Utah
Enacts Bush-Style Paycheck Protection
Governor Leavitt signs landmark campaign reform legislation this
afternoon
WASHINGTON-
President Bush's efforts to enact legislation protecting the first
amendment rights of America's working men and women were given a
boost today as Utah Governor Michael O. Leavitt (R) signed a new
"paycheck protection" bill into law in his state. Utah becomes the
sixth state to enact such a measure.
Under
the "Voluntary Contributions Act," no Utah worker may have monies
deducted from his or her paycheck by an employer or union for political
purposes unless the worker has first given written permission. The
measure also gets taxpayers out of the business of subsidizing political
fundraising by prohibiting the use of public employer resources
to collect political contributions.
"Paycheck
protection legislation is pro-worker, pro-freedom," said Ron Nehring,
Senior Consultant to Americans for Tax Reform, which supports such
legislation. "No worker should be forced to choose between retaining
his or her rights in the workplace, and making political contributions."
"Some
union officials are understandably unsupportive of paycheck protection
because it shifts power to individual workers. Paycheck protection
gives each worker the power to decide whether to contribute money
to politics or to spend that money on shoes for their children,"
said Nehring. "The new law in Utah recognizes that when it comes
to the political use of union dues, the teacher's, or the cop's,
or the assembly worker's first amendment rights are paramount."
Other
states that have passed some form of paycheck protection include
Michigan, Ohio, Washington State, Idaho and Wyoming.
Paycheck
protection legislation can be enacted at the state level, or by
Congress. State action in this area is permitted when there is a
"compelling state interest," in the words of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Other courts have ruled that protecting the free speech rights of
a worker to not contribute to causes he or she opposes qualifies
as a compelling state interest.
According
to Nehring, the Utah action blows a hole in the Beltway argument
that paycheck protection is some kind of deal-breaker for campaign
finance reform. The measure won the support of conservatives and
centrists in the Utah legislature before making it to Governor Leavitt's
desk. It was supported by the Utah Taxpayers Association, the National
Federation of Independent Business, and other groups.
Text
of the bill is online at http://www.le.state.ut.us/~2001/htmdoc/hbillhtm/HB0179S1.htm.
For more information on the issue of paycheck protection, please
visit www.paycheckprotection.org.