Democratic lawmakers leave, block labor bill

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- Indiana House Democrats took a page from the playbook of their counterparts in Wisconsin on Tuesday, refusing to show up and at least temporarily blocking a Republican-backed labor bill.

Nearly all stayed away from the Statehouse completely and headed more than a 100 miles west to neighboring Illinois. Only three of 40 House Democrats were in the chamber when Republican Speaker Brian Bosma tried repeatedly to convene it, leaving the chamber short of the two-thirds needed for a quorum.

The Democratic caucus issued a statement Tuesday night saying members had relocated to Urbana, Ill., "for the immediate future" to continue reviewing Republican proposals on public education changes and so-called right-to-work legislation that would prohibit union representation fees from being a condition of employment at most private-sector companies.

"By staying here, we will be giving the people of Indiana a chance to find out more about this radical agenda and speak out against it," the statement said. "We will remain here until we get assurances from the governor and House Speaker Brian Bosma that these bills will not be called down in the House at any time this session."

While the desks of 37 Democratic legislators were empty, several hundred union members crowded the adjourning hallways and held up signs to windows looking into the House with slogans such as "Stop the War on Workers."

It was the second day of large union crowds at the Statehouse, with the spark being a GOP-led committee on Monday taking up the right-to-work legislation.

Wisconsin's Senate hasn't been able to take up a bolder measure that would strip nearly all public employees' bargaining rights since that chamber's Democrats left the state Thursday.

Indiana's Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels, who had urged GOP legislators not to act on the right-to-work bill this year, told reporters he would not use state troopers to compel Democratic legislators to return. Daniels had said he was worried that acting on the contentious right-to-work issue could derail other parts of his legislative agenda.

"I trust people's consciences will bring them back to work," Daniels said. "I choose to believe that our friends in the minority, having made their point, will come back and do their duty, the jobs that they're paid to do."

Because House Democrats skipped the entire day's floor session before Bosma adjourned Tuesday night, the right-to-work legislation missed a procedural deadline for further consideration. However, Republicans could find other ways to consider it later.

Republicans released a list of 23 bills they said would fail at the same deadline, although none are on major topics.

Minority walkouts in the Indiana House have happened periodically in the past, including in 2001 by Republicans and 2005 by Democrats.

Union groups oppose the right-to-work bill as well as some other proposals moving through the Legislature, including restricting teacher collective bargaining rights, expanding charter schools and reducing jobless benefits for some people as part of a plan to fix the state's debt-ridden unemployment insurance fund.

Rep. Terri Austin of Anderson, one of the Democrats on the House floor Tuesday, said Republicans have put forth a very partisan agenda that Democrats would keep fighting until the legislative session ends in late April.

"We've still got time," Austin said. "There is time to work out some compromises and that's what we hope we will be able to do."

Jerome Davison, an officer of the 3,400-member Steelworkers union at the ArcelorMittal steel mill in Burns Harbor, applauded the Democrats' boycott and said union members planned to continue showing up at the Statehouse.

"This is not a policy no one cares about," Davison said. "This is about paychecks and benefits."

Republican leaders, however, described Democrats as trying to kill legislation that could help the state.

"It is our responsibility to examine and discuss and decide upon policies that could be helpful to the citizens of Indiana in creating and retaining jobs so that we can grow our economy," said House Majority Leader William Friend, R-Macy. "We should at least have that discussion."

Comments
View 7 comments
Note: The nature of the Internet makes it impractical for our staff to review every comment. Please note that those who post comments on this website may do so using a screen name, which may or may not reflect a website user's actual name. Readers should be careful not to assign comments to real people who may have names similar to screen names. Refrain from obscenity in your comments, and to keep discussions civil, don't say anything in a way your grandmother would be ashamed to read.
  • "Why don't you Democrats just sit in the back of the room."

    Aha! Isn't that the idiot Obama's famous quote, said to the GOP, when dems rules D.C. ???

    How do you like it now? Dems, feel free to just leave the state, like the Wisconsin dems did? It will do us all a favor. If Hoosiers wanted your stupid rule, you would have majority, but you do not, thankfully.

    -- Posted by GRNT on Wed, Feb 23, 2011, at 6:58 AM
  • These are well paid elected officals,public employees,and since they don't have the numbers to block a bill,they run away schuking their duties and oh yes still getting paid for them,DEMOCRATES YOU NEED TO REMEMBER ONE THING,WE PUT YOU IN OFFICE AND WE CAN TAKE YOU OUT OF OFFICE!!!!

    -- Posted by obeone on Wed, Feb 23, 2011, at 7:31 AM
  • Maybe we should dock them six months pay,that might get them back to work,I feel we've been slapped in the face!

    -- Posted by obeone on Wed, Feb 23, 2011, at 7:34 AM
  • Why did they relocate to IL? Couldn't they have stayed in IN and stayed at IN hotels, eaten at IN restaurants, etc.?

    -- Posted by LangdonUlger on Wed, Feb 23, 2011, at 9:15 AM
  • Kudos to the democrates!!!! They should be paid and they are doing their job!! They are making a statement that they do not agree with what the Republicans are doing. People need to start standing up for what is right instead of going with the status quo!! The governor of this state is stupid and has his own personal agenda and does'nt care about anyone but himself, except Mr. Bennett............................

    -- Posted by enoughcrap on Wed, Feb 23, 2011, at 10:28 AM
  • I'm sure your education is by far superior to that of one from Princeton. I can tell by your spelling and grammar skills.

    -- Posted by Keyboard_hero on Thu, Feb 24, 2011, at 2:30 AM
  • LangdonUlger, I believe the reason they've gone to Illinois is that the state police can be called upon to bring them back to the state house if they're within the state.

    I feel it is a legitimate tactic but ultimately a dead end strategy as long term it negates elections.

    Run off for a day to show your contempt for a bill, that's fine. Run off any longer than that and you're showing your contempt for the voters.

    -- Posted by Pointman on Thu, Feb 24, 2011, at 4:11 PM
Respond to this story

Posting a comment requires free registration: