Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce’s Epic Blunder
State businesses reject its right-wing agenda
Epic Systems is a giant success story not only in Wisconsin
but across the country. In an uncertain and changing economy, Epic
should serve as a shining example of how ingenuity and forward thinking
can propel a business to great things during challenging times. The
Verona-based electronic medical records company sits on a 400-acre
campus and employs some 3,000 people in the Madison area. Epic Systems
is arguably the most important employer in Dane County and one of the
most important businesses in the state.
Earlier this year, another WMC board member, TDS Telecom CEO David A. Wittwer, stepped down from the position. Although Wittwer didn’t cite a specific reason for leaving, his resignation occurred on the cusp of WMC’s political attack on Wisconsin’s first African-American Supreme Court justice, Louis Butler.
It is increasingly clear that many WMC members and even some on its own board are becoming uneasy with the highly partisan and nasty direction that its legislative lobbyists have taken under the current leadership.
The Butler Attacks
In its announcement, Epic Systems very clearly stated that it did not approve of the role that WMC played in the most recent Supreme Court election—between Butler and Burnett County Judge Michael Gableman—and the damage it did to the high court and the concept of justice in Wisconsin.
The
race was marred by some of the most contemptible campaign advertising
in recent memory. WMC was right at the center of the problem. WMC’s
anti-Butler advertising was described by the nonpartisan Judicial
Campaign Integrity Committee as “deceptive” and as an “attack upon Wisconsin’s
tradition of fair and impartial courts.” Not only did the WMC ads
attempt to reduce complex matters of law to bumper-sticker slogans,
but more tragically it tried to reduce constitutional rights to
nothing more than mere “technicalities” that should be avoided.
The
fact that WMC has several lawyers on staff, who clearly should have
known better, makes the ads’ deceptions all the more tragic.
The
last race for state Supreme Court was perhaps WMC’s worst manifestation
of partisanship, but it certainly wasn’t the first. Under its current
leadership, WMC has transformed from a legitimate business lobby to a
highly partisan machine that has practically become the funding arm for
Republican candidates and causes. WMC not only spent record amounts on
former Republican official and current Justice elect Gableman, but it
also spent millions to elect ethically challenged Justice Annette
Ziegler. The cash that it pumped into J.B. Van Hollen’s race for
attorney general probably tipped the balance in what was a very close
election.
The online resource WMCWatch.org— created by the Institute for One Wisconsin—shows
that WMC has given almost exclusively to Republican candidates in the
state Legislature dating back to at least 2002. Further, when WMC produced its 2005-2006 legislative session “scorecard,” only Republicans
earned its stamp of approval. Additionally, several key staffers at WMC
come straight out of Republican politics. Given all of these facts, it
is laughable to suggest that WMC has not effectively become a major
tool of partisan politics for the Republican Party.
WMC’s Dangerous Agenda
After
the recent denunciation by Epic Systems and the loss of another
business and board member—a backlash that you haven’t read about in the
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel—WMC’s chief lobbyist James Buchen
sent out a statement trying to paint the political behemoth as some
sort of victim. Apparently Buchen believes that his organization
should be able to help turn elections with its corporate cash and not
be questioned or held accountable for its misdeeds.
Apparently
he feels that the public should just butt out when WMC exercises its
ownership rights over too many of our public officials. For all of his
whining, it seems that it is actually Buchen and his organization that
want to silence the public and avoid shining the light of day on their
activities.
When one takes even a moment to look at the kind
of legislative agenda that WMC promotes, one can quickly see why WMC
would like to escape public criticism. Quite simply, WMC repeatedly
acts against the common good for very narrow special interests.
WMCWatch.org has a compete list of legislation that WMC has opposed and
supported. The group has opposed efforts to eliminate wage disparities
and discrimination in employment, and has fought against real health
care reform, protections for pregnant employees, the minimum wage and
even the regulations that protect us from having too much mercury in
our water. No wonder that WMC would like to shield its activities from
public view. Wisconsin
Manufacturers & Commerce could actually learn many lessons from
business giants like Epic Systems and others that don’t belong to its
organization.
Many of them are on the cutting edge of their
respective fields and are succeeding without compromising the public
good. Companies like Epic Systems have done quite well in this
challenging economy and they have proven that there is another way for
doing great business that does not come at the expense of everything
and everyone else. WMC’s rejection of such a shining example reflects
both a failure to the public and to the very businesses that it claims
to represent. In many ways it could prove to be an epic blunder.
Liebmann is the research director and blog editor at One Wisconsin Now (www.onewisconsinnow.org).
What’s your take? Write: editor@shepex.com or comment on this story online at www.expressmilwaukee.com.



Comments