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Bush education secretary calls teachers union a terrorist
organization
By Patrick Martin
25 February 2004
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The top education official in the Bush administration said
he regarded the largest US teachers union as a terrorist
organization, in remarks to a delegation of state governors
visiting the White House Monday.
Secretary of Education Roderick Paige made the comment in the
course of a discussion on the implementation of the No Child Left
Behind law, which the Bush administration is using to undermine
public education and promote private schools.
The National Education Association, with 2.7 million members,
initially supported No Child Left Behind, the product of a bipartisan
agreement in 2001 between the Bush White House and leading House
and Senate Democrats, headed by Senator Edward Kennedy. The legislation
mandated regular testing of students in both elementary and secondary
schools, with the threat of financial penalties and even outright
closure for schools that failed to meet federal standards.
The NEA and the smaller American Federation of Teachers subsequently
turned against the bill when it became clear that the standards
were rigged to designate thousands of public schools as failing,
in order to force them to close and push their students out of
the public education system and into private schools. The unions
accused the Bush administration of reneging on promises to provide
sufficient funding to meet the goals mandated for local school
districts.
These charges have been taken up by the Democratic presidential
candidates, including Senator John Kerry, the frontrunner and
likely nominee, and Senator John Edwards, Kerrys last major
challenger, both of whom voted for No Child Left Behind but now
denounce it.
The education reform bill served two purposes for
the Bush administration: in the short run, it was to co-opt a
traditional Democratic issue and allow Bush to campaign for reelection
as the education president. In the long term, Republican
Party operatives assured their Christian fundamentalist base,
No Child Left Behind would lead to branding public schools as
failures and open the way to state funding of private religious
schools.
Paiges remark reveals the frustration of these political
calculations, as No Child Left Behind is now widely opposed by
educators and has been a target of political attack during the
presidential election campaign. Even state legislatures controlled
by Republicansin Utah and Virginiahave objected to
the federal standards as arbitrary and impossible to meet with
the resources available.
The education secretary was speaking only four days after he
was compelled to announce a relaxation of the testing requirements
for schools in areas heavily populated by immigrants, whose children
have greater difficulty meeting English proficiency standards.
It was a significant climb-down by the administration, which had
insisted that such waivers would not be granted.
In a written statement issued a few hours after his meeting
with the governors, Paige apologized for his remark, but in language
nearly as provocative. He called his statement an inappropriate
choice of words to describe the obstructionist scare tactics the
NEAs Washington lobbyists have employed against No Child
Left Behinds historic education reforms.
Paiges comment is not merely a gaffe. His
slip of the tongue reveals the mindset of a right-wing, anti-working
class government which regards domestic political opposition as
illegitimate. Bush has declared himself a war president
commanding an administration which is waging a war on terror.
In that context, branding opponents as terroristsi.e., the
equivalent of Al Qaedahas the most ominous implications.
It suggests that the Bush administration is preparing to use the
same methods of repression and violence at home that it is carrying
out abroad.
The response from the teachers union to Paiges
comment, however, was typically flaccid. NEA President Reg Weaver
said, It is morally repugnant to equate those who teach
Americas children with terrorists. Yet this is the kind
of rhetoric we have come to expect from this administration whenever
one challenges its worldview.
Weaver did not call for Paiges dismissal or resignation,
concluding only that the NEAs disagreement with the education
law is no cause for the administration or anybody else to
call anybody a name.
The Democratic governors who witnessed the verbal assault were
likewise restrained in their reaction. Edward Rendell of Pennsylvania
said of Paiges remark, Im not sure he was being
entirely serious, but it was probably inappropriate. Bob
Holden of Missouri said the governors were startled by Paiges
outburst, adding, He is, I guess, very concerned about anybody
that questions what the president is doing. Governor Jennifer
Granholm of Michigan said, I know he wasnt calling
teachers terrorists, but to even suggest that the organization
they belong to was a terrorist organization is uncalled for.
See Also:
Bush plan for community colleges: training
ground for low-wage jobs
[7 February 2004]
New York City teachers
rally against attacks on education
[28 October 2003]
Cuts in education
funding will improve academic performance. Honest.
[28 August 2003]
Growing national
pushout crisis
US school reform throws students into the street
[13 August 2003]
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