I think our old pal Vactor may have been crushed under the mob. I wonder whatever happened to him. Yo Vac, hope to hear how things are going.
I can ask that, because the public-worker-union business isn't over yet. As you'll notice from my nine-day-old post, a Wisconsin state-capitol judge placed a stay on the "Budget Repair" bill's implementation as a law. Governor Walker wanted it to be a law anyway, but the guy who actually publishes laws to be laws, the Secretary of State (Democrat) Doug LaFollette refused to publish it, because y'know judge's stay on the bill and all. So Walker went to the "Legislative Reference Bureau" and
made them officially publish the bill, and supposedly the governor's office is already sending out notices of pay cuts. The LRB meanwhile insists they only published the bill because they didn't think they had the authority for that to mark it as standing law.
So you have the courts, the responsible government publishing bureau, and the Secretary of State all saying a kinda-sorta published bill isn't really a law yet, and the Governor who has the power to order things to be enforced says it is a law. All political concepts and arguments aside,
this is not how you run a government. There should not be this kind of dire confusion over whether a bill is actually and can actually be implemented, with the Chief Executive at odds with his own offices and the Judiciary.
Meanwhile, semi-private agencies like state university faculties are
lining up to unionize. And the state's own budget-analysis offices report that the upcoming Wisconsin budget, passed under the shadow of the Governor insisting the state is too broke to follow the legal legislative process,
will actually increase spending by about 1%, while still managing to slash most actual department budgets, with most of the savings being creamed off to private-public partnerships.