If won, the vote will make Indiana a right to work state. However, presently, a sect of Republicans have attacked the proposal through a series of advertisements. The group, referred to as the Lunchpail Republicans, are attacking the governor's
John Nicols traces the origins of right-to-work legislation to the Jim Crow era, when Southern states acted to prevent unions from fighting against segregation. When the Congress of Industrial Organizations launched
If won, the vote will make Indiana a right to work state. However, presently, a sect of Republicans have attacked the proposal through a series of advertisements. The group, referred to as the Lunchpail Republicans, are attacking the governor's
One of the minority Democrats in the State House, Sheila Klinker, described the Republicans' fast-track effort to get their Right-to-Work bill through the legislature and signed by Governor Mitch Daniels well before the National
Indiana's House of Representatives are set to decide whether voters should make the call on contentious right-to-work legislation.