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Ross Eisenbrey, vice president of the liberal Economic Policy Institute, said the walkout by the Democrats in Wisconsin slowed down the process there and allowed the opposition to organize. He called what was happening in Ohio "a blitzkrieg." Wisconsin was the first state to allow collective bargaining for public employees, in 1959, and is the birthplace of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the nation's largest public employee union. In Ohio, despite a long union tradition among steel and auto workers, the right to collective bargaining was not extended to state employees until 1983. A Gallup survey released in August showed Ohio with the lowest proportion of government employees in the U.S.
-- 12 percent of the state's workforce. Wisconsin's capital, Madison, is more liberal than Columbus. Were Ohio's bill debated in one of its blue-collar bastions
-- say, Cleveland, Akron or Toledo -- the demonstrations might have been far larger, said Ohio University economics professor Richard Vedder. Ohio State University is only a couple of miles from the Ohio Statehouse, but the tens of thousands of students there have played little part in the pro-labor rallies. By contrast, passionate student demonstrators from the University of Wisconsin's flagship campus in Madison
-"up there with Berkeley" in its liberalism, according to Vedder
-- have been bolstering the Wisconsin fight. The campus is right next to the Capitol. "There has always been a sympathy for collective approaches to labor problems in Wisconsin, and you don't have that as much in Ohio," Vedder said. "It doesn't have that same progressive reputation or history." John Russo, labor studies professor at Youngstown State University, said the low numbers of people protesting in Ohio reflect the hurt that has been inflicted by the recession in the state, where unemployment is 9.5 percent versus 7.5 percent in Wisconsin. "There's a sense of hopelessness," he said. "Some people feel like,
'If we're not going to go anywhere, I'm going to make sure nobody else is going anywhere.'"
[Associated
Press;
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