The Meaning Of Scott Walker's Win
By DICK MORRIS
Published on DickMorris.com
"If the single man plant himself indomitably on his
instincts, and there abide, the huge world will come round to him." --
Ralph Waldo Emerson
.
Great Scotts! Just as Scott Brown's 2010 victory in
Massachusetts foretold the Republican rout later that year, so Scott
Walker's win is but a foretaste of the November election's likely
result. Polls come and go.
But when a Republican governor, in a
Democratic state that Obama carried by 14 points in 2008, wins by seven
points (Walker 53% - Barrett 46%), it shows how overwhelming our victory
later this year will be.
Add to these facts the high turnout in
Wisconsin (over 60 percent, compared with less than 50% in 2010) and the
handwriting is clearly on the wall for Obama.
But the real meaning of the Walker victory goes far
beyond its obvious role as a predictor of the fall elections. It marks
the same kind of catalyst for a downward decline in state and local
public employee unions that the air traffic controllers' strike in the
80s signaled for federal and private sector unions in general. It is
the beginning of the end of their reign of power - or terror - over our
states and localities.
While only 7% of the private sector labor force is
unionized, 41% of state and local government employees are. A majority
of union members are now public employees. After foreign competition
has decimated private sector unions, the labor movement has found new
power in using it leverage over complicit legislators to prey on
helpless taxpayers.
But, in Wisconsin, Walker flung down the gauntlet to
public employee unions and they accepted the challenge only to go down
to a total defeat. Their power will never be the same. Already, the
National Education Association (NEA) has experienced a 150,000 decline
in its 3.2 million memberships this year and expects another 200,000
falloff in the next few months - more than a ten percent drop. As
states follow Wisconsin's example and stop automatically deducting union
dues from their employee's paychecks, the funds available to unions
will continue to drop - and with it will go much of their political
power.
But even the fall of the power of public employee
unions fails to capture the full extent of the impact of the Walker
victory.
Its most important impact is on America's schools.
By elbowing teacher unions aside and permitting local school boards to
abolish teacher tenure and insist on merit pay and school choice, the
Walker reforms open the door to a vast and rapid improvement in
educational quality throughout the nation. No other education reforms
have worked. Now we have no choice but to insist on competition at
every level of our educational establishment to improve the product.
Teachers must compete for jobs and higher pay even as their schools
compete for students. It is the only way we have left that can raise
student performance.
The sun is shining and Walker won!
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