As observers outside Wisconsin attempt to divine what the failed attempt to recall Republican Gov. Scott Walker means for November’s presidential election, let us instead focus on what the so-called union-buster’s triumph says about Big Labor. My favorite comment on the matter came via Twitter: “Please explain: why so many people I know who are in unions (trades or schoolteachers) are so excited for Walker’s win?”
Let me take a crack at that one: Because not every tradesman or teacher wants to be forced into joining a union. And they certainly don’t want to pay hefty union fees that go toward supporting political agendas that have nothing to do with, say, educating children. That’s how I felt when I was a teacher and a forced member of a union, and how I still feel as the wife of a teacher union member. And a lot of others feel the same way, too.
Not that anyone would know this based on winter 2011 news coverage of masses of radical Wisconsin teachers calling in sick so they could travel to the state Capitol building to wave signs comparing Gov. Walker to Hitler. The coverage of militant-fist-logo-wearing union sympathizers made it easy to imagine all collective bargainers as one big, happy family. But if plummeting union membership doesn’t adequately illustrate Wisconsin workers’ desire to be relieved of their unions — The Wall Street Journal recently reported that membership in the state’s chapters of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees dropped by a heart-stopping 55 percent once the mandatory collection of dues was abolished — then Tuesday’s exit polls make it clear. According to The Washington Post, almost a third of union members who cast a vote did so for Walker, as did 48 percent of voters who live with a union member but aren’t members themselves.
Unions unloved
Teachers in particular aren’t feeling love for the unions they’re basically forced to join, and recent data show that taxpayers increasingly agree with them. The journal Education Next and Harvard’s Program on Education Policy and Governance have been keeping track of attitudes toward teacher unions since 2009, and while the numbers had been stable until 2011, they fell sharply this year. Though the majority of the general public felt neutral, the percentage of people with a positive view of teacher unions dropped to 22 percent this year from 29 percent in 2011. Last year, 58 percent of teachers had a positive view of unions but only 43 percent did this year, and the number of teachers holding negative views of unions nearly doubled to 32 percent in 2012.