Like a wind-whipped brush fire, the mass union protests that began in  Madison, Wis., last week have spread to the capitals of Ohio and Indiana  where Republican lawmakers also are trying to cripple the bargaining  power of unions — and ultimately realize a cherished partisan dream of  eradicating them. In each case, Republican talk of balancing budgets is  cover for the real purpose of gutting the political force of  middle-class state workers, who are steady supporters of Democrats and  pose a threat to a growing conservative agenda.        
 In Ohio, Republican legislators, backed by Gov. John Kasich, have  introduced a bill to end collective bargaining for state employees, in  addition to imposing budgetary givebacks. Former Gov. Ted Strickland, a  Democrat who was defeated by Mr. Kasich last year, has called the bill a  “coordinated attack on the working middle class.” Thousands of union supporters showed up at the Capitol in Columbus on Tuesday, but the party appears to have the votes to pass the measure.        
 Across the border, Republicans are pushing a bill that would make  Indiana what is misleadingly known as a “right-to-work” state. That  means workers cannot be required to join public-  or private-sector  unions or pay dues, starving unions of the money they need to operate.  Democrats in the Indiana House left the state to prevent a vote, tying  up all legislation for two days. Thousands of workers have rallied on  the Statehouse grounds. Gov. Mitch Daniels (who ended  collective-bargaining rights for state workers in 2005) has supported  the bill’s concept but on Tuesday urged Republicans to drop it because  it could interfere with other items on his agenda.        
 Conservative leaders in most states with strong unions have in the past  generally made accommodations with organized labor, often winning  support on social issues in return. That changed this year after wealthy  conservatives poured tens of millions of dollars into the election  campaigns of hard-right candidates like Mr. Kasich and Gov. Scott Walker  of Wisconsin.        
 As Eric Lipton reported in The Times on Tuesday,  the billionaire brothers Charles and David Koch, who have long been  staunch union opponents, were among the biggest contributors to Mr.  Walker. (Americans for Prosperity, the conservative group financed by  the Kochs, will begin running anti-union broadcast ads in Wisconsin in  the next few days.)        
 Some public sector unions have contracts and benefits that are too rich  for these times, but even when they have made concessions, Republican  officials have kept up the attack. The Republicans’ claim to be acting  on behalf of taxpayers is not believable.        
 In Wisconsin, union leaders agreed to concessions requested by Mr.  Walker: to pay nearly 6 percent of their wages for pension costs, up  from nearly zero, and double payments for health insurance. At that  point, most governors would declare victory and move on. Instead, Mr.  Walker has rejected union concessions and won’t even negotiate. His true  priority is stripping workers of collective-bargaining rights and  reducing their unions to a shell. The unions would no longer be able to  raise money to oppose him, as they did in last year’s election, easing  the way for future Republicans as well.        
 The game is up when unionized state workers demonstrate a sense of  shared sacrifice but Republican lawmakers won’t even allow them a seat  at the table. For unions and Democrats in the Midwest, this is an  existential struggle, and it is one worth waging.        
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