"I personally believe - and I think AFP would underscore this - that anybody who's paid by the public, who's paid by the taxpayers, has neither the right to strike nor the right to collective bargaining," Rohrer said in a phone interview. But he also acknowledged that any specific agenda in Harrisburg for AFP or the tea-party groups that work with it would depend heavily on the details of the spending plan that new GOP Gov. Corbett will unveil early next month.