MADISON, WI (FDL) – The Governor of Wisconsin, Scott Walker, ordered the Capitol police to close the Capitol building at 4:00pm today, just a few hours from now. Protesters who have occupied the building for 14 days, with no arrests, have been prepared for this eventuality, and have devised a number of strategies to combat this. Tom, a graduate student who has been leading the continuous protests inside the Rotunda for several days, had a phone number written in black marker on his arm last night. When I asked him what it was, he explained it was the number of the lawyer who would help him out after he got arrested.
The Wisconsin State Journal described the potential actions today:
There were several indications late Saturday that some won’t walk out of the building when asked. Posters went up in several places announcing that three “non-violence training” sessions were scheduled for late Saturday night.
Also, organizers distributed instructions for those who choose to peacefully refuse to leave. Among the options listed was going limp and being carried out by officers.
“I will leave peacefully,” said Neil Graupner, one of the protest organizers, Saturday. “But I can’t speak for my friends.”
Another protester spoke to the crowd about what to expect Sunday and how to behave.
“Don’t fight with the people who carry us out tomorrow,” she told the crowd. “They’re not who our fight is with. It’s with Scott Walker and the people who support his bill.”
I have the fliers being distributed to protesters. The first describes basic rights. “If faced with a request to leave the building, the protester has two choices: to stand up and leave (the lawful choice), or to ignore the request and stay (the unlawful choice). Attorneys cannot recommend that a person violate an ordinance or commit a crime.”
The flier continues that protesters are likely to be forcibly removed from the building if they refuse the order. They advise that the protester not resist and go limp, or walk out in the company of the officers. They expect protesters to be charged with disorderly conduct. This may or may not result in the protester being immediately taken into custody, as part of a criminal misbehavior. They can get out of jail through the posting of bail. A separate flier asks that any non-citizens not get arrested, as it could impact their immigration status. College students are warned that disciplinary action from the college could arise from the disorderly conduct, but that may only result in a formal reprimand. There are even “arrestee support forms” from a local legal collective that protesters expecting to get arrested can fill out, with various personal information, to give to legal support teams.
Most expect the arrests to occur peacefully, but with a large crowd (there are probably over 1,000 in the building at this time), you never truly know. Some could push the envelope more than others. It will be interesting to see whether any notable figures, like local politicians, choose to get arrested, or if city and county police sympathetic to the protesters will refuse to leave the building as well. That could create a spectacle of cops from the Wisconsin State Patrol throwing out cops from city and county police departments. Ministers, rabbis and priests are in the crowd today as well, so they too may risk arrest.
Governor Walker has been chipping away slowly at the protests for days. First they closed the upper floors to sleeping. Then they restricted what could be brought into the building. Bedrolls, air mattresses and sleeping bags were first on the list. Yesterday, they stopped all food from coming in, forcing protesters inside the Rotunda to leave in order to feed themselves. They have been closing the building earlier and earlier each night, including at 6:00pm last night. People can leave at that point, but not return.
The AFL-CIO called the closure of the building an “unprecedented power grab” by Governor Walker, who gives the order on such matters.
“First Governor Walker tried to take away workers’ rights, now he is trying to take away our Constitutional right as Americans to peacefully assemble,” said Steelworker Roy Vandenberg. “I have a message for Governor Walker, your plan to silence us won’t work. We are not going away, and we will not be silenced.”
“This is a critical moment for Wisconsin and for so many states,” said Rev. Leah Lonsbury of Memorial United Church of Christ. “Clearly, this is about far more than a budget. It’s a moral issue, and the rights at stake here are so basic to our common good and our common humanity, to the very idea of justice, that we are willing to risk arrest to protect them and have our voices be heard. Our faith calls us to stand with the vulnerable and speak truth to power. This is what we are called to do.”
The building will open again at 8am Monday morning, after an overnight cleaning. Protesters may return to occupy the Capitol at that point, or they may set up shop on the snow-covered lawn on the square.
There is a press availability at 3pm with some of the protesters, I’ll know more then.




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Certainly no bail needed for in-state folks, likely the Sheriff will take a catch and release approach to all.
ksquire ksquire
by plcorbett
Rumor: cops will ticket but not remove anyone from Capitol. Where would they put us anyway? Come for the flashmob f/ 1-4!
The constitution should only preserve the rights of the monarch like its writer and the hero of governor walker intended…yes King George would be oh so proud.
dday, you rock. Thank you.
Thanks for the great coverage, D-Day.
I got a call from “the vanguard” this morning. We talked about the possibility of arrest. I can just say that everyone there appreciates the love from around the country and the world.
Solidarity Forever!
I’m not sure if the following could be changed over the next 90 minutes, but I hope this gets out ASAP to the Capitol civil disobedience organizers and those planning for arrest.
The strategic problem with going limp is that the arresting officers
can and do get their backs hurt moving the deadweight (except in SF,
where the squad brings dollies and just wheel us away).
For the folks standing – or sitting – in solidarity with public workers, causing disabling injuries to public issues doesn’t help with messaging.
After you’re arrested, it’s far better to get up and walk when the officers place their hands on you to drag you off.
Also better for protesters: getting dragged/carried over marble is
just inviting head injuries.
[The above comes from fifteen years of serving as a medic at major and minor demos - hope those who read it in Madison will spread the word.]
should be “disabling injuries to public *servants*…”
Somebody better point out to them anybody in low income housing could lose their housing, too. Seniors and disabled housing too. The so called “war on drugs” got this snuck into Federal low income housing rules. Any felony could get someone tossed out of Federal housing. More protests than not find protesters charged with BS felony charges these days.
Thanks, Kirk.
Thanks again for the great and spot-on coverage, David. Please keep us updated on what the legislators are doing. We’re watching…
4 dead in Ohio?
College students should also be seriously worried that access to state or federal student loans become restricted or denied, and that their academic or student deans might seek to make an example of them.
The University of Wisconsin is not the University of Alabama, but legislative control over the power of the purse and tenure, and control over some powerful alumni, make for wonderfully powerful tools to enforce political compliance.
It is in need of a good cleaning, though…stinks
Newsflash: Police officers ignore “lift with the legs” training, hurt their backs as they forcefully remove peaceful citizens from a public building to accuse them of “disturbing the peace”
I don’t watch the Oscars, but I wonder if the Screen Actors Guild might manage some support for labor in tonight’s broadcast? Open, or cleverly subversive, this could help get the message out.
I may have stardust in my eyes, but as labor *seems* to be re-awakening and starting to flex some muscle, I’m noticing more talk about Tax The Rich. (As someone else pointed out, why is a 3% tax increase on the wealthy ‘socialism’ when slashing pay and benefits of workers is ‘sharing the deficit burden’?)
Tax The Rich.
Does any actor/director/whatever have the balls to make the kind of statement Michael Moore did when he won for “Bowling for Columbine?”
Schiller: …”the gods themselves contend in vain.”
The local law enforcement will still be there for the next protest, long after the fervently imagined newsflash. And local law enforcement remember the people who hurt their buddies.
Gotta go – cleaning up the cat boxes looks like the best possible use of my time at the moment. Cheers.
Dunno. But some acknowledgment of events in Madison, and around the country, might be fitting from other union people. They all seem to have a shitload of money, maybe someone can step up to the podium say, “Tax me!” in solidarity. Uh, sure they will….
But something unscripted might happen.
Walker was on teevee today:
on NBC’s “Meet the Press: Wisconsin is “broke,” and unions use their power to block necessary cost-saving measures, Walker said.
AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka assailed Walker.
“This isn’t about the budget crisis,” Trumka said, adding that Walker’s arguments have “migrated” as his justifications have been refuted.
http://www.cnn.com/2011/POLITICS/02/27/wisconsin.budget/
But Trumka has had some opposition too.
from Labor’s Voice for Change
August 11, 2009
http://www.laboreducator.org/laborsvoice60.htm
Da Diebold bastard
Leadership in the AFL-CIO has been corrupt for decades. Trumka talks a good game but folds when push comes to shove.
Unions have been corrupted labor merchandising marts for a long time. But we shouldn’t confuse the ought from the is. If labor is reenergized, and reorganized, it might become a renewed force representing working people.
But wealth is so dangerously concentrated, and it warps the political process. There needs to be some wealth redistrubution if the United States is to become an economically stronger, and politically more vibrant, country.
Tax The Rich.
Good to see the kids get reacquainted with the civil disobedience drill. After all, it’s only a little more than FIFTY GODDAMN YEARS since a lot of us had this training under near-combat conditions with no Internet or social media to bitch from. Millions of the same boomers not getting even partial credit for the fact that blacks can vote, abortions are legal, and that we helped to end our generation’s own terrible, immoral war probably remember well. I know I do.
Back in the ’70s and ’80s I was found of saying, “Yeah, we passed the baton and you guys dropped it!” Now we’ll see what you’re made of, won’t we? Good luck, Wisconsin, good luck, students, good luck, union workers of America, and don’t forget the hard stuff starts when the cops begin to crack some heads. Let them carry you off bleeding, and you’ll have a movement, not just stupid Internet petitions.
thank you kirk! can you twitter this? important info.
Before police do any heavy lifting, they might want to check to find out if any injuries they incur will be covered under the governor’s austerity program.
Lay off the paranoia guys, there’s only 1 bad actor among the commanding officers of the lead police agencies (Walker’s appointee at the State Patrol) on scene, and he will not be calling the shots.
Keep it all smiley, not so much for legal reasons, but optics.
Whatever each Wisconsin citizen and protestor decides to do is their individual decision. But they each should know they will move to the next stage and their numbers have grown and stretch far afield.
The first act Wisconsin citizens was extra-ordinary! But it will be followed with acts of honor still.
No-one will be losing loans, because there will be no felony charges unless someone is foolish enough to insist.
The Dane County District Attorney owes the Governor NOTHING, and will not jeopardize election to his own term by carrying the Walker’s water.
Eat the rich…
…with some favre beans and a nice Chianti.
Be careful police don’t stub their widdle toeseys on your fingers too.
Dibs on the eyeballs!