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Pickerington teacher Patricia Kuhn-Morgan said she was confused by connections being drawn between the bill and job creation. "As teachers, the best way we can have to job creation is to educate the public," she said. She predicted Wednesday's votes will hurt GOP lawmakers on Election Day. "I've spoken to a lot of educators who are typically straight-ticket Republicans that have said to me that they won't ever vote for another Republican because of how this bill's been pushed through and the democratic process has been abused," she said as she awaited the Senate's vote. Though protests were much larger in Wisconsin, Ohio unions claim they hold the hearts of a majority of voters in their political swing state. Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker signed a bill this month eliminating most of state workers' collective bargaining rights. That measure exempts police officers and firefighters; Ohio's does not. The Ohio bill has drawn thousands of demonstrators, prompted a visit from the Rev. Jesse Jackson and packed hearing rooms in the weeks before the Senate passed the earlier version of the measure. Its reception in the House had been quieter, as unions resolved themselves to its approval and shifted their strategy to the fall ballot. Democratic state Sen. Joe Schiavoni said the way the bill had been rushed through the legislative process without union input was unfair
-- but he said voters would have the last word. At the ballot box, he said, "all Ohioans will get the opportunity to right the wrongs they committed in the last election, and, ladies and gentlemen, that is fair."
[Associated
Press;
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