Thanks to Slate and Bluegrass Policy Blog for pointing out the most important moment of the DNC convention so far. No, it wasn’t Michelle Obama’s speech last night but a meeting just before the convention started.
I went to the Ed Challenge for Change event mainly to schmooze. I almost didn’t stay for the panels, being in no mood for what I expected would, even among these reformers, be an hour of vague EdBlob talk about “change” and “accountability” and “resources” that would tactfully ignore the elephant in the room, namely the teachers’ unions. I was so wrong. One panelist–I think it was Peter Groff, president of the Colorado State Senate, got the ball rolling by complaining that when the children’s agenda meets the adult agenda, the “adult agenda wins too often.” Then Cory Booker of Newark attacked teachers unions specifically–and there was applause. In a room of 500 people at the Democratic convention! “The politics are so vicious,” Booker complained, remembering how he’d been told his political career would be over if he kept pushing school choice, how early on he’d gotten help from Republicans rather than from Democrats. The party would “have to admit as Democrats we have been wrong on education.” Loud applause! Mayor Adrian Fenty of D.C. joined in, describing the AFT’s attempt to block the proposed pathbreaking D.C. teacher contract. Booker denounced “insane work rules,” and Groff talked about doing the bidding of “those folks who are giving money [for campaigns], and you know who I’m talking about.” Yes, they did!
As Jon Alter, moderating the next panel, noted, it was hard to imagine this event happening at the previous Democratic conventions. (If it had there would have been maybe 15 people in the room, not 500.) Alter called it a “landmark” future historians should note. Maybe he was right.
Maybe there is hope for students and their parents and caring legislatures in the battle against organizations like the NEA and state and local teachers’ unions and the school boards they dominate. The Democratic party needs more leaders like these.


3 comments
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August 26, 2008 at 11:17 pm
didionsmommy
we’re not big fans of teacher’s unions either … i’ve seen what happens in california … NOTHING when the union has the stranglehold it does … that said, we are not against EVERYTHING the unions stand for … primarily we do not like how the union now exists simply for its own sake …
issue is too complicated right now … we gotta pack for our trip tomorrow …
August 27, 2008 at 8:23 am
Progressive Conservative
I can’t say I have been happy with really anything the unions stand for. They lost sight of what their primary mission should be a long time ago.
September 2, 2008 at 1:56 pm
Union Steve
The vast majority of members are so because of Insurance. While you may often rasie the claim of us protecting “bad” teachers you never mention that if a teacher commits a crime no union rep may even speak with the alleged criminal. I have represented a lot of education employees that made mistakes. I will be happy to let you know that most of those employees were shown the door through resignation, even in cases where extended hearings and maybe even civil court proceedings were not only with merit but also having a seventy to ninety percent chance of prevailing. You need to dig deeper and find someone else to hang the problem on.