By
I’ll never grow up, never grow up, never grow up.
No sir,
Not I,
Not me,
So there!
— “Peter Pan” the musical, 1954
WAUWATOSA, Wis.
This state, the first to let government employees unionize, was an incubator
of progressivism and gave birth to its emblematic institution, the government
employees union (in 1932 in Madison, the precursor of the American Federation of
State, County and Municipal Employees) — government organized as a special
interest to lobby itself to expand itself. But Wisconsin progressivism is in a
dark Peter Pan phase; it is childish without being winsome.
Wisconsin has produced populists of the left (Robert La Follette) and right
(Joe McCarthy). On Tuesday, in this year’s second-most important election,
voters will judge the attempt by a populism of the privileged — white-collar
labor unions whose members live comfortably above the American median — to recall Republican Gov. Scott Walker.
In this Milwaukee suburb, a pro-Walker phone bank is conducting mobilization,
not persuasion. Is any voter undecided? For 16 months, Wisconsin,
normally a paragon of Midwestern neighborliness, has been riven by furious attempts to punish Walker for keeping his
campaign promise to change the state’s unsustainable fiscal trajectory driven by
the perquisites of government employees. His progressive adversaries have,
however, retreated from their original pretext for attempting to overturn the
election Walker won handily just 19 months ago.
He defeated Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett. A recall is a gubernatorial
election, and the Democrats’ May primary was won by . . .
Barrett.
In 2010, government employees unions campaigned against Walker’s “5 and 12”
plan. It requires government employees to contribute 5.8 percent of their pay to
their pension plans. (Most were paying less than 1 percent. Most private-sector
workers have no pensions; those who do pay, on average, much more than 5.8
percent.) Walker’s reform requires government employees to pay 12.6
percent of their health-care premiums (up from 6 percent but still less than the
21 percent private-sector average). Defeated in 2010, the unions now are
demanding, as frustrated children do after losing a game, “Let’s start
over!”
Like children throwing tantrums against the rules of a game going badly, in
2011 petulant Wisconsin Democratic legislators fled to Illinois to disrupt the
Legislature. Walker’s reforms included restricting the issues subject to
collective bargaining. This emancipated school districts from buying teachers’
health insurance from a provider entity associated with the teachers union.
Barrett used Walker’s reform to save Milwaukee $19 million.
In justifying a raucous resistance to, and then this recall of, Walker, the
government employees unions stressed his restriction of collective bargaining
rights. But in the May primary, these unions backed the candidate trounced by
Barrett, who is largely ignoring the collective bargaining issue, perhaps partly
because most worker protections are embedded in Wisconsin’s uniquely strong
civil service law. Besides, what really motivates the unions and elected
Democrats is that Walker ended the automatic deduction of union dues from
government employees’ pay. The experience in Colorado, Indiana, Utah and
Washington state is that when dues become voluntary, they become elusive.
So, Barrett is essentially running another general-election campaign, not
unlike that of 2010 — except that the $3.6 billion deficit Walker inherited has
disappeared and property taxes have declined. By re-posing the 2010 choice,
Wisconsin progressives’ one-word platform becomes: “Mulligan!”
The emblem displayed at some anti-Walker centers is an outline of Wisconsin
rendered as a clenched fist, with a red star on the heel of the hand. Walker’s
disproportionately middle-aged adversaries know the red star symbolized
murderous totalitarianism, yet they flaunt it as a progressive ornament. Why?
Because it satisfies the sandbox socialists’ childish pleasure in
naughtiness, as does their playground name-calling (Walker is a “Midwest
Mussolini”) and infantile point-scoring: When the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel endorsed Walker, Wisconsin’s Democratic Party chair
fulminated that six decades ago the Sentinel (which merged with the Journal in
1995) supported McCarthy.
Also, many backward-looking baby boomers want to recapture their youthful fun
of waving clenched fists in the face of privilege. Now, embarrassingly, they
are privileged.
A January poll found that even 17 percent of Democrats think that recalls are
justified only by criminal behavior, not policy differences. If, however, Walker
loses, regular Wisconsin elections will henceforth confer only evanescent
legitimacy. If he wins, progressives will have inadvertently demonstrated that
entrenched privilege can be challenged, and they will have squandered huge sums
that cannot finance progressive causes elsewhere. So, for a change, progressives
will have served progress.
georgewill@washpost.com
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