'We were demonized': labor unions win big in ruling on Wisconsin's Act 10
Source: The Guardian
Sun 8 Dec 2024 07.00 EST
As the labor movement braces for a second Trump term, union members and their leaders are celebrating a major victory over a controversial law that stripped public sector unions of collective bargaining rights.
In response to a lawsuit alleging that a notorious law passed by the former Republican governor of Wisconsin Scott Walker in 2011 is unconstitutional, a county judge ruled on Monday that more than 60 sections of the law and several sections of a follow-up law in 2015, Act 55, are unconstitutional. Walker called the decision brazen political activism at its worst and Republicans plan an appeal.
Thousands protested the introduction of the law, which crippled unions funding and powers. Following the passage of Act 10, several Republican-dominated states pushed to pass similar legislation, including Florida which passed a similar law in May 2023 targeting public sector unions, and Iowa, which passed legislation that took away collective bargaining rights from many state employees in 2017.
Act 10 stripped collective bargaining rights from thousands of state employees in Wisconsin, limiting their ability to bargain solely on wage increases that cannot exceed inflation. It also forced public sector labor unions to annually vote, with a majority of members participating and voting, to maintain certification.
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/dec/08/wisconsin-unions-court-restores-collective-bargaining-rights