Pundits will be talking about why Scott Brown defeated the machine to win the Senate election in Massachusetts until the cows come home. What you won’t hear liberal pundits talk about is how the Democrats’ chickens have come home to roost. [Borrowing a phrase from Obama's favorite preacher.]
Daniel Henninger’s op-ed in today’s Wall Street Journal is a must-read for anyone whose state isn’t crushed by the costs of public employee labor unions. And those of you in states like NY, NJ and MA might be interested in finding out why your state keeps cutting services while raising taxes.
The central battle in our time is over political primacy. It is a competition between the public sector and the private sector over who defines the work and the institutions that make a nation thrive and grow.
In 1962, President John F. Kennedy planted the seeds that grew the modern Democratic Party. That year, JFK signed executive order 10988 allowing the unionization of the federal work force. This changed everything in the American political system. Kennedy’s order swung open the door for the inexorable rise of a unionized public work force in many states and cities.
This in turn led to the fantastic growth in membership of the public employee unions—The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) and the teachers’ National Education Association.
They broke the public’s bank. More than that, they entrenched a system of taking money from members’ dues and spending it on political campaigns. Over time, this transformed the Democratic Party into a public-sector dependency.
They became different than the party of FDR, Truman, Meany and Reuther. That party was allied with the fading industrial unions, which in turn were tethered to a real world of profit and loss.
The states in the North and on the coasts turned blue because blue is the color of the public-sector unions. This tax-and-spend milieu became the training ground for their politicians.
Until the Obama exception, the only recent Democrats electable into the presidency had to be centrist Southerners little known to the country. Every post-Kennedy liberal who tried, failed, including Teddy.
What an irony it is that in the same week the Kennedy labor legacy hit the wall in Massachusetts, the NEA approved a $1 million donation from the union’s contingency fund to the Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate. It is this Kennedy legacy, the public union tax and spend machine, that drove blue Massachusetts into revolt Tuesday.
Yes, health care was ground zero, but Massachusetts—like New Jersey, like California, like New York—has been building toward this explosion for years. ….
Read the whole thing. It’s very enlightening. So much for everyone paying their fair share in America.











This makes me so mad. My blood is boiling!
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FaceBooked this post, LC. I know truly wonderful Americans who are in unions, because they have to in order to work. But, it’s high time these Americans stood up to the union leadership (which is nothing more than the Mafia) and stop this insanity that is killing their jobs and their livlihoods.
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livelihood….oy.
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