The Daily - The Sunday Read: ‘The Most Dangerous Person in the World Is Randi Weingarten’
Episode Date: June 11, 2023When the former secretary of state and C.I.A. director Mike Pompeo, a man who had dealt firsthand with autocrats like Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping, described Randi Weingarten as “the most dangerous... person in the world” last November, it seemed as though he couldn’t possibly be serious.Weingarten is 65 and just over five feet tall. She is Jewish and openly gay — she’s married to a rabbi — and lives in Upper Manhattan. She is the longtime president of the American Federation of Teachers, which is not even the country’s biggest union of public school educators. The A.F.T. did give in excess of $26 million to Democratic candidates and causes in the 2022 election cycle, but the Carpenters and Joiners union gave more than twice as much.The public education system may not be very popular right now, but both Democrats and Republicans tend to like their local schools and their children’s teachers. The unions that represent those teachers, however, are more polarizing. One reason for this is that they are actively involved in partisan politics and, more specifically, are closely aligned with the Democrats, a reality powerfully driven home during the pandemic. In some ways, Randi Weingarten and the A.F.T. — the union “boss” and “big labor” — are a logical, even inevitable target for the G.O.P.This story was recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, my name is Jonathan Mahler, and I'm a staff writer for the New York Times Magazine.
This story that I wrote for the magazine, and you'll hear it in a minute, is about the most dangerous person in the world.
That's at least according to Mike Pompeo, as he said in an interview last year.
Remember, Mike Pompeo formerly led the CIA.
He was also Donald Trump's Secretary of State. So it was surprising when he didn't say this
person was somebody like Vladimir Putin. Rather, he said this name, Randy Weingarten.
Randy Weingarten is a five-foot-tall, 60-something,
who lives with her wife, a rabbi, in Manhattan.
I know, it's likely you've never heard of her,
but she's the president of one of the largest and most influential teachers' unions in the country,
the American Federation of Teachers.
So why does Pompeo consider her this incredibly powerful and malevolent force?
What has happened in America that a high-profile member of the last presidential administration
would single out this relatively obscure person as the most dangerous person in the world?
relatively obscure person as the most dangerous person in the world.
Criticism of public education has been pretty consistent over recent decades.
For one, our test scores as a nation are incredibly low, and so people say that public schools aren't getting the job done, and perhaps that money would be better spent somewhere else,
like a charter school. Then there's this moral criticism
about the curriculum itself. Some people don't approve of what public schools teach their
children. They would prefer to move them, with the help of government vouchers, into religious or
home schools. In many ways, these debates can be traced back to Brown versus Board of Education
and the desegregation of the schools.
Some people feel like, you know what?
We don't want our children in the same schools as these other kids,
whoever those other kids may be.
Then COVID broke open the floodgates.
It provided this opportunity for longtime critics
to go all out against the institution
of public education itself.
First came the incredibly charged fights over when to reopen the schools.
A lot of parents wanted their kids back in school, but a lot of teachers were worried about COVID.
Some people argued that because the unions were reluctant to reopen,
it was just further proof that they were not to be trusted to educate their children.
to reopen, it was just further proof that they were not to be trusted to educate their children.
That shifted into debates over the culture wars, over Black Lives Matter, and eventually over trans issues. And it took the political form of, by and large, Republican politicians running in the
midterms and in local school board races, campaigning against public education. And so Randy Weingarten, who had used her own
position to campaign on behalf of Democrats and defend teachers, became a huge target for the
right. Suddenly, you had these radically different agendas colliding in a way that only the pandemic
could have made possible. We saw it play out in Virginia's gubernatorial race
with Glenn Youngkin,
and more recently,
in the mayoral race in Chicago with Brandon Johnson.
The fights over public education
are only going to get more intense
as next year's presidential campaign ramps up.
This is a story about teachers' unions.
It's a story about public education.
And yes, Randy Weingarten is at the center of it.
But it's really about how politics and education
have become more closely intertwined
than at any point in American history.
So here's this week's Sunday read,
The Most Dangerous Person in the World is Randy Weingarten,
read by Eduardo Ballarini.
When the former Secretary of State and CIA Director Mike Pompeo,
a man who had dealt firsthand with autocrats like Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping,
described Randy Weingarten as the most dangerous person in the world last November,
it seemed as though he couldn't possibly be serious.
Weingarten is 65 and just over 5 feet tall.
She is Jewish and openly gay.
She's married to a rabbi and lives in Upper Manhattan.
She is the longtime president of the American Federation of Teachers,
which is not even the country's biggest union of public school educators.
The AFT has 1.7 million members. The National Education Association has 3 million. The AFT
did give in excess of $26 million to Democratic candidates and causes in the 2022 election cycle,
but the Carpenters and Joiners Union gave more than twice as much. Pompeo, whose remarks appeared
in a widely quoted interview
with the online news site Semaphore,
had nevertheless put his finger on something.
The pandemic and the ongoing culture wars over race and gender
had shifted America's educational landscape,
and with it, the political landscape.
It's not a close call, Pompeo elaborated.
If you ask who's the most likely to take this republic down,
it would be the teachers' unions,
and the filth that they're teaching our kids,
and the fact that they don't know math and reading or writing.
Other Republicans quickly piled on.
Pompeo had set the bar high,
and they needed to invoke equally hot rhetoric and florid imagery
to ensure headlines of their own.
Big labor unions
have taken over public education,
Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina
told Fox News in late January.
That's bad for parents,
bad for kids,
bad for America.
Senator Marco Rubio of Florida
mounted his attack
in the American Conservative magazine.
Our schools are a cesspool of Marxist indoctrination. Dangerous academic constructs
like critical race theory and radical gender theory are being forced on elementary school
children. Governor Ron DeSantis, who had already garnered national attention with his book bans,
Florida's Stop Woke Act, and its so-called Don't Say Gay legislation unveiled a new proposal designed to
rein in overreaching teachers' unions, which a column on the Fox website enthusiastically
embraced as a blueprint to dominate union bosses. Donald Trump, declaring that public schools
have been taken over by the radical left maniacs and pink-haired communists released his own plan to save American education.
It was clear that Weingarten had come to stand for something much larger than herself.
The last few years have been historically convulsive ones for education in America.
Some 1.3 million children left the public schools during the pandemic.
The results from the most recent National Assessment of Educational Progress,
known as the Nation's Report Card,
revealed the largest average score decline in reading since 1990
and the first average score decline in math since 1969.
Schools have reported major increases in rates of student depression,
anxiety, and trauma.
School districts around the country are experiencing severe teacher shortages.
Last fall, a Gallup poll found that the percentage of adults who are satisfied with the nation's public schools
had fallen to 42 percent, a 20-year low.
This crisis has political consequences.
The pandemic closures and classroom culture wars have fueled the revival of the dormant school choice movement,
with Republican-led states around the country passing an array of far-reaching school voucher bills.
These bills come in different forms but share a common goal.
To enable parents to move their children out of America's government-run education system en masse.
All of the prospective Republican presidential candidates for 2024 have committed
to building on this growing movement, whose roots can be traced back more than 50 years
to the battle over desegregation. The same pandemic closures that demonstrated how central
public schools are to the communities they serve also became the inciting event for an unprecedented
effort to dismantle them. The public education system may
not be very popular right now, but both Democrats and Republicans tend to like their local schools
and their children's teachers. The unions that represent those teachers, however, are more
polarizing. One reason for this is that they are actively involved in partisan politics, and,
more specifically, are closely aligned with the Democrats,
a reality powerfully driven home
during the pandemic.
A study by Brown University's
Annenberg Institute
found that Democratic districts,
with correspondingly strong teachers' unions,
return to in-person learning
more slowly and gradually
than Republican districts
with weaker unions.
In some ways,
Randy Weingarten and the AFT,
the union boss and big labor, are a logical, even inevitable target for the GOP.
A frequent knock on the AFT is that it puts teachers before students, a framing neatly
encapsulated by a quote attributed to the union's former president, Al Shanker.
When school children start paying union dues,
that's when I'll start representing
the interests of school children.
Shanker's biographer, Richard Kallenberg,
found no record of Shanker's ever saying this
and doesn't think he ever did,
but that hasn't stopped the union's critics
from citing it.
Weingarten has a rebuttal.
Good working conditions for teachers
make good learning conditions for students.
But Weingarten does in fact represent teachers, not students. Often, such as when it comes to
issues like classroom size or school budgets, their interests align. Sometimes, they don't.
For a period during the pandemic, the two groups' apparent interests diverged,
and a series of fault lines started opening across the country,
separating not only Republicans from Democrats,
but also parents from teachers,
centrist Democrats from progressives,
and urban black parents from suburban white parents,
and even dividing the teachers' union itself.
These fault lines widened as the reopening debates merged into fights
over how schools should deal with the teaching of the country's racial history, as well as sexuality and gender identity.
What became increasingly clear to me over the last several months, as I spoke to dozens of
politicians, political consultants, union leaders, parent activists, and education scholars about the
convulsions in American education, is that it's no longer possible to separate education from politics
and that public schools are more vulnerable than they've ever been.
How did Randy Weingarten wind up at the center of the 2024 Republican primary?
The only way to answer that question
is to re-examine America's education wars
and the competing political agendas that are driving them.
Oh, goodness, no, not at all, Pompeo answered when I asked if he was,
perhaps, being hyperbolic in his remarks about Weingarten.
It's not just about Ms. Weingarten, but she has been the most visible face
of the destruction of American education.
In the chaotic early months of the pandemic, teachers were celebrated as essential workers, heroically continuing to serve America's children from their homes, often with limited resources and inadequate technology.
But during the summer of 2020, things started to shift.
There was already early research showing that students were suffering academically from remote learning.
academically from remote learning. Schools across Europe had begun reopening without any major outbreaks, and many of America's private and parochial schools were making plans to resume
in-person learning at the start of the new school year. A lot of public school parents wanted their
children to be back in the classroom, too. But many teachers seemed resistant to the idea.
Because of the decentralized structure of America's public education system,
which has some 14,000 different school districts, the federal government could not order schools to reopen for in-person learning.
But in July 2020, President Trump threatened to withhold federal funds from those that didn't.
Secretary, Betsy DeVos, echoed his sentiments, demanding that the nation's schools be fully operational by the fall without providing a specific plan for doing so.
Many members of the AFT remained worried about putting themselves, their families,
and their communities at risk. The AFT had issued its own reopening plan in late April,
calling for adequate personal protective equipment, a temporary suspension of formal
teacher performance evaluations, a limit on student equipment, a temporary suspension of formal teacher performance evaluations,
a limit on student testing, a cancellation of student loan debt,
and a $750 billion federal aid package to help schools prepare to reopen safely and facilitate a real recovery for all our communities.
Weingarten did not believe the Trump administration was giving the schools what teachers needed to return to work safely.
She publicly denounced Trump and DeVos' call to reopen as reckless, callous, and cruel.
And the AFT passed a resolution supporting local strikes if schools were forced to reopen in areas where a variety of safety conditions hadn't been met.
As if to underscore the point, some teachers took to the streets in protest with mock coffins.
Florida became a test case.
Even as the state's COVID death rate was surging in July,
its Department of Education issued an emergency order requiring schools to fully reopen in August.
The state's largest teachers' union, the Florida Education Association,
affiliated with
both the AFT and the NEA, sued DeSantis and his education commissioner, Richard Corcoran, among
others, to block the reopenings, arguing that the order violated the state's constitution,
which guarantees Florida residents the right to safe and secure public schools. At a virtual
news conference announcing the lawsuit, Weingarten accused
DeSantis of being in intense denial. After some Florida schools started reopening, an AFT
political action committee produced a TV ad attacking Trump, citing claims that schools
were becoming super-spreader sites and that children were being used as guinea pigs. As the
lawsuit was working its way through the legal system, the union won in the
lower court but lost on appeal. Florida was holding its biannual school board elections,
and the prospective return to in-person learning became the defining issue in many races.
In Brevard County, Tina Descovich, the incumbent, was in favor of an immediate return to the
classroom and opposed mask mandates. She was challenged by public school
speech-language pathologist Jennifer Jenkins, who called for a more cautious approach, including a
mask mandate for all but the youngest children. Jenkins easily won the late August election,
but Deskovich was just getting started. She called Tiffany Justice, a fellow school board member in
nearby Indian River County, to suggest that they create their own parents' rights group, Moms for Liberty.
We've got to do something here, Justice recalled Descovich as telling her.
We have to help these parents because they're trying to step up and speak out,
and the schools are just slamming them at every turn.
Other parents across the political spectrum started organizing too.
Many public schools hadn't fully reopened for the start of the new school year,
and they were frustrated.
They wrote op-eds, held rallies, or met via Zoom with school board members
and other elected officials, often finding themselves at odds
with local teachers' unions and union-backed school board members.
The first fault lines had started to open By the fall of 2020, the murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer
and the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement
had prompted a national reckoning over race, as well as an ensuing backlash
The politics of the pandemic
had begun to merge with the culture wars, and both were playing out most vividly in the American
classroom. An esoteric academic term, critical race theory, or CRT, had improbably become the
rallying cry for a conservative campaign focused on the teaching of the nation's racial history.
campaign focused on the teaching of the nation's racial history. President Trump, running for re-election, eagerly took up the cause, blaming decades of left-wing indoctrination in our schools
for the Black Lives Matter protests and urging America's parents to fight back against efforts
to teach their children hateful lies about this country. The AFT championed the new movement for
racial equity, committing publicly to the fight to end systemic racism in America.
Some of the AFT's locals went further.
The Chicago Teachers Union took to the streets to demand that the city's Board of Education cancel a $33 million contract between Chicago's public schools and its police department for the safety officers who staff the city's public schools.
schools and its police department for the safety officers who staff the city's public schools.
United Teachers Los Angeles helped lead a successful fight to press its school district to slash its police budget by $25 million and use the money instead to hire more counselors,
psychologists, and social workers. That October, Weingarten embarked on a cross-country bus tour
to get out the vote for Joe Biden. His Democratic predecessor, Barack Obama, had not always been in sync with the AFT.
The union opposed elements of Obama's Race to the Top program,
which sent money to states that reformed their public education systems by,
among other things, weakening teacher tenure,
introducing data-driven accountability measures,
and adding more non-unionized charter schools
Biden, by contrast, vowed to focus on neighborhood public schools
Rather than charters
And criticized the standardized testing regimes
And teacher evaluations that were a hallmark of race to the top
Weingarten's name was even floated as a candidate for Secretary of Education
She didn't get the job
But she and the head of the NEA,
Becky Pringle, were invited to the White House on the day after Biden's inauguration.
The teachers' unions finally had a true ally in the Oval Office. The First Lady, Jill Biden,
taught at a public community college herself. I sleep with an NEA member every night,
President Biden would later quip. The new administration gave
teachers preferential access to the COVID vaccine, behind some other essential workers but ahead of
the general population. Biden had pledged to quickly reopen America's schools, and the AFT
was communicating with top officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
about its guidelines for doing so, suggesting that the agency add a provision allowing for
its recommendations to be revisited if a highly contagious COVID variant emerged.
But the anger that had been unleashed by the pandemic closures and the culture wars had not
abated. Justice Andescovich, the former Florida school board members, incorporated Moms for
Liberty in early 2021 with a far more ambitious and political agenda than simply
advocating a return to maskless in-person classes. As the group's mission statement explained,
it was dedicated to fighting for the survival of America by unifying, educating, and empowering
parents to defend their parental rights at all levels of government. The group built its brand with bumper magnets and t-shirts emblazoned with the motto,
We Do Not Co-Parent With The Government.
It was embraced by the right-wing media, and then by donors eager to turn it into a national
movement, while nurturing its grassroots image, mirroring the model created by the Tea Party,
the quasi-populist uprising fueled by conservative billionaires and Fox News.
The former Fox host, Megyn Kelly, headlined a fundraising event in Florida,
speaking about, as Justice recalled,
the woke ideology coming out of America's classrooms.
Moms for Liberty soon expanded beyond Florida.
That summer, a chapter in Tennessee presented an 11-page letter of complaint to the
state's Department of Education, objecting to a curriculum that it said, focuses repeatedly and
daily on very dark and divisive slivers of American history, and works to sow feelings of resentment,
shame of one's skin color, and or fear. After several Republican states passed laws limiting the teaching
of race-related subjects
and banning CRT,
Weingarten gave a speech
citing a historian
who had compared their efforts
to the censorship
of the Soviet regime.
A clip of the speech
spent days in heavy rotation
on Fox News,
and it inspired an editorial
in the Wall Street Journal.
The teachers' unions go woke.
It was not Glenn Youngkin's plan to turn Virginia's 2021 governor's race
into a referendum on America's battles over education.
Initially, he was just hoping to prevent his opponent, Terry McAuliffe,
from owning an issue that historically favored Democrats.
We couldn't afford to let them take the fight to us,
Jeff Rowe, one of
Youngkin's chief strategists, told me. By almost every measure, Youngkin, a former private equity
executive with no political experience, was the underdog. McAuliffe, a Democratic stalwart dating
back to the Clinton presidency, served as Virginia's governor between 2014 and 2018.
A state law barring governors from serving consecutive terms
prevented him from running for re-election. Biden had beaten Trump by ten points in Virginia,
and McAuliffe led in the early polls. But Virginia's schools had been among the last
on the East Coast to fully reopen, and the lingering bitterness from these pandemic
closures had formed a politically combustible mix with the rising culture wars.
Amid the national racial reckoning of 2020, Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and
Technology in Fairfax County, one of the top public high schools in the nation,
had jettisoned its admissions exam, prompting a lawsuit by 17 families, many of them Asian-American,
who viewed the change as a form of discrimination against their children.
Some of the most bitter fights were unfolding in suburban Loudoun County,
where a proposal to allow transgender children to choose which bathrooms and
pronouns they wished to use had sparked an angry backlash among conservative parents.
The tensions were later exacerbated by news of a sexual assault in a high school girl's bathroom
perpetrated by a boy who was wearing a skirt at the time.
Loudon's increasingly contentious school board meetings became spectator events,
attracting the sustained attention of right-wing media outlets like Fox News and the New York Post.
Youngkin held Save Our Schools rallies and pledged to ban CRT from the state schools.
But his campaign's internal education polls revealed a wide range
of voter priorities across the state. The race and gender issues that resonated with his base,
Trump voters, weren't going to be enough to win. He micro-targeted other education voters with
different ads. It was a scattershot approach, though, at least until a gubernatorial debate
in late September. During his tenure as governor, McAuliffe had vetoed a bill,
prompted by a mother who objected to her high school senior son's reading
Toni Morrison's Beloved in an AP English class,
that would have enabled parents to prevent their children
from studying material they deemed sexually explicit.
When Youngkin criticized that decision on the debate stage,
McAuliffe shot back,
I don't think parents should be telling schools what they should teach. When Youngkin criticized that decision on the debate stage, McAuliffe shot back.
I don't think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.
Recognizing that they had just been handed a political gift,
Youngkin's staff cobbled together a digital and TV ad that very night,
hoping to take advantage of the apparent gaffe before McAuliffe tried to clarify it.
I was sure he was going to walk it back on Morning Joe, Roe told me. Instead,
McAuliffe stood by his comment, saying that states and local school boards should have authority over what's taught in schools. Youngkin unified his diffuse education campaign under a new
phrase, Parents Matter, printing up t-shirts and bumper stickers and holding Parents Matter
rallies in suburban and exurban
counties that supported Biden in 2020. McAuliffe's quote became the centerpiece of a rolling series
of ads accusing him of going on the attack against parents. A longtime critic of organized labor,
Youngkin also sought to drive a wedge between teachers and their unions, promising to devote
at least $100 million to raise teachers'
salaries, while at the same time saying that McAuliffe would bout with special interest allies
rather than doing what's best for children. A vast majority of Virginia's teachers belong to
the NEA, which tends to cover more rural areas, not the AFT, whose members are generally concentrated
in big cities. But Weingarten was friendly with McAuliffe from the Clinton days
and was supporting his candidacy on Twitter and cable news,
and the AFT was helping him develop his education platform.
Weingarten told me that she called McAuliffe after the debate
to tell him that he was wrong,
that parents should have a role in their children's education.
Terry made a very bad mistake, which Youngkin capitalized on, she said.
Through a spokesman, McAuliffe said that he talked to Weingarten regularly during the campaign,
but has no recollection of her criticizing his remark.
By the fall of 2021, America's public schools were fully open, but mask mandates were still
being hotly contested. Weingarten had been working to try to rebuild trust between some
families and their schools. In late September, just a couple of days after the McAuliffe debate,
she held a virtual town hall on mask mandates with Open Schools USA, an anti-masking right-wing
parents' rights group that was rallying families to pull their children out of public schools
in an effort to foster open dialogue with the union's critics.
Under Weingarten, who was elected president of the AFT in 2008, the National Union has gone all-in on electoral politics, significantly increasing its political spending in the
belief that the best way to serve its rank and file is by electing Democrats. The AFT gave more
than $1 million to McAuliffe, and Weingarten even knocked on doors for him in Alexandria.
But Youngkin had the momentum in the final weeks of the race.
His candidacy received another boost in October, when Attorney General Merrick Garland ordered the FBI to help address the rising threats of violence towards some school board members.
The order stemmed from a letter written to the Biden administration by the National School Boards Association,
asking that federal law enforcement address threats against public school officials that could be the equivalent to a form of domestic terrorism.
But Republican lawmakers and the right-wing media seized on the language in the letter
to falsely accuse Garland of labeling parents domestic terrorists.
Youngkin quickly exploited the opportunity, releasing an ad claiming that
the FBI was trying to silence parents. On the night before the election,
Weingarten headed down to Virginia to warm up the crowd at McAuliffe's closing rally in Fairfax
County. She was eager to be on hand for the final push, and her staff asked for her to be given a
speaking role at the rally. Because she had been such a generous and loyal supporter of McAuliffe's,
the campaign didn't want to say no,
even though some Democrats worried
that they could be handing Youngkin another gift.
Politically speaking,
Weingarten played perfectly into Youngkin's Parents Matter campaign.
That spring, a right-wing watchdog group,
Americans for Public Trust,
had gotten hold of email communications
between top officials at
the AFT and the CDC about the agency's school reopening guidelines through the Freedom of
Information Act and had passed them on to the New York Post. The tabloid, which had been gleefully
attacking Weingarten for years, dubbing her Wine, W-H-I-N-E, Garten, trumpeted the story.
H-I-N-E, Garten, trumpeted the story.
Powerful teachers' union influenced CDC on school reopenings, documents show.
The rest of the right-wing media and numerous Republican officials instantly jumped on the narrative.
Senator Susan Collins of Maine grilled the CDC's director, Dr. Rochelle Walensky,
at a committee hearing over what she called the CDC's
secret negotiations with the teachers' union.
Weingarten told me that the CDC had solicited the AFT's input
and that the union hadn't suggested anything that the agency
wasn't already considering incorporating into its guidelines.
But the appearance of a partisan union leader
who had privately discussed the future of the nation's schools
with a government agency could be counterproductive
in Virginia's charged political climate. Youngkin's staff was giddy at the prospect. I wanted to send them a
gift basket, Kristen Davison, another senior Youngkin strategist, told me. It was almost as
good as when Stacey Abrams came. Republican elected officials around the country took potshots at
their emerging villain. The union boss responsible for shutting down schools
is the final surrogate for Terry McAuliffe's failing campaign,
Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas wrote on Twitter.
Virginians should vote accordingly.
Youngkin won narrowly,
motivating the GOP base and making critical inroads in Loudoun,
which had voted overwhelmingly for Biden.
For a closer, for a campaign, he would think he would bring inroads in Loudoun, which had voted overwhelmingly for Biden.
For a closer, for a campaign, he would think he would bring in a showstopper,
Betsy DeVos gloated on Fox News on election night.
I guess, in this case, he did bring in a showstopper in Randy Weingarten,
because she definitely stopped the show for kids across the country.
To Republicans, Weingarten may be too progressive.
But to some members of her own union, she is not progressive enough.
As the pandemic dragged on, she found herself caught between the wishes of the Democratic establishment she did not want to alienate and the left-leaning rank and file she represented.
In Chicago, this tension came down in early 2022 to the most elemental question for unions,
whether or not to strike. At the time, the new Omicron variant was surging,
and Illinois was experiencing a record number of COVID cases and hospitalizations.
The AFT's left-wing local, the Chicago Teachers Union, was concerned about sending its 25,000
members back to the classroom after winter break. The union was hearing similar
worries from the black families whose children make up a large percentage of the 320,000 students
in Chicago's public schools. Many white suburban and ex-urban parents had been desperate to see
their children return to the classroom and were now committed to keeping them there.
But many urban black parents, who tended to live in smaller homes with more family members,
had generally lower vaccination rates, and had lost more loved ones to the pandemic,
had been and remained wary, especially with a new variant spiking. The union demanded mandatory
testing for all teachers and students or a temporary return to remote learning.
Mayor Lori Lightfoot, a Democrat, balked. President Biden and other prominent Democrats
had been unambiguous about their desire for the nation's schools to remain open. And the recent
governor's election in Virginia had underscored the political danger of introducing more disruptions
to in-person learning, especially with the 2022 midterms just around the corner. For Weingarten
and the National Union, a strike in the country's
third-largest school system would obviously be politically costly.
The insurgent group that leads the CTU first came together in 2008, when the bipartisan
education reform movement was sweeping across the country, dividing the Democratic Party.
Centrist billionaires and centrist Democrats joined forces to lead the effort to introduce more testing,
accountability, and free market competition to the public schools.
But the more progressive wing of the party viewed these measures
as an attack on the very institution of public education,
unleashing the forces of capitalism on what is supposed to be a public good.
In Chicago, the reform efforts were led by Arne Duncan,
the chief executive of the city's public school district
and President Obama's future education secretary.
Neo-liberal education reform hit Chicago like a ton of bricks,
Jesse Sharkey, a high school history teacher, told me.
Sharkey was a leader of this insurgency
and would go on to become president of the CTU from 2018 to 2022.
He'd flip on the TV or pick up a newspaper, and you couldn't avoid hearing our so-called leaders trashing our schools,
talking about their culture of failure, he says.
It was an environment that was downright hostile to public education.
Sharkey and his fellow insurgents didn't believe the National Union was fighting aggressively enough against these Democratic reformers.
Tapping into Chicago's long history of community-based organizing, they built their own grassroots movement within the union, called the Caucus of Rank-and-File Educators, or CORE.
Led by Karen Lewis, a chemistry teacher and union activist, CORE challenged the CTU's incumbent leadership in 2010
and won control of the Chicago Union.
Two years later, after the city's new Democratic mayor,
President Obama's former chief of staff Rahm Emanuel,
embarked on an ambitious program to close public schools
and replace them with charters,
the CTU called Chicago's first teacher strike in 25 years.
While the CTU was voting on the strike
authorization, Weingarten arrived in Chicago to appear on a panel with Emanuel at a conference
hosted by the Clinton Global Initiative. It was a stunning turn of events that spoke to the tension
between the AFT and its left wing. For the political health of the union, Weingarten felt
she needed to preserve her relationships with the country's most powerful democratic leaders, many of whom, like Emanuel, were centrist reformers. As the 2012 strike wore
on, Emanuel tried to turn the city against the teachers, accusing them of using Chicago's
children as pawns, and unsuccessfully sought a court order to force them to return to work.
After seven days, the city backed down.
The union won major concessions,
including a 16% raise over four years and the right for teachers who were laid off
as part of Emanuel's ongoing school closures
to be given priority for positions at other schools.
The strike instantly became a galvanizing event
for the union's more progressive members.
Not only does CORE still control the CTU,
but like-minded left-wing slates have since taken control of AFT locals in several other cities too,
including Los Angeles and Baltimore. These insurgent caucuses are unified by what they call
social justice unionism. They see public schools' ongoing struggles to educate their students
as inseparable from the larger societal and economic issues facing their working class members and the poor communities whose children dominate their classrooms.
We are trying to promote a brand of unionism that goes all out in its fight for educational justice and is brave about taking on conflicts, Sharkey says.
In some ways, we're less careful about who we piss off nationally.
There is a natural tension between these insurgent movements and the more establishment-oriented
National Union. In 2015, some rank-and-file members protested the AFT's decision to issue
an early endorsement of Hillary Clinton, to whom Weingarten is close, was running against the
pro-labor Bernie Sanders.
But the tension is about more than just politics.
It also goes to the heart of the AFT's identity.
To these caucuses, the union's power comes from the collective strength of its members,
from the bottom up, which can conflict with the top-down leadership style of Weingarten, who has cultivated a distinct public profile,
sometimes characterized by her
own tendency toward political hyperbole. An impulsive user of Twitter, she has been known
to send out the occasional overheated message. During the pandemic, when DeSantis supporters
were selling Don't Fauci My Florida merchandise, including beer koozies, on the GOP's WinRed
website, she wrote, disgusting. Millions of Floridians are going to die from Ron DeSantis' ignorance.
She later apologized for the tweet.
Two days after returning from winter break in January 2022,
with their demands still unmet, the CTU called a strike.
The union isn't stupid, Sharkey, who was president at the time, told me.
We knew people were sick of the pandemic.
But, he went on, for better or for worse, we're a union that strikes.
We didn't think it would be an easy or strategically wise thing,
but there was a principle around it.
It was something we had to do.
The union already had a contentious relationship with Lightfoot,
dating back to an 11-day strike over wages and class sizes in 2019
that ended with the city making major concessions.
This time, though, the mayor had public opinion on her side,
and she leveraged it in a flurry of media interviews,
accusing the CTU of holding Chicago's children hostage.
Lightfoot had long seen the AFT's local as a political movement
whose ambitions extended well beyond protecting the rights of its workers.
I think, ultimately, they'd like to take over not only Chicago public schools,
but take over running the city government, she told the Times in 2021.
The 2022 strike quickly became a political nightmare for National Democrats.
A Democratic mayor was at war with a Democratic union,
shutting down Chicago schools at a moment when children were finally back in the classroom
and the country was just beginning to confront the learning loss and emotional trauma caused by the pandemic.
Splinter groups of teachers in Northern California were also planning sick-outs in the face of the Omicron surge.
The Chicago strike put Weingarten in a difficult position. Publicly, she supported the CTU, while also saying that
children needed to be in the classroom. Behind the scenes, she was calling and texting Sharkey
constantly, offering to do anything she could, even arrange a call with people at the White House,
to help press Lightfoot and end the strike.
After a few days, under intensifying public pressure,
the CTU's members voted to return to work.
They had lost this battle.
But they already had their sights on a bigger one.
The city's upcoming mayoral election.
In late October, just before the 2022 midterms,
the results from the first full national assessment of educational progress since the start of the pandemic were released,
revealing that 40% of the country's 8th grade public school students
were not proficient in math,
and 32% were not proficient in reading.
The strikingly low scores instantly became a GOP talking point.
The culprit wasn't the pandemic, schools, or teachers, but the unions and Democratic
politicians beholden to them. We cannot let the nation forget how teachers' unions tried to hold
our children's futures for ransom, said Representative Virginia Fox of North Carolina,
then the ranking Republican on the House Committee on Education in the Workforce, these union bosses and the politicians who enabled them must be held
accountable. Republicans up and down the ballot accused their Democratic opponents of carrying
water for the teachers' unions. A week before the election, Fox News ran a segment headlined,
Have the Teachers' Unions Sold Out Your Kids to the Democrats? Christopher Ruffo,
the right-wing activist who manufactured the obsession with CRT two years earlier,
was now on Fox News railing against another crisis, the academic queer theory that he charged
was being mainlined into America's public schools, while Republican candidates condemned the grooming
of children
to identify as different genders in the nation's classrooms. Many Republican candidates pledged
their allegiance to a Parents' Bill of Rights, requiring schools to provide information on
reading lists, curriculums, and whether a family's child used another name or pronoun in school.
The AFT spent in excess of $20 million in the 2022 midterms, more than it ever had in an
off-year election, and Weingarten campaigned tirelessly with high-profile Democrats around
the country, her arrival on the stump invariably inspiring glee among local Republican leaders.
When she appeared in Michigan with Governor Gretchen Whitmer, one GOP pundit, Kayleigh
McGee White, described her on Fox Business Network as
the kiss of death. Whitmer won easily, as did many other Democrats whose opponents had railed
against drag queen shows for children or LGBTQ-themed books in school libraries.
But Republican candidates who campaigned on another education issue, school choice,
fared much better. As a political matter, all the education battles
that had erupted since the start of the pandemic, over school closures, over how the country's racial
history should be taught, over what sort of role parents ought to have in the classroom,
were really about the same thing. Whether America's children should continue to be educated
in government-run public schools. Did the pandemic and the culture wars reveal the indispensability of these schools to their
communities and to the broader fabric of the nation? Or did they only underscore their
inherent limitations, in effect, making the case for school choice?
It was the University of Chicago economist Milton Friedman who first proposed the modern
concept of school vouchers in a paper in 1955. Friedman
was a champion of free markets, and his idea was to leverage the transformative power of capitalism
to prod schools to compete for families' dollars. But vouchers served another purpose, too. The
Supreme Court had just ruled on Brown v. Board of Education, and many white Americans were worried
about the looming prospect of being forced to send their children to desegregated schools. Friedman saw an opening for his proposal, writing,
Under such a system, there can develop exclusively white schools, exclusively colored schools,
and mixed schools. Thirty years later, with Friedman serving as an economic advisor,
President Reagan tried repeatedly to introduce federal school voucher legislation.
One of his most vocal opponents was Al Shanker,
then the AFT's president,
who argued that choice might be the point of shopping malls,
but it was not the point of education.
Nor was it the reason taxpayers were expected to fund the nation's public schools.
We do so not to satisfy the individual wants of parents and students,
but because of the public interest in producing an educated citizenry
capable of exercising the rights of liberty and being productive members of society.
Even Congress, where Republicans held the Senate majority, considered Reagan's voucher proposals
too radical. But the concept endured. In the 1990s, vouchers were championed by Christian
conservatives like Paul Weyrich, a founder of the Heritage Foundation and mentor to Justice
Clarence Thomas. Weyrich believed that the nation's public schools had become morally decadent
institutions, and argued that the only answer was for Christians to educate their children themselves,
ideally with government money. Over the years, some states experimented
with limited voucher programs,
typically designed to target discrete populations
like children with special needs.
But the pandemic created an opening
for voucher advocates to think more ambitiously
and move more aggressively.
In fact, this had been the plan
almost from the very beginning.
Two months into the school closures,
in the spring of 2020,
Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the Catholic Archbishop of New York,
asked DeVos, then the Education Secretary and a longtime supporter of school choice,
in an interview on Sirius XM Radio,
if she intended to
DeVos answered unequivocally. Yes, absolutely.
In 2021, at least 18 states created new school choice programs or expanded existing ones,
and more followed suit in 2022. Some of these new programs represent a significant departure from those of the past.
Known collectively as universal voucher programs,
they are available to everyone and can be applied toward any kind of school.
The goal is not merely to disrupt public education, but to defund and dismantle it.
For years, the country's lower courts largely agreed
that spending taxpayer money on religious schools was unconstitutional.
But last summer, the Supreme Court created a new precedent, ruling that it was in fact unconstitutional for voucher programs, in this case one in rural Maine, to exclude religious schools.
DeVos, now back in the private sector, is one of the leading funders of this new national voucher campaign, primarily through an organization that she helped found called the American Federation for Children.
The group and its affiliates spent $9 million on school choice campaigns in 2022,
at least $2.5 million of which came directly from DeVos and her husband. They spent much of this
money in the primaries, turning support for school choice into a litmus test and targeting Republican incumbents opposed to it. Three-quarters of the candidates they
supported won. There wasn't a red wave or a blue wave in the midterms, but there was a school
choice wave. Corey DeAngelis, a senior fellow at the American Federation for Children, wrote to me
in an email. Echoing Weirich's sentiments about the moral decadence of American public education, DeAngelis quoted Votie Bauckham, a Christian homeschooling advocate.
We cannot continue to send our children to Caesar for their education and be surprised when they
come home as Romans. DeAngelis identified Weingarten as a useful political foil long
before Mike Pompeo. He has been trolling her relentlessly on Twitter since 2021,
ostentatiously thanking her for starting the school choice revolution.
In March, at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference in suburban Washington,
he posed with a life-size cardboard cutout of her clutching an award labeled
Threat to America's Children.
His left thumb raised in approval.
Threat to America's Children.
His left thumb raised in approval.
Lori Lightfoot, the mayor of Chicago,
was right about the local teachers' union's political ambitions.
In February, Brandon Johnson,
a former middle school teacher and paid union organizer,
challenged her in the city's mayoral election.
It was a long shot.
One early poll put his support at 3%. But for the CTU, the Johnson campaign was a natural
progression. To pursue their broader agenda, which reaches beyond education into areas like housing
and policing, they needed the kind of power that can come only from winning partisan political
elections. And they had both a powerful grassroots movement and a source of campaign funds, in the
form of members' dues that could be leveraged to support Johnson's candidacy.
Johnson's campaign was underwritten largely by the teachers' unions.
Though the AFT and the CTU had their differences in the past, they have become more closely aligned in recent years.
While there are still some divisions within the Democratic Party over education policy,
the bipartisan education reform movement that once posed such a formidable
existential threat to the AFT is a shadow of its former self. The threat to the AFT is now partisan,
which means that Weingarten is no longer facing as much pressure from centrist Democrats.
Backed by the financial and organizational muscle of the national and local teachers' unions,
Johnson knocked Lightfoot out of the two-person runoff,
making her the first incumbent mayor in Chicago to be unseated after a single term in 40 years.
By now, Pompeo, Tim Scott, Marco Rubio, Ron DeSantis, Donald Trump, and the rest of the Republican Party were busy elevating education to a central plank in its 2024 platform,
and in the process, transforming Weingarten into the new Hillary,
a GOP stand-in for everything that was wrong with America.
The Republican-led House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic
was continuing to build its case that Weingarten and the AFT
exerted undue influence over the CDC's school reopening guidelines,
summoning Weingarten to appear in
Washington on April 26th at a hearing titled The Consequences of School Closures. But Weingarten
was building her own case. Public education was now itself a hyper-partisan issue, and she addressed
it in hyper-partisan terms in a fiery speech at the National Press Club. Calling out by name some
of the people who had
demonized her since the pandemic, including Betsy DeVos, she described the ongoing effort
to defund public schools as nothing less than a threat to cornerstones of community,
of our democracy, our economy, and our nation. She pointed to studies that have shown that
vouchers don't improve student achievement, characterizing them as a backdoor into private and parochial schools that are not subject to the same federal civil
rights laws as public institutions and can therefore promote discrimination. Our public
schools shouldn't be pawns for politicians' ambitions, she thundered, moving toward her
emotional conclusion. They shouldn't be defunded or destroyed by ideologues. Like the Virginia's
governor's race one and a half years earlier, Chicago's mayoral runoff became, at least in part,
a referendum on education. The effects of the pandemic on Chicago's public schools have been
profound. More than 33,000 students have left the school system since the fall of 2020,
and the recent National Assessment of Educational Progress Scores showed steep declines in math and a widening achievement
gap between white and black students. Brandon Johnson's opponent, Paul Vallis,
ran Chicago's public schools in the late 1990s. Chicago has no Republican Party to speak of,
but Vallis, a vocal proponent of charter schools and vouchers,
was the conservative candidate.
In 2009, he said he was
more of a Republican than a Democrat.
He was supported by the local business community
and endorsed by the city's police union.
A group affiliated with the American Federation for Children
spent $60,285 on a pro-Valas digital media effort.
But Arne Duncan and a number of other centrist Democrats endorsed Valas too.
On the eve of the April runoff election,
Weingarten headed to Chicago to speak at a Johnson political rally headlined by Bernie Sanders.
Both the AFT and the CTU continued to funnel money into Johnson's campaign as the election approached,
their combined contributions totaling $4.6 million.
All of this stuff is about power, observed a local community activist, Jamal Green,
who had run in the first round of the election but didn't make the runoff and was now supporting
Vallis. When Johnson narrowly won, it was a stunning upset, not just for the candidate,
but for the left.
Even as the Republicans were ramping up their attacks on Weingarten and on the institution of public education,
the teachers' unions had effectively elected the mayor of America's third-largest city,
who was himself an avowedly progressive union organizer
promising to raise taxes on the rich,
reform the police, and increase funding for the city's schools.
Maybe Pompeo hadn't been wrong, at least as far as his own party was concerned.
It was those who had underestimated the political power of the unions who were mistaken.
They said this would never happen, Johnson said in his victory speech.
If they didn't know, now they know.