Now that Michigan’s anti-union laws are on their way to the books, organized labor faces a couple of questions. First, locally in Michigan, whether to take on a statewide initiative to get union rights back, or whether to focus instead of trying to win back control of the legislature and the governorship, or both. Any one of those items would be a challenge. Second, at the national level, there’s the question of whether any states might try to follow Michigan in stripping union rights, the way Michigan followed Indiana. Wisconsin, maybe? Kentucky? Or Ohio?
Reporters in Ohio asked Republican Governor John Kasich this week whether he had been following the developments in Michigan. I’ll put the transcript after the jump. You can decide for yourself whether this is a “no” as in “no,” or as in Rick Snyder. The video’s from Ohio Capital Blog:
Transcript from the video:
REPORTER: Governor, have you been what’s been going on up in Michigan with the right of work debate over the last few days?
KASICH: Not real closely. Look, you know, I have a very aggressive agenda for ’13 and ’14 that includes things like education reform, both at the university level, community college level, K through 12. We have a big change coming with our infrastructure program, tax reform, managing a lot of these businesses including fracking. And that’s the agenda that I’m focused on and what I’m going to continue to be focused on.
REPORTER: If there should be a constitutional —








