Protesters Greet Walker in Lincolnshire
More than 200 union members line the street to give a message to Lake County Republican Federation.
With chants of “Union busting is disgusting” and “Hey, hey, ho, ho, Scott Walker’s got to go,” more than 200 union members from Illinois and Wisconsin lined the entrance to the Marriott Lincolnshire early this evening giving a message to Walker and Illinois Republicans.
Walker is speaking later tonight to the annual gathering of the Lake County Republican Federation at the hotel. The union members wanted to give a message to the local members of Walker’s party his brand of politics is not welcome in Illinois.
“What he did up there is not what we want here,” Northeastern Illinois Federation of Labor President Patrick Statter said of Walker’s efforts to reduce collective bargaining for public sector workers in Wisconsin. “If they support him they hold the same views.”
Statter was referring to people like Rep. Robert Dold (R-Kenilworth) and Rep. Joe Walsh (R-McHenry), who he expects to be at the event. “We want to send them into retirement too,” he added referring to the effort in Wisconsin to recall the current governor.
“Just over one million people voted for him and just under one million signed recall petitions,” Statter said. “We try to find common ground and if we can’t we compromise,” he added expressing his union philosophy.
Some of the demonstrators were angry at the legislation Walker signed into law in Wisconsin stripping most collective bargaining rights away from government workers. James Schiabieu of Waukegan was highly critical.
“We want more jobs, union jobs,” Schiabieu said. “They want to strip the jobs down to minimum wage and that’s not right, not in this country. We built this country.”\
Check Patch for updates on this story with a report on Walker’s speech and comments from local Republicans at the event.
Luke
9:17 pm on Friday, April 20, 2012
So much for an effort to give balanced coverage of the event.
http://www.city-journal.org/2012/22_2_snd-wisconsin.html
steve shay
8:58 am on Saturday, April 21, 2012
I agree. As a professional journalist, I would have written, "Some of the demonstrators were angry at the legislation Walker signed into law in Wisconsin stripping most collective bargaining rights away from government workers. However, others acknowledge Wisconsin's tough measures have helped put their house in order."
Then give at least one link or example, regardless of your own personal political viewpoint.
Luke
9:18 pm on Friday, April 20, 2012
http://www.illinoisreview.typepad.com/
Patches
10:32 pm on Friday, April 20, 2012
Wow look at that, unions protesting. Great Photo, Scott Walker will win in a landslide. I only wish that the people of Illinois can elect a man like Scott Walker.
Steve Sadin
11:00 am on Saturday, April 21, 2012
Thank you for your comment.
There is a story coming on what Gov. Walker had to say to the Lake County Republican Federation. The governor said he was thinking about the next generation not the next election. He explained how public service workers had more choices now. He said how much better his state was doing under his stewardship than Illinois is performing right now. He received a standing ovation when he finished.
steve shay
3:48 pm on Saturday, April 21, 2012
Thank you for the reply and clarification, Stephen. What I feel makes this story interesting, and critical, is the divisiveness of Illinois and Wisconsin citizens on this. I am glad you are showing both sides.
Luke
10:09 pm on Saturday, April 21, 2012
Thanks Stephen.
RB
3:15 pm on Saturday, April 21, 2012
Scott Walker? I guess Ted Nugent wanted more than gas money for the appearance.
mau
10:18 am on Sunday, April 22, 2012
Isn't this the same proud state that put Rod Blagojevich in prison?
steve shay
12:18 pm on Sunday, April 22, 2012
Yes mau, in addition to Blagojevich, jailed Illinois governors included former Deerfield resident Dan Walker, George Ryan, & Otto Kerner. Walker was jailed for corruption he did after his term, though.
Boy Scout Gov. Stratton was acquitted for tax evasion, but, you know..., and let's not forget my personal favorite, Secretary of State Paul Powell. The famous Paul Powell shoebox was actually more than one box, and not all were shoeboxes. There were also metal boxes, briefcases, and envelopes. This treasure trove, roughly $800,000 in cash, was discovered two days after he died, when Powell's staff and his estate executor gathered his belongings from the hotel room and storage area. The other, less famous findings included 49 cases of whiskey, 14 transistor radios, and two cases of creamed corn. He would have made a great governor!