And what if the quesiton was asked, "Should your taxes be raised so members of public employee unions can continue to pay little to nothing for their health care and pension benefits?" I bet you would get an overwhelming no.Skjellyfetti wrote:http://voices.washingtonpost.com/ezra-k ... _walk.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;Are unions popular? Sort of. According to a new NYT/CBS poll, a third of Americans view them favorably, a quarter of Americans view them unfavorably, and the rest are undecided. But are efforts to attack unions popular? Not at all. The same poll showed Americans opposed weakening the bargaining rights of union members by an almost two-to-one margin.
Nor does the public like the idea of cutting the pay or benefits of union employees to balance budgets: 56 percent opposed that strategy, while 37 percent supported it. You can find the reason for that in another question: Only 26 percent of Americans think public employees are overpaid. Another 37 percent think their pay is about right, and a further 25 percent think their pay is too low.
And that's not an isolated survey. A Pew poll released yesterday found the unions winning over the public in Wisconsin -- they led Walker by 11 points.
I've actually been surprised at how well unions have held up in the polling. My gut instinct was that Scott Walker's campaign would be popular, and resistance to it would be a minority sentiment. My gut was very, very wrong. I wonder whether Scott Walker is beginning to get the creeping suspicion that his gut was wrong, too? A new PPP poll of Wisconsin shows that if the Badger State's voters could do it over again, they'd elect Walker's opponent as governor. The change in sentiment is almost entirely attributable to self-identified Republicans who are also union members. They voted for Walker in November, and now wish they hadn't. According to the PPP poll, if the election was run again, 10 percent of Republicans would defect from Walker, up from only 3 percent who voted Democratic in November.
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Should public employees have to pay for 25% of their health care premiums (the national avg, and what fed employees pay) (notice that Walker's proposal only increases them paying from little to nothing to 12.6%) and should public employees have to contribute enough to cover 1/2 of their pension costs. (Walker's proposal). Bet you would get an overwhelming yes.











