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RTW is good for the GOP, says O'Brien

by: Lucy Edwards

Fri May 20, 2011 at 13:30:51 PM EDT


The New Hampshire Business Review's Flotsam and Jetsam column has an interesting quote from the Speakah at a meeting of the Belknap County Republicans:

The reason to back RTW, according to O'Brien: The bill "is good for our party." He then claimed that 10 of the 12 largest contributors to Democrats in the 2010 election cycle were unions.
Lucy Edwards :: RTW is good for the GOP, says O'Brien
And then he want on to say:

Then he offered this dire warning to his audience: "If we don't win this veto, we might as well go home."

Even more reason to make sure this veto doesn't get overridden.

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O'Brien isn't even bothering to pretend to the BUSINESS press that this RTW will help business n/t (4.00 / 2)


Today O'Brien admits it is about politics not policy: (0.00 / 0)
RIGHT TO WORK

Dear Republican colleague,

As you are undoubtedly aware, the House is facing the override of Governor Lynch's veto of the Right to Work legislation. This will be a defining moment to determine if the Republican supermajority that the voters elected last November will be able to set the policy for the state of New Hampshire.

For Republicans, the case for Right to Work has been made clearly and effectively through data and precise language in both our state and national Party platforms. To reinforce this, I am including below a copy of an editorial that ran in the weekend Wall Street Journal, America's leading pro-growth and free market publication, calling for New Hampshire to pass Right to Work, as well as an op-ed of mine in today's New Hampshire Union Leader on the subject.

While it is important to set good policy as a legislature, the issue of a veto override is no longer just about Right to Work. Very simply, the issue is about whether the policy of the State of New Hampshire will be set by a Republican supermajority or by a Democrat Governor.

Rest assured that if we do not override this veto, that Governor Lynch will feel emboldened to veto more bills that are central to our party and critical to reform in New Hampshire, such as parental notification, retirement reform and, most importantly, a fiscally responsible budget that does not raise taxes and lives within our means. Not overriding this veto leaves all of these and other important issues in jeopardy.

To make this point abundantly clear, Governor Lynch is now calling Republican members, asking them to support him over our caucus. Governor Lynch knows that if he is successful here, he and the House Democrat minority can begin to undo all our efforts to bring needed change to state government.

In order to bring perspective to this matter, some of you will be receiving calls in support of overriding the veto from noted Republicans such as Governor John Sununu, John Stephen, Ovide Lamontagne, Jeb Bradley, Jack Kimball as well as members of our congressional delegation and candidates seeking the nomination for president.

On the issue of this veto override, the choice could not be more apparent -Will you stand with your caucus and the Republican Party, or with the Democrats?

I would be happy to discuss this issue further with any member who has questions or concerns. Please feel free to contact me at any time.

Sincerely,
William O'Brien
Speaker of the House

----------------------------------------------
Wall Street Journal
MAY 21, 2011
Right to Work in New England: New Hampshire could become the 23rd free union state

Twenty-two states have right-to-work laws, most of them in the faster-growing South and West. The big news is that New Hampshire is edging closer to becoming the 23rd, which would make it the first new right-to-work state since Oklahoma in 2001 and could lead to a regional revolution.

The state House and Senate in Concord have passed a right-to-work statute, but Governor John Lynch, a Democrat, vetoed the bill. On May 25 the legislature will attempt to override that veto, and House Speaker Bill O'Brien says he is "cautiously optimistic" that he can gain the two-thirds majority to do so.

This would be a landmark victory for the right-to-work movement. All other Northeastern states operate under forced-union rules, so the Granite State would gain a decisive competitive advantage over its neighbors in attracting investment and jobs. "Passing right to work on top of not having an income tax could make us the Hong Kong of the region," Mr. O'Brien says. The precedent would put enormous pressure on Maine and Massachusetts to follow. We assume Vermont is hopeless and prefers to be a tourist and natural history museum.

Right-to-work laws don't outlaw unions. They simply allow each individual worker to decide whether or not to join the union. In compulsory-union states, workers employed in unionized workplaces are required to have union dues withheld from their paychecks as a condition of employment, so there's big money at stake here for unions.

The issue has taken on national prominence since the National Labor Relations Board announced it will try to block Boeing's new airplane manufacturing plant in right-to-work South Carolina. Boeing decided to build its second plant for its 787 Dreamliner outside of Washington state, which imposes compulsory union rules and has been the scene of many work stoppages at Boeing.

The Boeing incident underscores that more businesses are migrating each year to states with right-to-work laws. It's no accident that so many of the foreign auto plants in America that employ tens of thousands are located in right-to-work southern states like Alabama, South Carolina and Texas.

New data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the consulting firm Haver Analytics show that private business creation was 46% higher in right-to-work states (497,000 new businesses) than in forced union states (340,000 new businesses) from 1993 to 2009. That's a remarkable difference given that about 60% of American workers reside in non-right-to-work states.

This year five states have tried to adopt right-to-work laws, but it appears that unions have stopped them everywhere except in New Hampshire. It is a sad testament to Big Labor's financial and political influence that not a single one of the more than 100 House and Senate Democrats in New Hampshire voted for right to work. These politicians would deny the right of 68,000 unionized workers to choose for themselves whether to stay in the union, no matter how much that hurts the working families they claim to speak for.

----------------------------------------------
Bringing more jobs by curbing union power
by William O'Brien
Published May 22, 2011

The New Hampshire Republican Party Platform promises New Hampshire that, "in an effort to expand the market both at home and abroad and develop productive employment with safety, rewards and dignity for workers of all ages, (Republicans) will work to ... support the "right to work" by adopting legislation necessary to ensure this principle for all workers." The national Republican Party Platform goes on to say, "We affirm both the right of individuals to voluntarily participate in labor organizations and ... states to enact Right-to-Work laws."

In this inspiring language, Republican candidates last fall committed to the voters to support worker freedom. In passing HB 474, the Franklin A. Partin Jr. Right to Work Act, New Hampshire House and Senate Republicans were faithful to this commitment.

The House and the Senate passed right-to-work because we know that economic liberty and employment freedom are fundamental building blocks of a dynamic economy. At a time when we need to become even more competitive to maintain the New Hampshire Advantage, we are quickly falling behind the 22 others states that have passed this important worker protection that turbo-charges economic growth.

The ongoing efforts of Boeing to put its newest factory and several thousand jobs in South Carolina, a right-to-work state, demonstrate the clear need for this law to produce jobs in New Hampshire. Non-right-to-work states are simply not competitive for employers looking to create manufacturing jobs.

The Boeing experience further demonstrates the need for a right-to-work law in New Hampshire to limit the corrupting power of labor unions, as they now direct the Obama administration's efforts to prevent that Boeing factory from being built for the sole reason that the new factory will not be a closed union shop.

What these unions fail to realize is that, for many employers, the choices are very simple: move to a right-to-work state, or take business, and jobs, to another country.

If the unions' efforts to cripple Boeing are not sufficient reason alone to limit the power of closed-shop unions, we should also consider the fact that the largest single contributor in the 2010 elections was the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), which alone spent $87.5 million on Democrats this past election. In fact, 10 of the top 13 national political contributors from 1989 to 2010 were labor unions, and many of those contributed nothing, or next to nothing, to Republicans, whom they have consistently worked to defeat.

It is time that New Hampshire stops requiring workers in closed shops to contribute their hard-earned income to candidates who they do not support and often find objectionable. The New Hampshire House can allow for this political freedom by overriding Gov. John Lynch's veto of the right-to-work law. In doing so, we will go far to break the unions' control over our state government that they tried to buy with $112,000 in political contributions to Gov. Lynch.

In an effort to be as fair as possible to unions, the House amended HB 474 before it went to the Senate to avoid any argument that unions are required to bargain for non-members not paying union dues or agency fees. To make sure that that the bill came back to the House with what they view as "poison pill" language they hope will prevent votes for right-to-work, the unions asked the Senate to remove that amendment.

Now, although the union lobbyists directed the removal of this language that was to make clear that unions do not have to bargain for non-members, we hear the argument from union-generated opposition to HB 474 that it is unfair for non-union workers to not pay their share of the cost of bargaining. This cynical manipulation of the system is without parallel in recent legislative history.

The "fair" response to this insincere and legally baseless argument by the unions is to override the veto of HB 474. New Hampshire needs to show unions that they cannot play our citizens and legislators for fools.

More importantly, Republican legislators need to show voters they made the right decision in electing our party last November, and we will fulfill our promise to bring jobs to New Hampshire and grow our economy. It would be impossible for any legislator to vote against right-to-work and tell constituents that he or she had done everything possible to create jobs.

*Rep. William O'Brien, Republican of Mont Vernon, is speaker of the New Hampshire House of Representatives.



Have you told a stranger today about Bill O'Brien and his Tea Party agenda? The people of NH deserve to hear about O'Brien  and his majority committed to destroying New Hampshire and remaking it into a armed survivalist preserve.  

What I love in all this (0.00 / 0)
is the absolute throwing under the bus of Union members who are also Republican voters.  But I guess according to O'Brien, such an oxymoron of being a Union member and Republican, cannot surely exist.

"We start working to beat these guys right now." -Jed Bartlet

[ Parent ]
NH Labor Leaders... (0.00 / 0)
have told me over the years that 40% of their membership are registered Republicans in NH.

Have you told a stranger today about Bill O'Brien and his Tea Party agenda? The people of NH deserve to hear about O'Brien  and his majority committed to destroying New Hampshire and remaking it into a armed survivalist preserve.  

[ Parent ]
What is there to say (4.00 / 2)
about this arrogance and sheer meanness?  This man is a psychopath.

[ Parent ]
What is he talking about? (4.00 / 1)
At a time when we need to become even more competitive to maintain the New Hampshire Advantage, we are quickly falling behind the 22 others states that have passed this important worker protection that turbo-charges economic growth.

He is making stuff up again.    



"When you get to the end of your rope, tie a knot and hang on."  Franklin D. Roosevelt    


You're right, he IS making stuff up (0.00 / 0)
we are quickly falling behind the 22 others states that have passed this important worker protection that turbo-charges economic growth.

Too bad the other 22 states that have this law have higher unemployment rates than New Hampshire (I believe Mississippi is around 10%).  So he's right, if his goal is to make us like Alabama or Mississippi in unemployment rate (NH now below 5%) than we are falling behind.

"We start working to beat these guys right now." -Jed Bartlet


[ Parent ]

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