By Rep. Chris Taylor (D-WI)
After the 2010 tea party takeover of Wisconsin, it became clear that the real force behind policymaking in Wisconsin is not the voters, but the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), the most powerful right-wing policy-making machine in the country. A ménage a trois of powerful corporations, state legislators, and right-wing think tanks, ALEC pushes out model legislation that promotes corporate hegemony.
I know because I am a Wisconsin legislator, and a member of ALEC.
For the last six years, the ALEC agenda has rolled through Republican state houses – including mine – crushing labor unions and workers’ rights, voting rights, consumer and environmental protections, and campaign finance reforms. And now, ALEC, their funders and partners, are leading the effort to amend the U.S. Constitution to kneecap the federal government.
At my first ALEC conference in 2013, Citizens for Self-Governance (CSG) rolled out the “Convention of States” campaign. Their scheme was to get 34 states to pass resolutions calling for an Article V Convention of States, provided for in the U.S. Constitution, in order to propose constitutional amendments that severely limit the government’s ability to regulate and spend. CSG’s Mark Meckler, founder of the Tea Party Patriots, and his colleague Michael Farris railed against the federal government, civil rights, and social safety nets. Meckler proselytized like a preacher at a church revival, exhorting us to use our power as state legislators to save the country and join their movement, for which we would be handsomely rewarded with bundled campaign contributions and grassroots support. We were given a model Article V constitutional convention resolution, urged to save the Republic, and sent on our way.
One of my Republican colleagues was sitting several rows in front of me, and I knew then this effort would come to Wisconsin. His resolution, which would make Wisconsin the 30th state calling for a Constitutional Convention to propose a balanced budget amendment, will soon be considered by the Wisconsin legislature.
ALEC is a driving force behind this austerity movement, supplying model bills, “how to” books, and support for pro-amendment groups.
The last time we had a Constitutional Convention, George Washington served as chair. This is a high-stakes process. The convention can amend the Constitution in any way it sees fit, and can write its own rules. In a hyper-partisan environment, most convention delegates would be chosen by Republican legislatures. The only safeguard is that three quarters of states must ratify any proposed amendment.
After CSG’s presentation, a representative from the right-wing Madison Coalition asked about my thoughts on such an effort. I told him I didn’t think people would go for it. He replied that because Republicans controlled so many state governments and the corporations pushing these changes had unlimited money to spend, they didn’t really need the people.
That sums up ALEC. ALEC’s drive to amend our constitution has nothing to do with actual people and everything to do with their big corporate backers. They want to stop the federal government from protecting our environment, giving workers a voice at the table, paying fair wages, and giving the economy a boost during recessions. To them, government is not about the people, but the most powerful doing what they want, when they want, and to whom they want.
As I left that first Convention of States meeting, I was asked by a young, enthusiastic ALEC staffer whether I was “ready to fight the fight with us?” Indeed, we must be ready to fight.
Bob Massey
There is a Republican plan to run up the national debt until dealing with it requires massive budget cuts or large tax increases. It’s called “Stave the Beast.” With the Republicans in charge, we know there will be no tax increases.
At the beginning of Reagan presidency, in 1981 the US National Debt, $997.8 billion. At the end in 1989 the US National Debt, $2.1 trillion.
When George W Bush took office the debt was about $2.8 trillion. When he left office, the national debt had swelled to 66.1 percent of the GDP and was $10.6 trillion. Bush left Obama bills to pay for the war he started in Iraq, an unfunded prescription drug program attached to Medicare and a recession that was about to become a depression, guaranteeing the debt would grow. It did. Now Trump wants to add trillions more.
The Republican leadership realizes the American people will not voluntarily end programs such as Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.
“Starve the Beast” paints us into a corner where, eventually, our choice will be massive tax increases for the middle class or ending the programs listed above. If a balanced budget amendment passes the crisis will begin the next day. “Starve the Beast” will have worked and programs Republicans believe are coddling the public will end. A balanced budget amendment is not about the budget, it is about ending programs the rich would rather not fund and don’t need themselves.
The difference between greed and poverty, greed has no limits.
rhonda walker
how can we put together a system that starves THEM? i mean do we absolutely HAVE to keep making them rich?
Carol Nelson
What can we do to stop this?
Chester Payne
The one thing all those calling for a constitutional convention fail to realize is that it won’t quit with just amending the constitution, but that our current constitution doesn’t even have to be referred to when they start working. Gun rights will be written into the constitution so that only those with authority will be allowed to even possess a slingshot, let alone a semi automatic weapon. Slavery will become a very real thing again, with debtors prisons being not only allowed, but encouraged, and interest rates for the poor will be astronomical so more of them can be sent to debtors’ prisons. Corporations will be the rulers of the land, with no man to say them nay. So many things we take for granted, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, any freedom that might allow the lower classes to counteract their uppers, will no longer exist.
rhonda walker
what should we do? leave the country?
Aaron J Matteson
Informative article. How can won find out if his representative has ties to ALEC if that’s possible?
ExposedByCMD Editors
Information on ALEC members can be found here:
http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php/ALEC_Politicians
This is a partial list of politicians that are known to be involved in, or previously involved in, the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). Not all dues-paying members of ALEC are included because ALEC does not post its full list.
Marilyn Mueller
If s/he is a Republican, you can almost be certain that there are ties to ALEC!
rhonda walker
kansas is a republican state and the koch brothers are there but ironically there is only one rep there connected to alec and its a woman. i was kinda surprised but it gave me hope. im from kansas!
Bsanders
Awakening needs to happen. Education means freedoms. I want my country back.
Marie Amato
End ALEC! It’s wrong for America.