Sunday, November 6, 2011

Ohio's Issue 2 Goes Down to the Wire

At Los Angeles Times, "Ohio voters look set to dump Republicans' anti-union law."

An aggressive Republican drive to weaken the labor rights of government workers appears to have crested, at least in Ohio, where voters are expected to throw out a far-reaching anti-union law this week.

The referendum over collective bargaining for public employees, potentially the most important contest in off-year elections around the nation, is being closely watched for clues about shifting voter trends in a state expected to play its usual outsized role in next year's presidential contest.

Barely seven months ago, newly elected Gov. John Kasich joined other Republican governors, including Wisconsin's Scott Walker, in defying angry street demonstrations to push through a measure designed to curb the power of public-employee unions.

Tuesday's vote "will reverberate in a major way across the country, because Ohio is still Ohio," said Dale Butland of Innovation Ohio, a liberal think tank with ties to organized labor. "We are one of the linchpins of any presidential election."

Kasich, the focus of both sides in the referendum fight, touts his blue-collar roots as the son of a postman. But he warns that a victory by organized labor would undercut his efforts to hold the line on government spending and rebuild the state's economy.

"Look, I understand that people are nervous about this in the public sector," he told a northeastern Ohio rally in support of the anti-union law he signed in March. But, he added, "if we want to continue on this path of pulling Ohio out of this ditch, the state of Ohio has to be responsible."
RTWT.

Also, at the Portland Maine Press-Herald, "Voters to decide labor's reach across Ohio." And at the Cleveland Plain-Dealer, "'Proud former union member' Sarah Palin joins home-stretch campaign to uphold SB 5."

1 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hard to know how to rationally predict this one. Ohio pols are reliably skewed heavily leftwards, but not always. On occasion they're accurate and on occasion badly off the mark beyond the factor of normal skew...