The Denver Post comes out against card check this morning:
If Obama or congressional Democrats now put a card-check bill high on their agenda, they will risk a "Ritter moment" that would damage their relations with moderates and the business community. That's what happened to Gov. Bill Ritter in 2007 when a bill gutting long-standing rules limiting "union shops" in the Colorado Peace Act hurtled through the legislature with little public input.
Ritter rightly vetoed that bill, but the move angered his labor supporters. Later that year, the governor tried to make amends by granting limited collective-bargaining rights to state employees. That move, in turn, alienated much of the business community. This year's wholly avoidable fights over a right-to- work initiative and four anti-business initiatives that labor later withdrew all followed.
The Colorado squabbles weren't worth it. Whatever benefits labor might have gained by disrupting a decades-long accord with business were far outweighed by the disruption these duels caused.
This, coming from a paper whose editorial page never mentioned card check as an issue, and whose campaign coverage rarely mentioned it at all. From an editorial page that repeatedly blamed business for instigating this year's ballot initiatives fight,
Now that Right to Work is safely dead and buried, and now that their candidate - candidates, if one includes Mark Udall - are safely elected, they tell us that it would be in the Democrats' best interests not to reward their largest, most organized constituency.
Forgive me for doubting their sincerity.
Cross-Posted on View From a Height.



















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Classic Dan-Quayle-Was-Right
November 17, 2008 - 00:33 ET by mattmClassic Dan-Quayle-Was-Right journalism (to use that term loosely).
This is how the shyster media operate; first they advocate one side of an issue or one particular candidate, then after getting the result they want they put out a little of the other side of the story. That way they can move their leftist agenda forward, while fooling idiots into believing they are objective journalists.
in case you've never been in a union
November 17, 2008 - 06:37 ET by tonemeisterit's already almost too easy to join a union. all you need is 1/3 of the proposed "bargaining unit" to sign cards requesting representation by a union .then, a secret ballot supervised by the company and the union. simple majority wins..... its as easy as it sounds and the unions are still in decline. yes, to be fair many workplace rules reguarding safety, benefits, vacations are thanks to unions. but they have simply priced themselves out of the labor market in many areas. the vetting and campaigning can get pretty ugly..especially in a small company, hard feelings that last a long time. by law the company cannot make promises during the campaign.like, "vote against the union and you will all get raises" etc. thats where card check comes in .imagine sitting in a room with co-workers, people who you probably spend more time with than your family, and through peer pressure being forced to vote in the open... yes i'm a former union member and veteran of several organizing campaigns.so i know from whence i speak..