New Jersey Unions lose seats of power
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.