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February 24, 2010

New Jersey Unions lose seats of power

Charles Stile:

Marching orders bellowed from across the state Senate president's balcony on Monday, jolting the union members nestled in the public gallery.

They had to get out -- now. Too noisy. Too crowded. The beefy sergeant-at-arms did not seem to care that some people had secured those seats hours earlier.

"That's everybody," he said, his arms shooing them toward the exits.

"Well, that's a first," a stunned New Jersey Education Association representative complained.

A brigade of public employee union leaders, hoping to defeat four pension "reform" bills with a last-minute show of force, also found little sympathy or patience downstairs at the door to the Senate chambers. A "Vote No!" chant was quickly doused. Officials herded them along the wall. An irritated state trooper snapped at one protester perceived to be a little too loud.

Public employee unions, whose money and muscle once earned them a permanent access to Trenton's inner sanctums of power, are being told to leave their business cards at the door. They once roamed the State House halls, feared and respected; now they are subjected to aggressive crowd control.

Posted by Jim Zellmer at February 24, 2010 1:02 AM
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