We have been yelling, tweeting, writing and calling our senators and other elected representatives on the rafters, asking them to abandon the “Protection of the Right to Organise (PRO) Act” because it is a gift package to the union .The sole purpose of the bill is Destroying independent professionals, And the national economy that followed.
Sadly, it is mostly deaf ears.
Guys, I don’t care what political party you are, call your senator right away. This threatens economic freedom-ask freelancers who are punished under AB5 in California.Unless you all want to work for a few large companies, otherwise #PROAct It takes a nuclear bomb—as Gabby said—to heaven. https://t.co/bp6WpGMsa8
— Carol Ross (@caroljsroth) July 14, 2021
Craven Democratic Socialist Bernie Sanders (I-Crank) silently responded to reporters’ questions about whether the bill has been embedded in the settled version of the 3.5 trillion infrastructure bill.
From Washington Examiner:
secondYep. Bernie Sanders stated that the PRO bill supported by organized labor will be included in the $3.5 trillion spending plan that the Democrats will promote through the Senate.
When the reporter asked on Wednesday whether to include the Right to Organize Act or the PRO Act into the Democratic Party’s Settlement plan Vermont Socialist Say, “Yes.” The news came after the president Joe Biden Spent a day on Capitol Hill Assembly support The $3.5 trillion package will be combined with a more modest $580 billion bipartisan infrastructure plan.
Republicans and business groups expressed strong opposition to the PRO bill, which was passed in the Democratic-controlled House of Representatives earlier this year but died when it reached the Senate.
Other pork disguised as infrastructure is stuffed into the bill to lower the age of medical insurance and expand medical insurance benefits. Artificial restrictions on prescription drug prices, childcare funding, climate change funding, immigration and green cards, as well as old views on tax increases for the rich and large companies, are the personal favorites of Sanders and his associate Senator Elizabeth Warren (D -Fauxahontas).
Not all roads, bridges, or buildings can be seen from a few miles away. It’s just an attack on independent professionals who want to work according to their choice, and companies that enjoy the freedom to sign contracts with professionals in order to be able to expand the products and services they provide while maintaining profits.Bottom line: Its purpose is to destroy small businesses and entrepreneurship, and filter all jobs through unions, as explained by me and my other colleagues Here, Here, Here, with Here.
Among its many clauses, the most heinous is to give unions the freedom to infringe on personal privacy, to force companies to join a union without an employee’s vote, and to require collective bargaining in the workplace, even if it has been rejected before.And these 27 countries have Right to work law? You can kiss those people goodbye.
Potential saving grace? Member of the Senate.
Although Sanders stated that the PRO bill will be included in the settlement plan, the process requires Senate members to approve which budget-related aspects can be included in the final legislation, which may mean the original version.
If you remember, a member of the Senate is the one who made Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-Schemer) do what he wanted to do to bypass the obstruction of the bill.
As my colleague Bunch Explanation,
Settlement is a very narrow process, and the Byrd rule requires that everything contained in the settlement bill must deal with tax and budget issues. You must also take into account the regulations on offsetting deficits. You cannot pass legislative projects regularly under the guise of reconciliation.
It is hoped that lawmakers will take a sharp knife on all excess issues that are not related to taxes and budgets. This will include the ABC test embedded in the PRO bill, which makes it so evil and untenable.
I also hope that Republicans will not give in and play a game of bipartisan cooperation. The US independent contractor model and the US economy are both at stake.



