The point about the Dems fleeing more to draw attention is a good one, and it raises an interesting comparison.
The democrats used a procedural rule to lock down congress and prevent representative democracy from working as intended. This was done primarily to raise national attention.
The republicans used a series of procedural rules to re-open congress and pass a series of bills that would have been passed if the representative democracy was working as intended, but also circumvented representative democracy by keeping the democrats from voting. This was done to pass bills that would have been passed anyways.
Now, I'm not defending the republicans here. While I don't disagree with some of their procedural moves I find others highly distasteful and probably illegal (the current thing about blocking voting.) However, I do think that both sides chose to use procedural loopholes to break the intent of representative democracy, and of the twoI think that the initial actions of the republicans were more ethical as the goal was to restore the power of the elected officials that had been empowered by the people of the state to make decisions, whereas the democrats goal was to say 'not fair' on the national stage as loud as they could.
Which of those is right? I don't know.
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As for the protests, I dunno how much that really matters. Madison is not Wisconsin in the exact same way that Austin is not Texas. When I lived in Austin you would see massive protests all the time at the capital about this thing or that, but the people protesting were not even close to an accurate representation of the population of the state.
Should democracy bow to the principle of "every man has a vote, weighted by the volume of his voice"? No. The power of the individual in a democracy is in his vote, not his voice. If the people of Wisconsin voted in a bunch of tea party republicans they should not be surprised when they attack unions.
As for the polls, I hold a somewhat similar view. A poll I would *love* to see would be how many people in the crowd voted in the state legislative elections. I'm curious how many of the polls even ask people about that. I could care less about the opinion of someone who didn't vote. Its like telling the waiter "just bring me whatever" and then complaining about what he brings to the table.