MADISON, Wis. — Wisconsin’s right-to-work law, championed
by Republican Gov. Scott Walker as he was mounting his run for president, was
struck down Friday as violating the state constitution.
Attorney General Brad Schimel promised to appeal the decision
and said he was confident it would not stand, noting that no similar law has
been struck down in any other state. Schimel, also a Republican, has not
decided whether to seek an immediate suspension of the ruling while the appeal
is pending, spokesman Johnny Koremenos said.
“We are confident Wisconsin’s freedom-to-work law is
constitutional and will ultimately be upheld,” Walker wrote on Twitter.
Right-to-work laws prohibit businesses and unions from
reaching agreements that require all workers, not just union members, to pay
union dues. Twenty-five other states have such laws.
Three unions filed the lawsuit last year shortly after
Walker signed the bill into law. They argued that Wisconsin’s law was an
unconstitutional seizure of union property since they now must extend benefits
to workers who don’t pay dues.
Dane County Circuit Judge William Foust agreed. He said
the law amounts to the government taking union funds without compensation since
under the law they must represent people who don’t pay dues. That presents an
existential threat to unions, Foust wrote.
“While (union) losses today could be characterized by
some as minor, they are not isolated and the impact of (the law) over time is
threatening to the unions’ very economic viability,” he wrote.
Foust noted that no other state court had struck down a
right-to-work law on those grounds, but said he wasn’t obligated to follow
other states.
The Wisconsin attorney general had argued that the law
doesn’t take anything from the unions since it technically doesn’t remove any
money currently in their accounts.
Republicans who backed the law dismissed the ruling,
saying it will be reversed.
“Once again, a liberal Dane County judge is trying to
legislate from the bench,” Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester, said in a
statement. “No one should be forced to join a union or pay union dues as a
condition of employment.”
The law’s Democratic supporters hailed the decision as a
victory for the middle class and working families.
“The extreme right-wing Republican agenda has been
incredibly harmful to working people and businesses in Wisconsin,” said
Democratic Assembly Minority Leader Peter Barca.
Frederick Perillo, lead attorney for the unions, said the
judge’s decision was based on well-established Wisconsin law and should stand
on appeal.
“I don’t think the decision can just be dismissed as a
product of a liberal judge in one county. ... We think that justice prevailed
in the lower court and we would be hopeful that it would continue to prevail,”
he said.
The lawsuit was brought by three unions — Machinists Local
Lodge 1061 in Milwaukee, the Wisconsin AFL-CIO chapter and United Steelworkers
District 2 in Menasha. Phil Neuenfeldt, president of the Wisconsin AFL-CIO,
said the ruling was a “needed check on Scott Walker’s attacks on working
families.”
“Right to work has always been unjust, now it’s proven
unconstitutional,” he said.
Supporters of right-to-work laws say they give workers
the freedom to choose whether to join a union. Opponents say the laws weaken
unions by depriving them of the dues from workers who choose not to pay them,
resulting in lower wages and fewer employee rights. They also say the
Republican-backed law is intended to undermine unions’ political power because
unions tend to vote Democrat.
In 2014 the Indiana Supreme Court rejected two nearly
identical challenges to that state’s right-to-work law. Those lawsuits alleged
that the law unconstitutionally required unions to provide services to nonunion
workers without compensation.
Walker launched his run for president just months after
signing the law, and frequently mentioned it while campaigning. Months after
taking office in 2011, Walker also signed a law that effectively ended
collective bargaining for public sector workers.
Source: The
Washington Post
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