By Steve Rhodes
“Rahm Emanuel started a fight with teachers that only he can finish,” Carol Marin writes in the Sun-Times.
“In his 2011 campaign for mayor, he took the Chicago Teachers Union on as an adversary rather than attempt to make them a partner. He opted for a blunt instrument rather than a finessed approach. In hammering home how he was ‘for the children,’ he left the implication that teachers were not.”
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“And then, shortly after his election, Emanuel went to Springfield to get Senate Bill 7 passed. Touted as education reform, it was really an anti-collective bargaining measure, setting up a 75 percent vote threshold for union members to authorize a strike.
“Jonah Edelman, executive director of the deep-pocketed, pro-business group Stand for Children, was caught on video gloating about its legislative victory, saying: ‘The unions cannot strike in Chicago . . . They will never be able to muster the 75 percent threshold.’
“Though Edelman later publicly regretted his bravado, his agenda clearly is on behalf of the privatization of public education. And of charter schools. Even though the metrics of charter-school performance mirror the highs and lows of neighborhood public schools.
Posted on September 12, 2012