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* Opponents say draft law aimed at undermining unions

* Percentage of union workers is fifth highest in nation

* Obama opposes “right-to-work” measures

By Andrea King Collier

LANSING, Mich., Dec 6 (Reuters) – Michigan’s

Republican-controlled Legislature passed separate bills on

Thursday aimed at making the home of the U.S. auto industry the

24th “right-to-work” state banning mandatory union dues,

igniting raucous demonstrations that led to eight arrests.

The Michigan House of Representatives voted 58-52 to approve

a measure that would make payment of union dues voluntary in the

private sector, after Democrats walked out in protest at the

public being kept out of the Capitol.

A few hours later, the state Senate passed two

“right-to-work” bills for private- and public-sector workers on

22-16 and 22-4 votes. Each measure must be sent for

consideration to the other chamber before receiving final

legislative approval.

Republican Governor Rick Snyder has pledged to sign the

bills when they are sent to him. Snyder, who said last year that

“right-to-work” legislation would be divisive for the state,

said this week he now supported it.

The House has adjourned until Tuesday, the next date when it

could take up the bills sent to it from the Senate and the

Senate could take up the House bill under Michigan rules.

Thousands of union workers converged on the state capital,

Lansing, to protest the sudden drive f or the law, and officials

closed the Capitol building’s doors for hours, citing safety

concerns.

Eight people were arrested when they tried to rush past

state troopers outside Senate chambers during the demonstrations

and two people were hit with mace in the commotion, State Police

Inspector Gene Adamczyk said.

The protests recalled the bitter two-year fight in

Wisconsin, where Republicans voted to curb the powers of

public-sector unions.

The 2011 Wisconsin law sparked massive protests and an

unsuccessful effort to recall Republican Governor Scott Walker.

Approval of such legislation in the union stronghold of

Michigan would be a major blow to organized labor. Michigan is

where the headquarters of General Motors, Ford Motor Co

and Chrysler are located, and is the home of the United

Auto Workers union.

“It’s another attack on the middle class,” UAW President Bob

King said in an interview. “The wealthy are never satisfied.”

King said that if the law were passed, the union would try

to overturn it at the ballot box through a referendum.

The bills include appropriations and may be ineligible for

challenge by ballot initiatives.

REPUBLICANS LOOK FOR PASSAGE BY YEAR-END

Republicans intend to pass separate measures applying to

public-and private-sector unions. They are rushing to finish by

the end of the year because Democrats gained five seats in the

state House in the November election, narrowing the Republican

majority in the new Legislature convening in January.

Michigan would be the second state in the industrial U.S.

heartland to adopt such a law, after Indiana earlier in 2012,

and the 24th in the nation, although most are in the South.

“Right-to-work” laws typically allow workers to opt out of

paying union dues and bar requirements that an employee must

join a union to work in a certain shop.

Supporters say the laws help attract or keep businesses,

while opponents say they suppress workers’ wages and benefits

and are aimed at undermining the financial stability of unions.

A White House spokesman said President Barack Obama had long

opposed “right-to-work” laws.

“The president believes our economy is stronger when workers

get good wages and good benefits, and he opposes attempts to

roll back their rights,” spokesman Matt Lehrich said.

All three major U.S. automakers said they were “neutral” on

the proposed law, although the Michigan Chamber of Commerce said

it supported the measure.

Republicans were emboldened to seek the measure after

Michigan voters in November rejected a measure that would have

enshrined a right to collective bargaining in the state

constitution.

Michigan had the fifth highest percentage of workers in the

country who are union members in 2011, according to the U.S.

Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Protester Kathleen Tronjo, a teachers’ union member from

Port Huron, Michigan, said the schools and children would suffer

under “right-to-work” laws.

“This is just bad policy,” Tronjo said. “They just keep

taking more and more away from teachers.”

At a news conference on Thursday, Snyder said, “Quite often

people call it right-to-work, but I think it is a much better

description to say that this is about fairness in the workplace

and equality in the workplace.”

Unlike some other Republican governors who have championed

curbs on unions, Snyder acknowledged he was a reluctant

supporter of the measure.

“We have come to the point over the last few weeks and the

last month or two where that issue was on the table whether I

wanted it to be there or not,” he said.