ALEC and Wisconsin

So, Center for Media and Democracy has exposed ALEC and they need your help! Plus, here’s some Wisconsin specific materials. I’m just regurgitating information I have, because I’m in a hurry, but I figured readers would want this info. This is some pretty AWESOME work! Love the Center for Media and Democracy . . .

INFO ON ALEC AND WISCONSIN

ALEC in Wisconsin

NATION article on ALEC’s labor and economic agenda Joel Rogers/Laura Dresser
ALEC Exposed: Business Domination Inc.

ALEC Exposed Website

ALEC GENERAL INFO AND THE PROJECT

CMD UNVEILS TROVE OF OVER 800 ALEC “MODEL BILLS” SECRETLY VOTED ON BY CORPORATIONS”
ALEC Exposed” Website Reveals the Corporate Collaboration Reshaping Our DemocracyMadison — Today, the Center for Media and Democracy (CMD) made available over 800 “model” bills and resolutions secretly voted on by corporate and legislative members of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). ALEC was created by right-wing political apparatchik Paul Weyrich in 1973. ALEC has become the premier institution for crafting and promoting model legislation and resolutions that largely benefit its corporate members. Until today, it has been difficult to trace the controversial and oddly uniform bills popping up in legislatures across the country directly to ALEC.

Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker was an ALEC member during his prior career as a state legislator, touting his ALEC connections in his Wisconsin Blue Book profile. Today, his top lieutenants, Senate Leader Scott Fitzgerald, Assembly Speaker Jeff Fitzgerald, Majority Leader Scott Suder and Joint Finance Committee Chair Robin Vos are all members of ALEC. Scott Fitzgerald previously served as ALEC’s “State Chairman” a role now held by Robin Vos. As a “State Chairman,” Vos has the duty to recruit new members and work to “ensure introduction of model legislation,” according to ALEC bylaws. Vos is also supposed to work cooperatively with his unnamed state corporate co-chair to raise funds for ALEC “scholarships” and administer the distribution of them. Senator Leah Vukmir serves as the chair of Wisconsin’s Health Committee, she also serves as the co-chair of ALEC’s Health and Human Services Committee along with corporate co-chair Guarantee Trust. She nabbed ALEC’s “legislator of the year” award in 2009. In 2010, Scott Fitzgerald told the Capitol Times magazine that 20 or 30 Wisconsin Legislators went to ALEC’s national meeting in Washington D.C. Not all of these members have been identified.

The public can now examine the array of ALEC model bills for the first time and link them to bills being introduced in their own state house. CMD has uploaded a full archive of ALEC bills with annotations and analysis on the bills, on its website “ALECexposed.org“. We make these bills available in the public interest, in conjunction with analysis provided in today’s edition of The Nation Magazine. The bills are in a wiki to empower crowd-sourcing by reporters and citizen journalists to help compile additional analysis of the bills and resolutions.

“Through ALEC, global corporations and politicians vote behind closed doors on bills to rewrite laws reaching into almost every area of American life,” said Lisa Graves, CMD’s executive director, adding “Voters have no idea that legislative proposals dramatically changing our laws have been pre-approved and underwritten by corporations like Koch and others in ALEC.”

“An examination of the broad sweep of bills exposes a very radical agenda. Why is Wal-Mart involved with an organization that wants to turn Medicare and Medicaid into voucher plans? Why is Kraft working with a group that wants to privatize the public school system? Why is Coca Cola going along with efforts to take away voting rights from college students? Why are Bayer and Pfizer and all the big insurance firms in bed with big tobacco? We hope people will start asking these firms, which are all on ALEC’s corporate board, to quit undermining our democracy through ALEC, ” said Mary Bottari of the Center for Media and Democracy.

HELP WANTED!

Reporters, researchers, and citizen journalists can visit the ALEC Exposed archive here and help us document where these bills are moving or have passed. They are organized into nine topic areas: Worker and Consumer Rights, Tort Reform and Injured Americans, Privatizing Schools and Higher Ed Policy, Health, Pharmaceuticals and Safety Net Programs, Environment, Energy and Agriculture, Democracy, Voter Rights and Federal Power, Taxes and Budgets, and Guns, Prisons, Crime and Immigration.

NEWLY CREATED ALEC RESOURCES FROM CMD

ALEC FAQS, what it is, how it is funded, and what goes on behind closed doors.

ALEC POLITICIANS, an incomplete but growing list of ALEC leaders, “state representatives,” congressional alumni, and more. (The list includes Speaker of the House John Boehner, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, and blasts from the past like Donald Rumsfeld).

ALEC CORPORATIONS, a growing list of ALEC corporations in leadership past and present.

ALEC FUNDING, our analysis demonstrates ALEC’s almost complete reliance on corporations and corporate foundations, with steeply discounted legislative dues serving as window dressing.

ALEC ANALYSIS FROM THE NATION MAGAZINE, today The Nation magazine published a series of articles tackling major aspects of the archive: labor rights, democracy, health care, the Koch Brothers’ role, and school privatization. These articles are the beginning of an inquiry we hope will be pursued by journalists, academics, and researchers across the country.

ALEC AGENDA IN BRIEF

Starving State Government of Revenue to Make It Dysfunctional and Despised.This past session, ALEC members introduced scores of ALEC bills to grant tax breaks to big corporations or cripple state’s ability to raise revenue, including new constitutional rules limiting state taxing powers. Simultaneously, ALEC bills attempt to turn major government programs into a profit-making enterprise.
Transforming Government for the Public Good into “Government, Inc.” ALEC bills encompass over 20 years of effort to privatize public education through an ever-expanding school voucher system, to turn Medicare and Medicaid into voucher programs, to privatize public pension funds for the benefit of Wall Street firms, and to privatize almost all aspects of social service delivery including prisons and prison labor. Many firms in ALEC would benefit from these schemes to turn government into a for-profit operation.
Race to the Bottom in Wages for Americans. ALEC bills would repeal state or local laws that boost workers wages such as “living wage” and prevailing wage laws. ALEC bills call a starting minimum wage an “unfunded mandate” but think that prison labor is just terrific. ALEC also supports a radical “free trade” agenda that sends U.S. manufacturing and an increasing number of service-sector jobs overseas.
Defunding Traditional Supporters of the Democratic Party. ALEC purports to be nonpartisan, but only 1 of 104 legislators in ALEC’s leadership is a Democrat. The “ALEC Exposed” archive contains dozens of bills to defund public sector and private sector unions and to make it harder for trial lawyers to bring cases when consumers are injured or killed by dangerous products.
Disenfranchising Democratic Voters. ALEC provides model “Voter ID” legislation that requires all voters to present official state photo identification. ALEC provides the blueprint then disclaims all responsibility when states then target college students, the elderly, the poor, and other traditional Democratic constituencies.
Federalism Hypocrisy. ALEC supports the preemption of any policy at any level of government that raises wages (such as living wage laws), expands health care (such as insurance coverage for autism), and protects consumers (such as local pesticide and zoning rules). But its bills are designed to be introduced in every state, nationalizing the corporate agenda through your statehouses.

ABOUT THE CENTER FOR MEDIA AND DEMOCRACY

The Center for Media and Democracy is a non-profit investigative reporting group whose work aids public awareness about the people, companies, and groups attempting to shape the media and our democracy. Founded in 1993, our national reporting and analysis focus on exposing corporate spin. We accept no funding from for-profit corporations or the government. The Center for Media and Democracy’s websites are PRWatch.org, SourceWatch.org, BanksterUSA.org, and ALECexposed.org.

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