By Steve Gunn
EAG Communications
MUSKEGON, MI – The National Education Association has earned a reputation for using campaign contributions to purchase the loyalty of lawmakers at the federal and state levels.
In the 2007-08 election cycle, for instance, the union, through its political action committees, spent a whopping $56 million on various candidates and state ballot proposals. That ranked the NEA as the largest political contributor in the nation, outspending the second-place donor by more than $12 million.
The smaller American Federation of Teachers doesn’t give as much, but it’s still a major player in the purchase-a-politician game. In 2007-08 the AFT spent about $12 million on candidates and ballot proposals. The two teachers unions even combined to form a third PAC, “NEA AFT,” which spent more than $3.3 million on campaign contributions.
As one writer recently put it, “America’s two teachers unions outspent AT&T, Goldman Sachs, Wal-Mart, Microsoft, General Electric, Chevron, Pfizer, Morgan Stanley, Lockheed Martin, FedEx, Boeing, Merrill Lynch, Exxon Mobil, Lehman Brothers and the Walt Disney Corporation – combined.”
Then there are the political expenditures that don’t get counted. The NEA employs a team of several thousand regional Uniserv directors, who as one observer put it, comprise “the largest army of campaign workers that any organization has.”
The Uniserv directors are spread across the map to raise funds for union PACs, recruit pro-union candidates, recruit union members to campaign on behalf of those candidates, and get those members to the polls to vote for those candidates.
Union-backed candidates not only get big donations, they get a built-in army of volunteers to lick their envelopes and hand out their literature.
This year the NEA can be expected to spend even more money, and field even more campaign volunteers, with very good reason.
The education reform movement has a great deal of momentum across the nation. Leading Democrats, including President Obama, are finally joining Republicans in calling for fundamental changes in the nation’s public school system.
If the union can’t find a way to halt this movement, its dominant influence over public education policy will clearly be threatened. If ever there were an election year for the NEA to pull out all the stops, this is it.
We’re already seeing evidence of the union’s political machine springing into action across the nation. And the NEA has proven, at least in two states, that it still packs a punch when it comes to doling out money and influencing public opinion.
“True Republican PAC”
In Alabama, the state teachers union took the unusual step of getting involved in the Republican gubernatorial primary.
That’s pretty extraordinary for an organization that gives 95 percent of its campaign donations to liberal Democrats.
So why did this happen? Because one of the GOP candidates, former State Sen. Bradley Byrne, has been an outspoken critic of the teachers union for years, particularly on the topics of tenure and expansion of charter schools.
According to press reports, the Alabama Education Association formed a new political action committee called the True Republican PAC. This organization accepted millions from union PACS and spent it on attack ads against Byrne, the winner of the earlier Republican primary.
The strategy worked. In the primary runoff last month, Byrne was edged out by State Rep. Robert Bentley, and most of the credit went to the AEA. As another GOP candidate said about Byrne’s predicament, he “reaped what he sowed” by taking on the teachers union.
The ironic part is that the teachers union has no real interest in Bentley, or maintaining the True Republican PAC. Full union support in the November general election will go to the Democratic nominee, Ron Sparks.
In a scathing editorial before the July primary, the Mobile Press-Register called the union effort to defeat Byrne and partner with his GOP opponents “one of the most disreputable political liasons in recent Alabama history.”
The newspaper focused on AEA President Paul Hubbert, a “superlobbyist” and powerful figure in the state Democratic Party. It said Hubbert was the driving force behind the effort to knock Byrne out of the race before the general election.
“Republican voters must not allow Paul Hubbert to hijack the GOP gubernatorial primary,” the May 23 editorial said. “If he succeeds in stopping Mr. Byrne, his already enormous power will grow exponentially, putting him in a position to block proposed government reforms.
“It doesn’t matter whether or not there is an explicit connection between Mr. Hubbert and the other Republican candidates; it’s obvious he would have tremendous influence on a GOP nominee who benefited from the AEA’s anti-Byrne campaign.”
Prophetic words indeed. We only wish Alabama voters had read this editorial and taken it to heart.
In the meantime, the union can put another notch in its victory column. Say what you want about this self-serving group, but it doesn’t go down easy.