Showing posts with label New Hampshire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Hampshire. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Former politician and political hack John Sununu thinks there's are too many teachers but he's silent on whether there should be more well connected political hacks

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

The Alec-Koch Brother Politicians

The politicians of Alec: Scott Walker, Mitch Daniels, John Kasich, One of the New Hampshire house, Paul Lepage,  Chris Christie (the chubby one in the back), Rick Scott, Scott Brown

This was a secret filming of David Koch addressing his minions



I particularly like the one in the back, he'll never make it with that independence

Friday, February 10, 2012

New Hampshire's Right-To-Work Bill Is Not A Job Creator, Critics Say

New Hampshire's Right-To-Work Bill Is Not A Job Creator, Critics Say

The proposed legislation would prevent union contracts at private sector workplaces from requiring employees to pay dues. A slew of related bills are in the works that also seek to curb union power in the state.


Supporters frame the issue as one of "freedom of choice" -- that workers should be allowed to choose whether they want to pay dues to a union. But in New Hampshire, some employers don't want the government dictating how they interact with their employees.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

New Hampshire Considers Collective Bargaining Ban

New Hampshire Considers Collective Bargaining Ban

The war over public employee collective bargaining has moved to New Hampshire, where the Tea Party-controlled legislature has taken up consideration of a bill banning collective bargaining in the state.

The state House Labor Committee is hearing testimony Thursday regarding a package of bills that local labor leaders consider the latest in a series of attacks on public employees. Among these are bills to prohibit collective bargaining among public employees, a bill to prohibit the collection of union dues from wages and a bill eliminating lunch breaks for workers. The bills follow a contentious debate over right-to-work legislation in the Granite State that resulted in the legislature narrowly sustaining Gov. John Lynch's (D) veto in early December.

"We had a drawn out right-to-work fight," said Mark Mackenzie, president of the New Hampshire AFL-CIO. "We have a group that is not in favor of organized labor. They see the second part of the session to focus on their ideological views of labor."