Federal Judge Rains on Gov. Wolf’s COVID-19 Power Parade

Federal Judge Rains on Gov. Wolf’s COVID-19 Power Parade

Recently, a federal judge ruled on September 14 that Wolf’s shut down orders are unconstitutional. U.S. District Judge William Stickman IV sided with plaintiffs that included hair salons, drive-in movie theaters and other business owners writing, “even in an emergency, the authority of government is not unfettered.”

Unfortunately, the ruling may have come too late for many Pennsylvania businesses and family-wage jobs.

When the COVID-19 pandemic began to take hold in March and it was becoming clear the government-mandated shutdowns were forcing many people out of work, the Freedom Foundation called on Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf to impose a temporary, three-month moratorium on public-sector union dues collections from government employee paychecks.

Doing so would have allowed tens of thousands of Pennsylvania families to keep more money in their paychecks to pay rent, bills and help support loved ones who found themselves out of work.

It also would have injected, at a minimum, $63 million back into Pennsylvania’s economy. A short-term moratorium on union dues collections could have helped keep jobs alive or even created new job opportunities because people would have been able to spend that money in this state rather than the money going to politicians’ war chests and the union leadership’s six-figure-salaries.

All without raising a single dollar in taxes.

Instead, Gov. Wolf, whose allegiance was long ago bought and paid for by union bosses, refused to even acknowledge our suggestion. He shut down businesses, wrecked the state’s economy and now has asked our Legislature to keep bailing out his mistakes by providing an additional $325 million in aid for small businesses.

Gov. Wolf chose not to take a simple action that would not have increased the financial burden on taxpayers. Instead, he chose to beg for funding from the $1 billion federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act funding that the state received earlier in the year.

Funding the U.S. taxpayer will have to cover.

Facing a looming pension crisis, closed schools and shut down sports, the fourth highest unemployment rate in the nation, including 300,000 out of 600,000 restaurant employees statewide, one might rationally think these dystopian outcomes would convince the governor to re-open the state economy and let Pennsylvanians get back to work.

Unfortunately, that wasn’t the response he planned.

Gov. Wolf said in a recent press conference, “I can’t override this virus and I don’t know how school districts can override this virus.”

What he’s not saying is that he’s more than happy to override the ability of Pennsylvania schoolchildren to receive in-person classroom instruction and adults to get back to making a living. Gov. Wolf just signed a 90-day emergency extending his powers for the remainder of the year.

It’s pretty disgusting of public officials who don’t have to worry about missing a paycheck to force others into the unemployment line.

It’s even worse that with so many households suddenly missing an income, government unions insist on taking dues money from public sector employee paychecks.

East Coast Director
Hunter Tower was hired as the Pennsylvania Director for the Freedom Foundation in March 2020 and now serves as the East Coast Director. Hunter has previously served as Executive Director of the Republican Committee of Lancaster County and as a Field Director with the PAGOP. He has also served as a Campaign Manager for a State Representative race in Connecticut and has lobbied Congress on behalf of his Fraternity (Theta Chi) and the Fraternal Government Relations Coalition (FGRC) to pass the Collegiate Housing and Infrastructure Act (CHIA). Hunter has been featured in many outlets across the East Coast and the nation such as RealClearPolicy, RedState, Center Square, Broad + Liberty, Penn Live, City & State, and Lincoln Radio Journal. He’s a member and Parliamentarian of the Pennsylvania Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. He has facilitated several national and regional events for his Fraternity, is a charter member of his local Rotary Club, a Kentucky Colonel, and a former member of Kennett Township (PA) Zoning Hearing Board. Hunter’s family has a long history in politics beginning with Charlemagne Tower Jr., who served as Minister to Austria-Hungary (1897–1899) for President William McKinley before being transferred to Russia as Ambassador (1899–1902). Following his post in St. Petersburg, Charlemagne served as Ambassador to Germany from 1902 to 1908 under President Theodore Roosevelt. Tower City in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania is named after his father, Charlemagne Tower, as is Tower, Minnesota, and Tower City, North Dakota. Hunter’s cousin, former United States Senator John G. Tower (R-Texas), served 24 years in the Senate and was George H.W. Bush’s first nominee for Secretary of Defense. Hunter’s late father, John W. Tower, was President Richard Nixon’s aide at the 1972 RNC in Florida with Alexander Haig’s son, worked with the Reagan Administration in the 1980s, and was a lobbyist in Washington, DC as President of American Strategy Group. Hunter is a graduate of Widener University in Chester, PA with a B.A. in Political Science. Hunter and his wife reside in Pennsylvania, with their two children and two rescue dogs.