‘No’ on Ohio Ballot Issues Means ‘Yes’ to Obama Agenda
On Tuesday, November 8 — actually, during the weeks leading up to November 8, thanks to the travesty known as “early voting” – Ohioans have been and will be voting on two crucial ballot issues. One of the results will largely determine whether the Buckeye State continues to be governed like a heading-towards-broke blue state — as it was for over 15 years before current Governor John Kasich took office — or a recovering red one. Both could heavily influence the red or blue direction of the entire nation.
Ballot Issue 2 is about whether to keep Senate Bill 5 (SB5), a law the state’s legislature passed earlier this year, on the books. The law:
- Requires public-sector employees to contribute 10 percent of their salaries towards their pensions, and to pay 15 percent of their health-care costs.
- Outlaws public employee strikes while banning binding arbitration.
- Gives cities, counties, and school districts badly needed flexibility to control their costs.
- Institutes merit pay for teachers, and potentially protects excellent but less experienced teachers from seniority-based layoffs.
A “yes” vote means that SB5 stays; a “no” vote repeals it.
Issue 3, the Ohio Health Care Freedom Amendment, is a direct response to what has become known, even to the president himself, as “Obamacare.” If it passes, Issue 3 will ensure that no federal, state, or local rule enacted after March 19, 2010 can:
- Force any Ohioan “to participate in a health care system”;
- “[P]rohibit the purchase or sale of health care or health insurance”;
- “[I]mpose a penalty or fine for the sale or purchase of health care or health insurance.”
A “yes” vote, subject to a likely federal constitutional challenge, will mean that the Amendment becomes part of Ohio’s constitution. A “no” vote will provide aid and comfort to statists who believe that they alone should be entrusted with micromanaging the delivery of health care and health insurance services in this country. While Issue 3 has drawn a bit of attention from the Obama administration, it appears to be ahead in the polls, and will probably pull in additional support for Issue 2.
What wasn’t expected was a move which I believe Issue 2′s opponents may come to regret. Late last week, despite his declining poll numbers in the state (from a net 4-point approval margin to an 8-point disapproval in the past five months, according to Quinnipiac on October 26) and his recent virtual blessing of Occupy Wall Streeters who have turned out in several instances to be nothing more than potty-mouthed, violent hooligans with an incoherent cause, Obama’s already ramped-up reelection machine came out swinging against Issue 2. Ohioans on the campaign’s email list were told:
On everyone’s ballot this fall is Issue 2 (formerly known as Senate Bill 5, or SB 5) — a law that forces many state employees, including teachers, firefighters, and police officers, to give up their right to bargain collectively for important benefits and working conditions. It’s a blatant attempt to balance the state’s budget on the backs of Ohio’s hard-working people.
In May, when Obama made a remark criticizing Wisconsin and Ohio for their attempts to rein in collective-bargaining excesses while balancing their budgets without tax increases, Kasich famously shot back: “[W]hen he does his job and gets our (federal) budget balanced and starts to prepare a future for our children, then maybe he can have an opinion on what’s going on in Ohio.” By that appropriate measurement, Obama and his administration, in backing a spendthrift “jobs act” which is so pathetic that they couldn’t even get all Democrats in the Senate to buy in, are less entitled to an opinion now than they were five months ago.
Even by recent electoral non-standards of veracity, the lies and misinformation put forth by Issue 2′s free-spending, largely out-of-state opposition have been extraordinarily brazen. Among them are howlers about public safety being compromised, reduced staffing levels, inadequate training, and as alleged in the Obama campaign email above, unsafe working conditions. The fact is that Issue 2′s passage will affect none of these areas, which are either matters covered in existing laws and regulations or are already management prerogatives not subject to negotiation.
Another claim of Issue 2 opponents is that Ohio under Kasich “continues to lose jobs.” Wrong again. The state gained seasonally adjusted jobs in every month from January through August — 84,000 in total — before preliminarily (and, in my view, a bit suspiciously) losing over 21,000 in September.
The opponents’ most underhanded tactic occurred early this year as SB5 was under consideration. Union leaders at schools and other organized workplaces, taking great care not to leave any tracks, quietly told teachers and others that the law’s passage would reduce their pay by 40%-50%. Though there is no credible basis whatsoever for this claim, many public employees who might ordinarily be receptive to supporting Issue 2′s reforms believed the lie and have become impervious to any attempt at rational discussion.
Issue 2 is so obviously superior to business as usual that most of Ohio’s newspapers, which on the whole lean decidedly left, have endorsed it. Some of those endorsements have raised possibly reasonable points that the law may in certain instances go too far. Kasich himself considered that possibility, and in August invited public-sector union leaders to discuss what might be done to adjust it. Union leaders wouldn’t meet without SB5 first being repealed. The meeting never happened. Labor’s intransigence has become so alarming that two prominent Democrats, Toledo’s current mayor and a now-former Cincinnati City Council member, are among Issue 2′s most ardent proponents.
The twisted definition of “negotiation” just described explains why other public-sector union-dominated states are in so much trouble. In Illinois, out-of-control state employee wages and perks are virtually untouchable, while vendors and Medicaid providers wait months to get paid. Decades of public-sector union dominance have taken Rhode Island to the point where “ten cents of every state tax dollar now goes to retired public workers.” Connecticut’s state debt per capita of over $5,400 is the highest in the nation. All three states tried to solve their fiscal problems with tax increases, which have predictably solved nothing.
Obama’s stake in Issue 2′s failure is clear. Continuing the unsustainable status quo helps keep Democratic campaign coffers full. Additionally, states whose situations become incurable will run to Washington for bailouts, which will create opportunities for even stronger federal control.
Supposed friends in the Republican Party haven’t always been helpful. On Tuesday, GOP presidential candidate Mitt “Flip-Flop” Romney, visiting — of all places — a get-out-the-vote phone bank, wouldn’t commit to supporting Issue 2. On Wednesday, he flipped back to “110% support,” which of course won’t fully repair the damage. Naturally, Team Obama pounced.
Polls show Issue 2 trailing, which is not at all surprising or even necessarily troubling. Ohio’s issue-related polls have a history of serious inaccuracy favoring the leftist position. Six years ago, two George Soros-driven “reform” proposals were ahead in two statewide polls just before Election Day by an average of 28 points. They lost by an average of 31. On Thursday, a leaked memo from Issue 2′s opponents, as interpreted by the Washington Post’s Greg Sargent, suggested that “the fight could still go either way.”
As usual, it will all come down to who gets their supporters to the polls. I would encourage readers, even those from outside the Buckeye State, to contact their center-right friends, relatives, and acquaintances and ask them to be sure they vote. The financial viability and competitiveness of Ohio, and the ability of other states to address their own fiscal quagmires, both likely hang in the balance.






This one is not looking good for Kasich and the GOP. Not by a long shot. They are totally getting out hustled.
Issue 2: As a resident of the state of Ohio, it looks as if it will go down in defeat. This smll city I live in is inundated with No signs including many in Toledo. Mike Bell, mayor of Toledo, came out in favor of Issue 2 and caught the wrath of every union worker sitting in the union hall playing cards. Most of the people that are against this issue do not understand the basic premise and their minds are closed to any further conversation.
Issue 3. I, personally worked on this for a year to obtain enough signatures to get it on the ballot. At the same time, many people refused to sign for fear of being scorned.
AS everything else in the USA voting for a socalled conservative candidate leaves one gasping for air when al they wanted was another soft high paying government job.
Kasich has done a poor job selling SB5. In fact the whole approach to reforming public sector bargaining has been polarizing and is likely to fail. Kasich won by a slim margin. Many people who supported him think he has gone too far. A right-to-work law for public sector unions would have been enough to cut their power. The basic approach should have been to whittle away at the unions with incremental reforms that would not have mobilized the opposition. Ohio is still cursed with a strong union ethos.
Whatever others say, this Ohio resident is voting “yes” on Issues 2 and 3.
Tom, good job, keep at it. Dare I suggest another reminder this weekend or Monday, Nov 7? Something short, succinct and email-ready.
The left-unions made a mistake when they positioned SB5 as an issue of “hard-working Ohioans,” many of whom are tired, tapped out, pissed off and non-union.
Issue 2-Collective Bargaining: Vote YES to rein in costly and out-of-control bargaining rights
Issue 3-Healthcare Freedom of Choice: Vote YES to retain the right to make your own healthcare choices and cancel Obamacare fines and penalties
At the risk of being accused of shameless self-promotion (guilty!), I plan several posts over at BizzyBlog.
Good, and good for you.
As you note in your article, Ohio’s still feeble “recovery” is at risk and these issues are crucial to longterm competitiveness and solvency.
Off Topic: During an online town hall, Governor Johnson will engage directly with the public and field live video questions over the web.
The event will begin at 8:00 PM EDT (5:00 PM PDT) on November 2, 2011.
To join, please visit http://www.GaryJohnson2012.com or http://www.Yowie.com.
The event will enable a direct digital dialog with the public and engage in open Q&A on key issues like smaller government, the economy, drug policy reform, tax reform, or any question a participant wishes to ask.
No topic will be off limits.
Kasich should warn Ohioans they will have to pay more taxes to support Govt unions if they voted no to SB5, and that a no will force Obamacare on them. Make things simple.
One must read really carefully to understand what a “yes” mean. A “yes” mean “not” repeal SB5, a “yes” means “no” to Obamacare. These “yes” means “no” things are quite confusing.
If Ohio voters are like the Floridians who couldn’t figure out butterfly ballots and dimple chads, then Kasich will lose. On the other hand, even the people of the People’s Republic of Wisconsin … Keep your fingers crossed.
One reason why government schools are as bad as they are is because the poor education that they deliver helps to keep current government employees safely on the government teat.
If the students were taught old-fashioned civics, math, and reading comprehension by the age of 18, they might be able to figure out these ballot issues well enough to vote their own interests.
I really wanted serious collective bargaining reform in Ohio, but this was handled terribly from the very start both in terms of the original SB5 content and how it’s been promoted by the Republican party. I think the odds of overturning SB5 are quite high, and the odds of us getting really useful reforms like right to work after it’s overturned are remote. I find it all extremely disappointing.
The state of Ohio and the nation of Greece will soon have their fate decided by a ballot. Both will likely reject the solution and go their own way. Governor Kasich and the European Union (or whoever volunteered to cosign for these deadbeats) did their best in throwing a life preserver-heck they jumped in and risked all for these fools. C’est la vie
NO recovery from the housing bubble until ALL public sector unions are GONE
Unions these days are nothing more than crime syndicates that have captured control over the government at all levels.
Go ahead, Ohio, vote NO. My state of Texas will continue to snatch away productive businesses and job creators from the drain-circling blue states. They’re flooding in from California and Illinois already. No state income tax, right to work, business-friendly, no public sector unions to speak of….it’s all here.
What Texas doesn’t get, Florida will. Gov. Rick Scott had an excellent interview on Gerri Willis’ show on Fox Business the other day, and he revealed he’s actively courting the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. No word on which city it would call home — likely Jacksonville, Miami or Tampa.
I am struck by the irony of having Social Security in default in part because of the requirement to fund public union pensions.
Good piece! I agree with GDI above and encourage a short, sweet, simplified reminder (and thanks in advance, Tom, for following through). “Yes” on issue 2 will bring unions a bit closer to the private sector “hard-working Ohioans”. “Yes” on issue 3 will assure Ohioans’ freedom in making their own health care choices, rather than being forced into Obamacare. Keep up the good work!
All PUBLIC sector Unions should be ABOLISHED!!! It is an unholy alliance… where the taxpayers who foot the bills don’t have a seat at the negotiating table with the union bosses and their paid for Democrat political hacks… John F Kennedy signed an executive order to ALLOW them, our next President should sign an executive order to ABOLISH them.
“We must close union offices, confiscate their money and put their leaders in prison. We must reduce workers’ salaries and take away their right to strike.”- Adolf Hitler, May 2 1933.
Hey Elaine, you and Hitler appear to have a lot in common. Sorry, but “never again.” Got it hun?
The qualifier here, slick, is PUBLIC sector unions. Those people who are paid directly from tax dollars. How is it right when teachers make twice as much as the average private salary, for much, MUCH less work and time spent at their jobs?
Clinical Blunder, you missed the point on this. Some years ago, public sector employees were paid very poorly. This is no longer the case; In fact, most public sector jobs pay well above and beyond what the payers of taxes who provide their salaries earn. Thanks to their unionizing, they got what may be debatable as a “fairer” shake but they continued their predatory attitudes and now are in a realm of ridiculous.
It’s the entitlement mentality all over again and repeatedly. And it’s being driven primarily by a very narrow portion of the population bell-curve. But it’s easy enough for all recipients of government enforced largesse to fall in line because they all run their own little kingdoms (unions) and they use childish antics as substitutes for substantive arguments.
My teachers drove older cars, had thin personal budgets and were very thrifty but they all loved to teach and were engaging, passionate and adept at getting us kids to learn.
Nowadays, they drive Escalades, wear designer fashions to work, have expensive laptops, cellphones and huge bank accounts. Yet every year the number of high school graduates who cannot read continues to rise. How is there a corollary between teacher salaries and student achievement? Easy, the more money the teachers make, the less concern they have for their students.
But ALL public sector jobs are in ruinous condition for the hold they can put on the people they take hostage. Collective bargaining? How is that even an apt term? On one side of the table, you have the public employees…on the other, the elected government…and who is the non-represented part of the equation? The taxpayers.
I’m not categorically against unionization of public employees as there are always issues to decide but allowing them free reign to decide how much money they can get from taxes when most local and state governments are going broke? Seriously?
“PUBLIC sector unions” .. correct. And not only that, Hitler FLIPPED on unions. His initial rise to power was on the backs of unions who were simply his useful idiots. Only after Hitler attained permanent power did he then abolish all independent unions telling them they would all then be ‘in one big union’ – the “National German Workers Socialist Party”.
Nowadays, they (public-school teachers) drive Escalades, wear designer fashions to work, have expensive laptops, cellphones and huge bank accounts.
And they send their kids to private school in droves. In fact, after adjusting for income they’re the group most likely to do so, and by a 4-to-1 margin. I can offer firsthand confirmation. A member of my extended family and her husband both teach in their local public school system, while their two kids attend a private Christian school. One fine day I might ask them how they can reconcile their (alleged) Christian faith with being on Satan’s payroll.
For the record, I am categorically against govt. employees unionizing. Even FDR and George Meany knew better. Either take away their union cards or take away their votes (at the level of govt. where they’re employed). While we’re at it, all welfare recipients should be barred from voting as well.
Hitler didn’t abolish any unions, he just merged all of them into one big happy union – the Nazi’s.
Any worker who didn’t want to join the new Nazi ‘union’ was given some ‘incentive’ to change their mind – sound familiar?