Yesterday the AFT/NEA sponsored a “Public Education Forum” in Pittsburgh. There, hand-selected union members heard from seven Democratic presidential candidates as one by one they pledged their troth, promising to starve alternative public schools and increase funding for traditional schools in exchange for teacher union money and endorsement.
At the same time as the candidates were courting union lobbyists, over 250 parents, mostly Black and Brown mothers and grandmothers, gathered in a hotel down the street (paid for by a GoFundMe campaign) to plead with candidates to stop by and listen to why the union’s position was untenable for their children and grandchildren, why waiting, as Elizabeth Warren suggested during her plea for cash, until “every public school was an excellent public school,” didn’t cut the mustard. Their children and grandchildren are in school NOW. They need good schools NOW.
Meet the #PowerfulParentNetwork.
We are a non-partisan, non-endorsing movement of parents to ensure presidential candidates hear from not only educators but also from real parents whose children are being left behind generation after generation. #PowerfulParentNetwork #WhatAboutUs #PublicEdForum pic.twitter.com/EOxFt9KYHi
— Sonya Thomas (@Sonyathemom) December 14, 2019
The plan was to ask the candidates — Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Pete Buttigieg, Amy Klobuchar, Tom Steyer, Mike Bennett — to walk down the block and listen to why AFT/NEA’s opposition to school choice hurts their children. Only the last two bothered (not that they were in danger of union endorsements). [Correction: only Bennett came to the hotel.]
Hey @PeteButtigieg @ewarren @TomSteyer @BernieSanders @amyklobuchar @JoeBiden @MichaelBennet #PublicEdForum!
— jumoke hinton hodge (@hintonhodge4oak) December 14, 2019
More than 250 parents of the #PowerfulParentNetwork are asking #WhatAboutUs and inviting you to talk about the educational futures of their children.
Will you meet them?
Let’s think about the optics here, which is a rare instance of when it’s fair to judge a book by its cover. The candidates on the stage were all white. (Cory Booker had the flu, or maybe he didn’t want to waste his time.) So were most of the audience (who showed up — word is there were empty seats). The #PowerfulParentNetwork is diverse, mostly Black and Brown. They tried to get tickets to the AFT/NEA event but were locked out, just like they’ve been locked out of high-quality schools.
Judge this book by its cover:
Millions of black/brown/white typical+atypical kids of all socioeconomic stature are suffering while white, wealthy, oppressive candidates play kiss-a$$ w/barbarians in @AFTunion @NEAToday, & call it a “Public” forum.??#Moms4FAPE #PowerfulParentNetwork@ABC @CBS @nbc @FoxNews
— Marilyn Muller (@1in5advocacy) December 15, 2019
With none of the major candidates willing to walk down the block to listen to Black and Brown parents and grandparents, the #PowerfulParentNetwork, on that cold, rainy day, headed down the street to the Pittsburgh Convention Center to try to speak to their Party’s candidates.
But they were locked out by security guards and police.
This right here is the real story about today’s #PublicEdForum @NBCNews @CBSNews @ABC parents of colored and learning disabled kids marginalized just like our kids are in public ed. #PowerfulParentNetwork @moms4FAPE say our #KidsCantWait https://t.co/2dWSsiNcF6
— ****2021**** (@EducateAll101) December 14, 2019
Here’s who wasn’t locked out:
.@MSNBC @ewarren @JoeBiden @PeteButtigieg @BernieSanders
— The 8 Black Hands Podcast (@8BlackHands1) December 15, 2019
This person was allowed inside, while we bravely protested outside in the elements.
By not giving us a seat at the table, her shirt is what you all are saying to us. We won't stand for it.#PowerfulParentNetwork pic.twitter.com/gKhmJUASS8
While they were ignored by the unions and the majority of the candidates, these warriors are not giving up.
#PowerfulParentNetwork #WhatAboutUs
— Akhirah Waheed (@AkhirahW) December 14, 2019
Met some beautiful people who want better choices for our children and their future. May we continue to grow as a family and have more advocates fighting for the cause. #themorethestrongerweare pic.twitter.com/brxng5rGRp
They know their numbers are growing, especially among parents of color, and they remain committed to this cause of social and educational justice:
Question I have for @ewarren at the #PublicEdForum:
— Tommy Schultz (@Tommy_USA) December 14, 2019
69% of Americans would prefer to send their children to a K-12 school that’s not a district public school.
Why do you want to force kids to go to a school that may not fit their needs?#SchoolChoice
They’re not willing to wait, as Warren suggested, for “all public schools to be excellent public schools.”
.@ewarren is asking parents to wait until "every school is an excellent public school." First, charter schools are public schools. Second, she didn't wait — took her kid out & sent him to a private school — but parents w/fewer resources should wait for never to happen? https://t.co/Bs971j1olj
— Laura Waters (@njleftbehind) December 14, 2019
I don’t know why NEA/AFT — let alone the aspiring nominees — think that ignoring Black and Brown parents who comprise an essential portion of the Democratic base is a sound political strategy or even a defensible ethical stance. Here’s what I do know: I’ve never been so disappointed in my Party. I’ve never been so proud to call members of the #PowerfulParentNetwork my friends. And I maintain hope that Democratic leaders will see past the the lure of union dollars and look squarely at the faces of Sarah Carpenter, Vesia Hawkins, Gwen Samuels, Sharif El-Mekki, and all the members of this growing movement.
That’s got to be worth more than a bucket of cash from a group of blind charlatans, right?
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