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Rick Snyder mousetraps Michigan Right To Work opponents.

Hey, do you want to see what it looks like to have your planned judicial delaying tactics trip, fall, and face-plant before it even clears the door?

…Yeah, sorry about the metaphor, but sometimes the convoluted ones are really the only ones that fit. Case in point:

Opponents of the state’s new right-to-work law promised a challenge of the controversial bill that passed the lame-duck Legislature in December.

But those challenges may become a moot point since Gov. Rick Snyder asked the Michigan Supreme Court on Monday to review the bill and determine whether it passes constitutional muster.

What was going to happen was that labor reform opponents were going to judicial shop until they found a tame judge ready and willing to pass a temporary injunction on the law until it… reached the Michigan Supreme Court. Governor Snyder, knowing this perfectly well, is simply going to move the process along – secure in the knowledge that Right-To-Work has passed muster in the courts time and again, and perhaps even more secure in the knowledge that the Michigan Supreme Court has a comfortable Republican majority, thanks to Democratic MI Supreme Court judge Diane Hathaway’s recent resignation in the face of charges of real estate fraud. Hence, the short-circuiting; the sooner this all gets resolved, the better.

Anyway, go read the Detroit Free Press article: it’s got some awesomely cranky Democrats being quoted in it. Apparently they don’t like it when Republicans are too busy to indulge the Left in its usual judicial Kabuki theater… but, honestly: jumping the queue to the Supreme Court is a perfectly-reasonable response to make to what is often a very childish, and always predictable, strategy by Democrats. If the Democrats don’t like that, then maybe they shouldn’t try to quick-draw an injunction every time they lose an important vote…

Via AoSHQ.

Moe Lane (crosspost)

COMMENTS

  • tankertodd

    Love it, love it, love it.

  • Martin Knight

    I’m beginning to really like this Snyder dude.

    Unlike too many Republicans, once he’s in a fight, he’s in it to win it. No punch-pulling, no milquetoasting, no holding back.

    John Kasich – take note.

  • BA Cyclone

    Wow. Game, set, match. I hope this truly works out the way Snyder has played it.

    Viewed from afar I really didn’t think Snyder would be able to play this political game so perfectly, but now it really looks like it will happen.

    Michigan: Right to Work state. NEVER thought I would see that day.

  • funwithknives

    Please, everyone remember a kinda’ important factoid here :
    Unions tried to enshrine Unionism into our State’s Constitution , just a short while ago and the initiative failed , hugely.
    They went as far as-to use County Sheriffs to lie on T V ads about the ramifications.
    [or at least lie by fact-deletion]
    So an error on their part turned into A Win for Freedom ,True Choice and Liberty.
    There is a lesson here and Conservatives should never forget it.
    Sometimes you just gotta let ‘em rail, use what they laughingly call ‘initiative’ and ‘gooder things’ can happen…….
    2014 Governor race is gonna be one for the books. Just when you think you’ve seen it all, you will be slack-jawed at what you see next…….make book on it.

  • kmtierney

    Well Snyder was originally big on tax reform before the Unions decide to pick a fight with him. He still wants to do that, but his current focus is on rebuilding a lot of bad infrastructure in the state, which will involve a small hike in the sales tax.
    Yet if you live in Michigan, you kind of understand why it has to be done. If he wants tax reform, he has to show he can still run an administration of competence. Even worse, he’s got some real fights on his hands once Detroit formally collapses and he has to fight over a new emergency manager law. So I’m not really sure what other major conservative goal Snyder can accomplish before November of 2014. I think major tax reform will be the goal of his second administration, should he get it.

  • kmtierney

    Even if the Democrats send someone to Lansing in 2015, it’s going to be VERY hard for them to overturn this once it gets ratified by the Courts. (High chance of that happening.) That will require a lot of Democrats in Lansing, and Republicans dominate both houses.