Posted on March 4, 2011, Printed on March 4, 2011
The Wisconsin State Capitol has erupted in a torrent of lawlessness this week that schoolchildren will be reading about for years. No, I don't mean rowdy protests resulting in mass arrests. Even though some 300,000 people have visited the capitol in the last two weeks, the crowds have been peaceful and fun; no arrests have been reported. I mean the convulsion of lawlessness that has seized Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker and the Republican leadership -- a track record that would make Richard Nixon proud.
Republic Senate Passes Unconstitutional Measures to Rein In Wisconsin 14
As the Wisconsin Capitol remained in almost complete lockdown  Thursday in violation of a standing court order, senate Republican  leadership turned up the heat on the missing 14 Democratic legislators  with an unprecedented series of new rules, some of which were quickly  assessed by lawyers as flatly unconstitutional. On Thursday, 19  Republican senators  passed a resolution authorizing the missing Senate Democrats to be  taken into custody by any Wisconsin law enforcement officer for  "contempt of the Senate." Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald said  the actions were justified because the 14 "have pushed us to the edge of  a constitutional crisis."
The latest legal ploy comes in the  context of news reports that the Wisconsin 14, who left the state to  delay Governor Walker's bill to eviscerate 50 years of collective  bargaining rights for Wisconsin public employees, were preparing to come  back under their own steam to fight the battle of the budget. One  senate staffer explained that it would be impossible for the 14 to  remain out when budget bill deliberations actually get underway because  they were needed to defend school children, the poor and the elderly  against draconian cuts in the bill.
The unprecedented “arrest  warrant” was taken as a preemptive strike. As the senators were meeting,  a Dane County Court Judge was poised to rule the capitol lockdown  unconstitutional. The Republicans hoped to shift the focus of the TV  news that night and the next day to their missing Democratic colleagues.  But the prominent law firm of Cullen, Weston, Pines threw a wrench into  these plans when it quickly reminded the public that "the Wisconsin  Constitution absolutely prohibits members of the Wisconsin Senate from  being arrested for non-criminal offense. The Wisconsin Senate' action  today ... has no basis in the law of this state." Further, the firm  argued that if the orders of the Republican legislators were carried  out, they themselves could be subject to a contempt ruling under a  Wisconsin statute that protects public officials from just this type of  chicanery.
Late in the afternoon, the head of the Wisconsin Professional Police Association, James Palmer, pleaded for sanity in the State Capitol: "The thought of using law enforcement officers to exercise force in order to achieve a political objective is insanely wrong, and Wisconsin sorely needs reasonable solutions and not potentially dangerous political theatrics.”
Legal Chicanery and Petty Politics
Republican senators had been ramping up the pressure on Democrats all  week, passing a resolution Wednesday that fines the absent fourteen  $100 for every day they are absent. Lawyers point out that the $100 fine  is likely also unconstitutional under Wisconsin law. They passed a  resolution to allow the senate Sergeant at Arms to request the  assistance of any law enforcement officer in the state to find and  return any senator who is absent without leave. The Republican senators  needed the extra help, since no local law enforcement agency was  treating the political brouhaha as a serious police matter. It is likely  the Wisconsin's State Patrol will be suborned into the hunt. The State  Patrol is headed by recently-appointed Stephen Fitzgerald, father of  both the Senate majority leader Scott Fitzgerald and State Assembly  Speaker Jeff Fitzgerald. 
The Senate also assigned Republican  "supervisors" to the staff of he missing senators. For instance,  Republican Senator Cowles is assigned to supervise the staff of  Democratic Senator Hansen. Many saw this as preparation to fire  Democratic staff members, or the ultimate move to expel Democratic  senators, which would indeed cause a constitutional crisis, beyond the  one precipitated by Walker's unilateral dictates.
"Palace Guard" Maintains Capitol Lockdown In Defiance of a Court Order
Since Monday, March 1, the Capitol building has been in an  unprecedented lockdown as the governor attempted to clear the building  in advance of his Tuesday budget address. Protesters, Capitol workers,  legislators, Congressmen and others were shut out. Windows were sealed  shut. The lockdown continued in contempt of court, because a Dane County  judge ordered the Capitol to open on Tuesday. When firefighters  responding to an emergency call at the Capitol Tuesday, even they were  turned away (firefighters have stood with the protesters since the start  of the frackass.) Although they were eventually allowed in to rescue a  police officer from an elevator, Dane County Sheriff Dave Mahoney said  enough was enough. He withdrew his men from the capitol, saying they  were not hired to act as a "Palace Guard."
Faced with the  problem of getting his supporters in to the Assembly Chamber on Tuesday,  the governor and his guard escorted a cadre of lobbyists and  well-heeled friends through a utility tunnel that runs from a parking  lot across the street, under the Capitol grounds to the building's  basement. Madison City Councilwoman Shiva Bidar-Sielaff heard that the  tunnel might be being used for this purpose and went to check it out.  She found about a dozen police officers guarding the tunnel entrance,  some from Milwaukee, some in suits with unknown insignias. She witnessed  an unmarked police vehicle screech into the garage. Out stepped  Wisconsin's First Lady, Tonnett Walker, who was hustled into the tunnel  as if the parking garage was under attack. "It was all very 'Men in  Black,'” the Councilwoman said with a laugh, as she watched with a  handful of other observers. Other Walker supporters had been bused in  earlier; the bus signs and arrows were still up on the walls.  
Not  surprisingly, the Governor's plans to cut $1 billion dollars from  public education and cap property taxes to force localitiess to balance  their budget shortfalls on the backs of teachers and other public  workers was greeted with wild cheers. Only about 20 protesters were  allowed in, and they were quickly escorted out when one upstart let lose  a single “boo.” The Governor's private address took place in definance  of a standing court order to open the Capitol to protesters, prompting  Democratic assembly leader Peter Barca to question the legality of the  whole event under the state's strong open meetings laws.
Desks on the Capitol Lawn
On Wednesday, Assembly Democratic representatives couldn’t get their  work done with the Capitol in a virtual lockdown, so they took their  desks out on the lawn for office hours. Democratic Rep. Nick Milroy  spoke with constituents standing in the freezing cold -- the Wednesday  low for Madison was minus 6 degrees, not including wind chill. Milroy  relocated his desk, complete with family pictures and trinkets onto the  muddy lawn. On Thursday night, Milroy was wrestled to the ground by police trying to prevent him from getting inside the building to his office. 
Representative  Marc Pocan was so irate with ever-shifting rules and the open access  Republican legislators seemed to enjoy, that he issued an “Open Letter  to Whoever is Calling the Shots on the Lockdown at the State Capitol,”  demanding to know who was in charge and asking for a measure of fairness  for the constituents of Democratic legislators.
On Thursday, a lone protestor stood in front of the parking lot which holds the Capitol utility tunnel entrance with a sign "Rat Hole to Walker's Palace."
Court Rules Capitol Shutdown Unconstitutional (Again), Protesters March Out in Victory
In the early evening on Thursday, a Dane County Court judge ruled for  the second time that Walker's virtual shut down of the Capitol was an  unconstitutional infringement on the rights of the protesters. An  agreement was reached to return the Capitol to normal business  operations by Monday. After talking to former Wisconsin Attorney General  Peg Lautenschlager, Capitol Police Chief Tubbs and Sheriff Mahoney who  explained the terms of the agreement, remaining protesters agreed to  leave the building for cleaning. The 100 or so remaining protesters, who  had stayed in the  building in an effort to keep it open, packed up  their gear and left to the applause of Democratic Assembly members and  countless other supporters who had been blocked from entering these past  few days. 
Lautenschlager summed up the two day-long court  battle: "This is an important determination by the courts. First it says  that actions of the state government officials are unconstitutional,  and it also affords average citizens the right to be in their Capitol on  Monday to lobby their legislators and conduct normal business. It is a  huge plus in terms of access, and a huge plus in terms of signaling to  Governor Walker and his colleagues that they will not be allowed to  tread on people's constitutional rights.”
Protesters Having a Big Impact, Walker's Poll Numbers Tanking
All that drumming from the Wisconsin State Capitol is having a big impact. The governor's poll numbers are tanking, and even the Republican-friendly polling firm Rasmussen shows that only 41% support the governor's propsal to gut collective bargaining in the state, while 56% support the workers. Another poll shows that if the election were held today, Walker would lose in a rematch 52%-45%.
There are many shoes yet to drop in this dramatic battle in Wisconsin. Will the Republicans attempt to enforce their illegal warrant against the missing 14? Will Papa Fitzgerald show for work in epaulettes? Will the governor start laying off 13,000 workers as promised, using real people with real lives as pawns in his political game?
Stay tuned, politics in Wisconsin have never been this wild.
Mary Bottari is the Director of the Center for Media and Democracy’s Real Economy Project and editor of the www.BanksterUSA.org site for bank busting activists.
http://www.alternet.org/story/150128/
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