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Union dues reform bill passes Florida House.

The bill in question is HB 1021, and it is designed to get government out of union’s business by: banning automatic dues collection for public sector unions; and requiring union leadership to get permission from individual members before using those dues for partisan politicking.  The bill passed 74-40, despite the rather strenuous objections of Big Labor: a similar bill (SB 830) is making its way through the Florida Senate.  The success of HB 1021 should help with the success of SB 830, which has been fought every step of the way, naturally; the Democratic-Big Labor governmental alliance has zero interest in seeing their profitable feedback cycle disrupted by the ability of mere workers to decide whether they like having their money go to keep one party in office.

Should the bill make it to the state Senate floor, it should pass relatively easily – both branches of the Florida legislature are solidly Republican.  In fact, they were like that before the last legislative elections… and that detail is something that I’d like to highlight, because it’s important.  Given that Florida is in fact a Right-to-Work state already, it may seem surprising that union reform is progressing even further in that state.  Well, there may be a reason for it, and that reason may be Wisconsin: specifically, the puerile, undemocratic, hooliganish, contemptuous, and generally infantile way that Democrats/Big Labor attempted to avoid dealing with the simple notion that elections have consequences.  The Left’s cheerleaders are currently ‘bragging’ – scare quotes because I’m not sure why anybody would be proud of the fact that they’re being vocal defenders of a political party’s deniable corruption slush fund – that their shrill, petulant extended whine against labor union reform in Wisconsin galvanized the Left nationwide.  That may or may not be true, but I can tell you one thing: it definitely galvanized the Right.

And, hey! – We control more state legislatures than you do!

Moe Lane (crosspost)

COMMENTS

  • uselogic

    of my state’s Reublican legislators. This is one of those times.

    Thanks for the heads-up, Moe!

  • jmimac351

    effect these changes. I am in touch with my state Rep regularly here in Central FL. Fortunately he is on the same page. Whereas with a member of Congress you get a form letter or email reply, with a State Legislator it is routine to get an email or phone call directly from them. And look at the impact… So far my State Rep has done a lot more good to defend my freedom than Sandy Adams (FL-24) has.

    Results.

  • http://www.floridapoliticalpress.com/ tomtflorida

    …how right you are, Moe! As someone from Florida who’s had personal discussions with a few state rep’s on this bill and the reasoning behind, you are spot on in your suggestion. Keep in mind, these various state legislatures do communicate with one another…

  • http://www.floridapoliticalpress.com/ tomtflorida

    …how right you are, Moe! As someone from Florida who’s had personal discussions with a few state rep’s on this bill and the reasoning behind, you are spot on in your suggestion. Keep in mind, these various state legislatures do communicate with one another…

  • earlgrey

    nt.

  • earlgrey

    my hope is that these changes will have a lasting effect on the democrat party to win elections.

  • lineholder

    Scott signed this bill into law this week, too. This is the bill that ties teachers’ increase in pay to student performance and requires annual renewal of contracts based on performance evaluations.

    http://www.tampabay.com/blogs/the-buzz-florida-politics/content/scott-signs-sb-736-jacksonville-politifact-florida-updates-scott-o-meter

  • msctex

    . . .which will destroy the Unions. The bigger gestures are more easily opposed by over-the-top displays of misguided anger, which a sufficient number of people are still unfortunately silly enough to take seriously. But small, common sense attacks like this are far harder to argue against, and will chip away at the Unions until they have no leg left to stand upon.

  • http://www.floridapoliticalpress.com/ tomtflorida

    Yes, that is what I’m saying, that there is dialogue from state to state. The actions by the Florida legislature, in a right to work state, helps deflect the focus from the left from being squarely on Wisconsin.