How long can Scott Walker hold out?
By Ezra Klein
WashPost
Mother Jones's Andy Kroll has been doing some great reporting from Wisconsin, and he runs through four of the possible endgames here. They are:
1) The bill passes.
2) The collective-bargaining ban gets dropped.
3) A weird procedural effort to repackage the bill as "non-financial," which would mean the Senate Democrats don't need to be present.
4) The collective-bargaining ban gets pushed to the 2011-13 budget fight, which will happen in the spring.
The problem with trying to game out Gov. Scott Walker's negotiating style is that the guy doesn't seem like much of a negotiator. Another politician would've taken the concrete concessions on pensions and health-care benefits, threatened to revisit the collective-bargaining ban in the spring if any of the unions failed to make the promised concessions and thrown himself a parade. But not Walker.
(Original here.)
WashPost
Mother Jones's Andy Kroll has been doing some great reporting from Wisconsin, and he runs through four of the possible endgames here. They are:
1) The bill passes.
2) The collective-bargaining ban gets dropped.
3) A weird procedural effort to repackage the bill as "non-financial," which would mean the Senate Democrats don't need to be present.
4) The collective-bargaining ban gets pushed to the 2011-13 budget fight, which will happen in the spring.
The problem with trying to game out Gov. Scott Walker's negotiating style is that the guy doesn't seem like much of a negotiator. Another politician would've taken the concrete concessions on pensions and health-care benefits, threatened to revisit the collective-bargaining ban in the spring if any of the unions failed to make the promised concessions and thrown himself a parade. But not Walker.
(Original here.)
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