JUST HOW MANY LIVES DOES BREWER HAVE?
There’s a great deal to complain about regarding the
recently enacted right-to-work laws, particularly the swiftness with which they
were passed. There are a few other
legitimate issues with the narrowness of the laws. But you've got to ask yourself, why didn't the unions and the Democratic Party see this coming?
After all, the man repeatedly asked them to not force his
hand. Governor Rick Snyder did not beg
the unions and the Democrats to refrain from pushing ballot initiatives which
would enshrine the collective bargaining process into Michigan’s constitution,
but he did a good job of making it clear that if they didn't, he wouldn't.
Maybe the unions and the Democratic Party did not believe
Snyder when he first said that right-to-work legislation was not on his agenda
and that he thought RTW and messing around with the constitution were both bad divisive
ideas. Maybe they thought that if they
went ahead and tried it anyway, Snyder would “nerd-up”, take the slap in the
face, and turn the other cheek. Well,
guess who got pimp-slapped…
The one-day lightening rod speed with which those three
bills zoomed through the house was ugly but impressive, if nothing else. No debate, not committee deliberation, no
negotiations with the House minority party…
all of which seemingly signaled a “take that!” response to Michigan Democratic
Party Chairman Mark Brewer’s most recent failure to get it done.
Seems like every time Brewer fails on a statewide level, he gets
more job security. He failed with the affirmative action
initiative, he failed with the Benero gubernatorial campaign, he failed with
the 2010 Michigan House and Senate elections, he failed with the “three Supremes”, and now he will again keep his job based on yet another promise, two full years from now, to reverse the RTW legislation and
the GOP grip on the state legislature.
Talk about nine lives. This man secures
relevancy with each instance of abject failure.
As a former union official and independent Democrat, I vehemently oppose the RTW
legislation as written. As a pragmatist, I understand why Snyder had no choice
but to reverse course. The word on the
street is that he would have lost a great deal of support during his next
gubernatorial or first senatorial campaign. It turns out he is not only nerdy,
but smart about it.
After the failure of all the initiatives that would have
changed Michigan’s constitution, anyone could have, and someone should have,
told Brewer that judgment day was surely coming.
Whoever is giving Brewer advice should give him a refund. Someone should also tell Brewer that if all
you do is talk to yourself, you will certainly always agree with yourself and
excuse yourself, outcomes be damned. The party deserves better leadership.
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