Michigan Workers and Families Have Been Hurt
“If Michiganders can keep the momentum going this year, they may soon have their Right to Work law back.”
After decades of being under the thumb of the big labor bosses, Michigan in general, and Detroit in particular, are suffering the inevitable consequences. Politicians, often of both parties, let the union bosses run wild in exchange for political support. Will they change their ways? Ron Dzwonkowski wonders the same thing.
In a column in the Detroit Free Press, Dzwonkowski reminds people that Einstein defined insanity as doing the same thing over and over expecting different results. It would be insanity for the state to continue to let the big labor union bosses to rule with an iron fist. The first step at true reform is enactment of a Right to Work law but some of the elected officials might be better suited for a padded room than a vote in the state legislature.
“If Michiganders can keep the momentum going this year, they may soon have their Right to Work law back.”
A handful of short-sighted Republicans are hurting themselves and their own party by failing to cosponsor the National Right to Work Act, breaking pledges they made to their constituents and helping Big Labor keep the legislation from coming to the floor.
Every Democrat House Member Supported Pro-Union Monopoly Bill’s Passage