Romney: Chicago teachers turning backs on students
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
WASHINGTON (AP) — Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney said Monday that striking Chicago teachers are turning their backs on thousands of students and that President Barack Obama is rooting for the absent educators. Obama's top spokesman said the president has not taken sides but is urging both the teachers and the city to settle quickly.
Chicago's mayor, Obama ally Rahm Emanuel, called Romney's statement "lip service" as the contract dispute in the nation's third-largest school system inserted itself into the hard-fought presidential campaign.
Romney said he chooses to side with the parents and students, echoing his oft-repeated campaign speech claim that teachers' unions are out for themselves.
"We ought to put the kids first in this country and the teacher's union goes behind," Romney, in the Chicago area for a fundraiser, told conservative syndicated radio talk-show host Hugh Hewitt in a telephone interview. "As president, I will stand up and say, look, these teachers unions are not acting in the — with the best interest of the kids in mind."
White House spokesman Jay Carney said Obama was monitoring the situation in his hometown but was not itching to get involved.
"We hope that both sides are able to come together to settle this quickly and in the best interests of Chicago's students," Carney told reporters.
The move by 26,000 teachers and support staff affected almost 400,000 students. It was the latest flashpoint in the public debate over public employee unions that have roiled politics in Ohio, Wisconsin and beyond.
Obama political aides in Chicago criticized Romney for seeking advantage and pointed to his repeated campaign statements that class size does not affect a student's education.
"Playing political games with local disputes won't help educate our kids, nor will fewer teachers," said Obama campaign spokesman Ben LaBolt.
Emanuel, Obama's former White House chief of staff, was more direct in dismissing Romney.
"While I appreciate his lip service, what really counts is what we are doing here," Emanuel told reporters. "I don't give two hoots about national comments scoring political points or trying to embarrass — or whatever — the president."
Romney looked to tap into parents' concerns nationally with the dispute in Illinois, a state heavily favoring Obama in the fall elections.
"Teachers unions have too often made plain that their interests conflict with those of our children, and today we are seeing one of the clearest examples yet," Romney said in a statement issued by his campaign. "President Obama has chosen his side in this fight, sending his vice president last year to assure the nation's largest teachers union that 'you should have no doubt about my affection for you and the president's commitment to you.'"
Romney was quoting Vice President Joe Biden's remarks to the National Education Association in 2011 during which he also acknowledged that "not all teachers are created equal" and urged educators to be accountable.
Romney running mate Paul Ryan joined the criticism of the president, saying he doesn't agree with the Chicago mayor very often but that "on this issue, on this day, we stand with Rahm Emanuel. We stand with the parents and the families of Chicago."
"We have to ask, 'Where does President Obama stand? Does he stand with his former chief of staff, Mayor Rahm Emanuel, with the children and the parents, or does he stand with the union?" Ryan told donors at a fundraiser in Portland, Ore.
Obama too has urged accountability in teachers — moves union leaders have opposed.
For instance, Obama's administration has favored pilot programs that challenge current practices, rewarded schools that try new approaches and pushed for longer school days.
Obama's education secretary, Arne Duncan, is a former head of Chicago Public Schools who pushed for changes the unions opposed.
Associated Press writer Jonathan J. Cooper in Portland, Ore., contributed to this report.

Comments
RobHunterJohnson 8 months, 1 week ago
Fire them all, and then OUTSOURCE those positions. That is how Romeny handled the problems back at Bain. Rob
newone 8 months, 1 week ago
That is the Republican's answer to everything, send the job's over seas, then we don't have to pay them squat!
spelchek 8 months, 1 week ago
Guess where Mayor Rahm Emmanuel's kids go to school? Hint: Their teachers are not striking.
clingingredneck 8 months, 1 week ago
This is what happens when you let Unions become too strong. They go from supporting the workers to being thugs that beat the owners, in this case the taxpaying citizens. If we could fire them and get caring people in there it wouldn't be a problem, but since it's a union, we are stuck with the left wing liberals they put in place to educate the kids and bring them up as good little liberal sheep.
JCLifer 8 months, 1 week ago
Surprised Arney Duncan and Obama haven't proposed replacing all the Chicago public schools with Charter Schools as a way to Race to the Top....
spelchek 8 months, 1 week ago
"A Chicago Public Schools spokesperson said average pay for teachers, without benefits, is $76,000. " Illinois and California are now reaping the sowing of years of liberal policies. Look what happens when the entitlement state runs out of others money; teachers abandon your kids while the liberals that run the state send their kids off to private schools. What a bunch of mean spirited, spoiled, ungrateful Obama voters.
MO4LIFE 8 months, 1 week ago
They are not on strik over the pay! They are on strike over all of the changes that are harming the children.. A brother & sister hugging in hallway = 2 weeks suspension. NO AC for children when it is 98 degrees in the schools. 50 children to a classroom. Taking lunches from children if the school doesn't think it is healthy enough and making them eat a school lunch then charging the parents when they sent a lunch for the child. These are the reasons they are striking not because of wages. Oh and by the way 76000 is not a lot in Chicago when you can't even get a 2 bedroom apt for under 1500 a month! ALL UNIONS ARE NOT BAD EVEN THOUGH THAT IS WHAT THE REFUGLICANS LIKE THE CANCEROUS PEOPLE ON HERE WANT YOU TO THINK. You will all be eating crow and peeved off after November when OBAMA wins because Romney is to Dumb to give specific details about what he will do. Even some of his own refuglicans are pressing him to give details about his plan and at least 1 time thank the troops. But that is not important according to him. He wants to boost the defense budget and he thinks that is thanking the troops.
LeoEinstein 8 months, 1 week ago
They probably have no AC because all the money got siphoned off into the hands of the Union Bosses and thus also Democrat campaigns. By the way MO4LIFE, where did you go to school? -
eileen10 8 months, 1 week ago
Report from Chicago states the key issues of the strike are salary,job security,teacher evaluations and work quality.
MO4LIFE 8 months, 1 week ago
@leoeinstein I went to school in JC, STL, Fulton, & CHI. my parents moved a lot when i was a kid. Oh and South Callawy for a year. "Only Black Person K-12"
Crump 8 months, 1 week ago
If XChicago had a true leader, instead of this little O'Bummerite, he would make decisions that would be best for the children, not the unions. Fire them all. There are plenty of recent college grads looking for work that would probably do a better job.
connor 8 months, 1 week ago
Except in order to teach they have placed so many hoops in the way that a simple Bachelors degree won't do. You would have to go back to school for about another year and a half to get your certification unless you went that route from almost day one of college. They could give out a waiver and then expect the new hires to get the cert while working though I think JC did that a few years back.
JCLifer 8 months, 1 week ago
Sounds like the Teach For America program. Ask Kansas City how that is working out.
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