Home About Chat Users Issues Party Candidates Polling Firms Media News Polls Calendar Key Races United States President Senate House Governors International

New User Account
"A comprehensive, collaborative elections resource." 
Email: Password:

  In Chicago, a Democratic civil war
NEWS DETAILS
Parent(s) Container 
ContributorImperator 
Last EditedImperator  Sep 12, 2012 10:40am
Logged 1 [Older]
CategoryOpinion
AuthorHarold Meyerson
MediaNewspaper - Washington Post
News DateWednesday, September 12, 2012 04:00:00 PM UTC0:0
DescriptionSo much for Democratic Party harmony.

Just a few days after a convention that displayed the party as one big happy family, a civil war has erupted in Chicago between the Democrats’ disparate wings.

Rahm Emanuel, the volatile, far-from-union-friendly mayor who is a mainstay of the national Democratic Party, and the almost-as-volatile Chicago local of the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), itself a mainstay of the national Democratic Party, are at loggerheads over the future of Chicago’s schools and teachers. The school strike that began Monday should be an alarm bell in the night for Democrats everywhere.

At stake in the conflict is not only the future of education reform but also the role of unions within the party and, by extension, the nation. Emanuel’s clear desire to reduce the teachers union’s role in the city’s schools is hardly his alone. It’s shared by other Democratic mayors such as Los Angeles’s Antonio Villaraigosa. Still other heavily Democratic cities, such as San Jose, Calif., have reduced their employees’ pension benefits. What’s brewing is a battle between Democratic Party management (chiefly mayors, backed by a significant portion of the public) and Democratic Party labor, also backed by a significant portion of the public. If there’s a win-win scenario out there, the party and its publics would do well to find it.

Win-win, however, is not the kind of solution toward which Chicago’s take-no-prisoners mayor inclines. To run the city’s schools, Emanuel hired Jean-Claude Brizard, the schools chief of Rochester, N.Y., where he’d earned a no-confidence vote from 95 percent of city teachers. After taking office, Emanuel canceled planned pay raises for teachers and moved to lengthen the school day by 20 percent. Chicago’s school day, one of the nation’s shortest at six hours, should certainly be lengthened, but imposing this change without discussion with teachers and with no commensurate increase in their pa
Share
ArticleRead Full Article

NEWS
Date Category Headline Article Contributor

DISCUSSION