I know 08 is a long ways a way... but I wanted to place a little bit of pre-election hype... please ignore it as you wish, heavens knows that soon enough you won't be able to.
Meet Dino Rossi. He's a real estate salesman who used to be a State Senator before he quit to run for Governor as a Republican. But delegates representing local labor unions across the State of Washington voted UNANIMOUSLY to OPPOSE his candidacy. Why?
Rossi calls himself a "compassionate conservative," but there's no compassion in his voting record. He voted for a lower minimum wage, voted against letting people use sick leave to care for ailing family members, voted to deny unemployment benefits to victims of domestic violence forced to quit their jobs to flee their abusers, and wrote a budget cutting 40,000 kids in low-income families off health insurance at the same time he renewed -- and expanded -- special interest business tax breaks.
That's just for starters.
Rossi's 6% voting record with the Washington State Labor Council ranks among the worst -- and most partisan -- of any legislator during his 1997-2003 tenure.
Dino Rossi's WSLC Voting Record
Dino Rossi's 6% voting record with the Washington State Labor Council ranks among the worst and most partisan of any legislator during his 1997-2003 tenure in the State Senate. He managed only five positive votes in 77 chances, and those were on issues with which labor, business and the leadership of both parties were all in agreement. For example, his one positive vote out of 15 in 2003 was to approve the 5-cent gas-tax increase to fund transportation improvements.
On all other labor issues, Sen. Rossi has voted with his party leadership and against the interests of Washington's working families every time, including when other moderate Republicans sided with Democrats to approve legislation. Here are a few examples (click on the years to see more detail on that year's WSLC Voting Record):
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2003 -- Rossi voted for changes to the unemployment system that dramatically cut benefits for workers who lose their jobs through no fault of their own; for cutting workers' compensation benefits for victims of job-related hearing loss; for repealing the workplace ergonomic safety rule; for freezing the state minimum wage; for adopting federal wage-and-hour standards (in anticipation of the Bush administration proposal to exclude some 8 million Americans from the right to overtime pay); and for authorizing charter schools.
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2002 -- Rossi voted against granting collective bargaining rights to state employees, 4-year college faculty and UW academic student employees; against the prescription drug utilization bill to create a "buying pool" negotiating lower drug prices in Washington; against allowing use of sick time or other paid leave to care for sick family members; and against allowing dues deduction for home-care workers who choose to join a union.
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2001 -- Rossi voted against granting unemployment benefits to victims of domestic violence who are forced to quit their jobs to flee their attackers (at an annual estimated cost of just $144,000); against implementation of the state ergonomic safety rule; and against prohibiting public employers from firing or misclassifying employees to avoid providing benefits.
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2000 -- Rossi voted against the retraining bill designed to assist laid-off Boeing Machinists, timber workers and others; against providing unemployment benefits to workers locked out of their jobs (like those at Kaiser Aluminum); against promoting apprenticeship on public-works projects; and against empowering health care workers to avoid and prevent needlestick injuries. He voted for privatization of certain ferry runs.
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1999 -- No labor voting record that year.
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1998 -- Rossi voted against increasing agency home-care workers' wages to an average $8.50 an hour and against a "pay gap" measure designed to grant bigger raises to state employees whose wages lag behind their private sector counterparts.
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1997 -- Rossi voted for overturning a unanimous Supreme Court decision (Birklid v. Boeing) granting legal immunity to employers that intentionally injure workers; for partial privatization of our state workers' compensation system; for lowering state standards protecting workers from secondhand smoke; and for granting legal immunity to job site contractors who negligently injure workers who are not their employees.
http://www.wslc.org/cope/rossi.htm http://www.seattleweekly.com/news/0441/041013_news_rossi.php Further, Gregoire has done a wonderful job working with the state legislature on important issues, promoting the growth and development of our state's education system, and being an active voice in the development of the future of Washington.