As seen from the rotunda dome in February 2011, demonstrators drum and cheer in protest of Act 10 at the state Capitol in Madison. A Wisconsin Policy Forum report published Tuesday states that Act 10 is one of the legislative drivers for the stark decline the state has seen in unionization activity over the last decade.
Looking back a decade later, 10 stories about Act 10
The most seismic political story of the last decade in Wisconsin began on Feb. 7, 2011, when Republican Gov. Scott Walker informed a gathering of cabinet members of plans to unilaterally roll back the power of public sector unions in the state. He "dropped the bomb," as Walker would describe it afterward, four days later.
The audacious proposal, to be known forever after as Act 10, required public employees to pay more for pension and health insurance benefits, but also banned most subjects of collective bargaining and placed obstacles to maintaining union membership.
As seen from the rotunda dome in February 2011, demonstrators drum and cheer in protest of Act 10 at the state Capitol in Madison. A Wisconsin Policy Forum report published Tuesday states that Act 10 is one of the legislative drivers for the stark decline the state has seen in unionization activity over the last decade.