Scott Walk­er calls nix­ing of land­mark WI law that led to mass protests in 2011 a ‘brazen polit­i­cal action’

For­mer Wis­con­sin Repub­li­can Gov. Scott Walk­er spoke out after a coun­ty judge in Madi­son struck down major parts of a 2011 law geared toward pub­lic employ­ee unions. 

Dane Coun­ty Judge Jacob Frost ruled that the pro­vi­sions of a law known as Act 10, which selec­tive­ly exempt cer­tain pub­lic work­ers from its restric­tions on union­iza­tion and col­lec­tive bar­gain­ing, are uncon­sti­tu­tion­al. The con­tro­ver­sial law sought to close a bud­get deficit by lim­it­ing col­lec­tive bar­gain­ing, there­by mod­er­at­ing pub­lic work­ers’ ben­e­fits that Walk­er said at the time helped solve a fis­cal sit­u­a­tion he was required to address.

The orig­i­nal pas­sage in 2011 led to week­s­long protests inside the state Capi­tol, and even saw leg­isla­tive Democ­rats flee to neigh­bor­ing Illi­nois to pre­vent Repub­li­cans from reach­ing a quo­rum to vote on it. Walk­er lat­er sur­vived a 2012 recall elec­tion over the law’s pas­sage and rode his suc­cess into a decent show­ing in the 2016 pres­i­den­tial race, where he even­tu­al­ly bowed out of the pri­ma­ry that ulti­mate­ly went to Don­ald Trump. 

On Tues­day, Walk­er, who cur­rent­ly leads the con­ser­v­a­tive-train­ing non­prof­it Young Amer­i­ca’s Foun­da­tion (YAF), said his law sim­ply took pow­er “out of the hands of the big union boss­es and put it firm­ly into the hands of the hard­work­ing tax­pay­ers…”

“And what this court deci­sion did as brazen polit­i­cal action was to throw that out and put pow­er back in the hands of those union boss­es,” he said in an inter­view, call­ing col­lec­tive bar­gain­ing not a right but an “expen­sive enti­tle­ment.”

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Asked about Frost’s asser­tion that dis­parate treat­ment of col­lec­tive bar­gain­ing rights of cer­tain “pub­lic safe­ty” work­ers and oth­er pub­lic work­ers was uncon­sti­tu­tion­al, Walk­er said it was a “bogus polit­i­cal argu­ment.” 

Frost stripped more than 60 sec­tions of the law from the books.

The law was upheld mul­ti­ple times at the state and fed­er­al lev­els, Walk­er replied, adding a new issue is that of a poten­tial­ly-grow­ing “lib­er­al activist major­i­ty” on the offi­cial­ly non­par­ti­san Wis­con­sin Supreme Court that may hear any appeal of the rul­ing.

Walk­er said that if appealed, the first place the case will land is in Wauke­sha court, which he pre­dict­ed would over­turn Frost. But a sub­se­quent appeal by the left would bring it before the state’s high bench.

“It’s all the more rea­son why the Supreme Court race in Wis­con­sin this spring (2025) is more impor­tant than ever,” he said.

Walk­er went on to dis­cuss the roots of Act 10, and how it was his way of abid­ing by Wisconsin’s bal­anced-bud­get require­ment. He not­ed the orig­i­nal name was the “Bud­get Repair Act” and that a pri­or Demo­c­ra­t­ic admin­is­tra­tion instead chose to cut fund­ing for munic­i­pal­i­ties, which instead result­ed in lay­offs.

Instead of risk­ing job loss or Medicare cuts, Walk­er opt­ed to require pub­lic work­ers to con­tribute more to their enti­tle­ments in return for keep­ing their pen­sions sol­vent.

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In addi­tion, Wis­con­sin Sen­ate Pres­i­dent Chris Kapen­ga echoed Walker’s claim that par­ti­san pol­i­tics played a role in the rul­ing:

“[I]t’s proof there is very lit­tle jus­tice left in our jus­tice sys­tem. Wis­con­sin’s leg­is­la­ture should be dis­cussing impeach­ment, as we are the only check on their pow­er,” said Kapen­ga, R‑Oconomowoc.

“Believ­ing Dane Coun­ty judges and the lib­er­al major­i­ty in our state Supreme Court are inde­pen­dent jurists is almost as far-fetched as believ­ing the bor­der is secure, infla­tion’s not a prob­lem, or [Pres­i­dent Biden] won’t par­don his son.”

“The left keeps telling us, ‘Don’t believe what you see’ — Wis­con­sinites see right through it,” he said.

As for Walker’s cur­rent role as pres­i­dent of YAF, he said his orga­ni­za­tion is prepar­ing for con­ser­v­a­tive lead­er­ship to return to Wash­ing­ton as he brought it to Madi­son in 2010.

Walk­er said he is thrilled by the prospect of see­ing many YAF alum­ni in the new Trump admin­is­tra­tion, includ­ing Stephen Miller, a top aide to Trump and for­mer­ly ex-Sen. Jeff Ses­sions, R‑Ala.

Ser­gio Gor, a long­time aide to Sen. Rand Paul, R‑Ky., was named Trump’s head of pres­i­den­tial per­son­nel last month. Walk­er praised Gor’s pri­or work lead­ing YAF’s George Wash­ing­ton Uni­ver­si­ty chap­ter.

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“Four years ago, younger vot­ers sided with Biden by 25 points,” Walk­er said. “This elec­tion, that shrunk right down to 5 or 6 points. And most inter­est­ing­ly, young men four years ago went with Biden by 15 points. In this elec­tion, they shift­ed to Trump by 14. What we need to do is lock that in.”