From The NationNo one has worked harder -- and smarter -- to keep the peace in Madison
during the dispute over Governor Scott Walker's attempt to crush public
employee unions than Dane County Sheriff Dave Mahoney.
A veteran lawman [1] who
came up through the ranks of the sheriff's department in the state's
second- largest county before being elected sheriff in 2006, he's hugely
popular in the capital county -- winning re-election in 2010 with 71
percent of the vote. He's also hugely respected, as a key contributor to
the work of the Governor's Council on Domestic Violence, the Governor's
Council on Wisconsin Homeland Security, the Wisconsin Supreme Court
Task Force on Mental Health and Criminal Justice System, Wisconsin
law-enforcement groups and the National Sheriff's Association.
That respect has served Sheriff Mahoney as he has worked long hours
to help coordinate the response of various law-enforcement agencies to
demonstrations that have attracted over 100,000 people, round-the-clock
sleep-ins and sit-ins at the state Capitol and even clashing rallies
between a small Tea Party contingent and a very large union crowd.
There has been no serious violence, no serious destruction and no serious arrests.
So you would think that Governor Walker and his aides--as well as their media echo chamber -- would be hailing Sheriff Mahoney.
Of course, you would think wrong.
Sheriff Mahoney's determination to preserve the peace, protect
demonstrators and officials and respect basic liberties has earned him
the scorn of those who are calling for an aggressive crackdown on
dissent.
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As the governor and his aides have attempted to limit access to the
state Capitol -- which the Wisconsin constitution says must remain open to
all citizens -- Sheriff Mahoney has steadily argued that he and his
deputies are present both to maintain public safety and to defend the
right of citizens to assemble and petition for the redress of
grievances.
As Walker's lawless approach has gone to extremes, [2]
culminating in a failure by the governor's Department of Administration
to obey an order from a Dane County Judge that the Capitol be opened,
Sheriff Mahoney has become more explicit in his objections.
The sheriff objected when Dane County deputies, who have been
front-line officers from the start of the recent protests, were the doors
of the Capitol were not opened. Finally, he pulled his officers from
the scene.
"When asked to stand guard at the doors that duty was turned over to
the Wisconsin State Patrol because our deputies would not stand and be
palace guards," said Sheriff Mahoney. [3] "I refused to put deputy sheriffs in a position to be palace guards."
The sheriff and I have walked through the Capitol several times in
recent days and he has reflected again and again on the importance of
respecting the Constitution and maintaining a free and open space for
honest debate and dissent.
"I smile everyday at what I am seeing take place in this building,"
the lawman told me as we walked amid throngs of protesters on Sunday,
before Walker's administration ordered an aggressive crackdown on
dissent.
The crowds have been noisy and passionate, he said, as might be
expected when issues of such consequence are at stake. But they have
also been responsible and respectful. "They've helped law-enforcement
agencies to keep the peace, and we have helped to assure that they can
exercise their First Amendment rights," the sheriff explains.
Even the signs on that decorate the walls of the Capitol met with his
approval. "Freedom of speech!" he said, explaining that even as the
building is cleaned, efforts are made to keep the displays of sentiment
with regard to the budget bill in place.
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John Nichols, a pioneering political blogger, has written the Online Beat since 1999. His posts have been circulated internationally, quoted in numerous books and mentioned in debates on the floor of Congress.
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