This
is one of those stories that shows how far some people will
go in America to make a buck - even if it means profiting
at the expense of children, or exploiting the legacy of
the civil rights movement.
Stand for Children is an unassuming name for an organization.
Just taken at face value, one would conclude that the Portland,
Oregon-based nonprofit aspires to accomplish what the title
suggests. Their website says
SFC is “an innovative, grassroots child advocacy organization.
Our mission is to use the power of grassroots action to
help all children get the excellent public education and
strong support they need to thrive. Our members believe
we need to stand up for our children now - particularly
for their education from pre-school through high school
- to create a better future for America.”
Now, that all sounds good, until you dig deeper. The cofounder
and CEO of SFC, Jonah Edelman, is the son of Marian Wright
Edelman, the well-respected civil rights activist and head
of the Children’s Defense Fund. Critics charge that Stand
for Children started out on the right side of the issues,
devoting itself to progressive
issues such as class sizes, affordable children’s healthcare
and adequate funding for schools. But then, things changed
when they started taking the money, and lots of it - from
wealthy interests who arguably care nothing about poor children
of color in the inner cities, and care a great deal about
a vision of privatization that extracts profit from the
public schools.
In an infamous YouTube video
that went viral, Edelman discussed his strategy
in Illinois at a July 10 Aspen Institute event. That strategy
was essentially to mislead the teachers unions, do a number
on them, and pay
off the state legislators to pass SB7, an extensive
school reform bill. The original bill would have stripped
teachers of their right to strike, eliminated seniority
as a factor in layoffs, and denied teachers their due process
rights that come with tenure. What this has to do with
the interests of children is anybody’s guess. A weaker
version of the bill that passed still undermined labor rights
by restricting seniority and the right to strike.
Typically, when Edelman goes into a state, he sets up a PAC,
raises a ton of money and hires the best lobbyists money
can buy. He benefits from his mother’s rolodex and the
cache her name and reputation bring to the table. SFC spreads
money around in the community, in an attempt to soften up
the black clergy and community leaders and get them on board
as partners. And they bribe public officials to pass union-busting
legislation.
In Illinois, SFC raised $3
million late last year and hired 11 lobbyists. They
approached Illinois Speaker Michael Madigan - who failed
to garner union support that year for passing pension
reform - and donated $610,000
to nine state campaigns in both major parties.
And Edelman attended a community meeting of black Chicago
clergy with what observers have called a “slick dog and
pony show.” But the pastors didn’t take the bait. According
to Rev.
Robin Hood, executive director of Clergy Committed to
Community, SFC wasn’t the least bit interested in the concerns
of the black community.
“One
of the schools I’m working in has serious problems. Their
organizer wasn’t concerned about that, they were interested
in getting people to see [the film] Waiting
for Superman,” Rev. Hood said of SFC. “Waiting
for Superman did not fly here in Chicago. It wasn’t
a hit like they thought it was going to be. It was about
taking away the rights of unions to organize. In the communities
we live in we need living wage jobs,” he said. “Most of
these parents have been arguing about how we don’t have
books in school. Those are not the things Stand for Children
were talking about. They were talking about taking power
from teachers,” Hood added.
From the start, Rev. Hood found Edelman and his group disrespectful
and arrogant, with dollar signs and union-bashing on their
mind. “I found they were anti-union when we met with Stand
for Children. It was all about money, it was nothing about
children. That’s why they had to build a grassroots component.
They did a switch up while they were working here,” he said.
Although SFC spread around a lot of money in Chicago communities,
Rev. Hood emphasized that not one of the pastors in his
group would take any of it. “How much money do you people
have?” he asked rhetorically of Edelman. “First they said
they are doing political advocacy, and using community organizations
as their base. Six months later they said ‘we got our own
base now.’ Then they gave $3 million to state legislators,”
he noted.
“Instead of advocating they became lobbyists,” Rev. Hood
concluded.
Rev. Hood also shared his thoughts on the recent fallout
from Edelman’s comments at Aspen. “As much money as they
put out, I didn’t think they would self-destruct,” Hood
said. “On a personal level, it was interesting to see him
self-destruct, and I knew they weren’t focused on changing
things for the children. They were union busting and making
money off the backs of our kids.” Moreover, Rev. Hood believed
Edelman’s public disclosure of his machinations with Speaker
Madigan was particularly damaging. “Speaker Mike Madigan
is the most powerful man in the state. The Governor doesn’t
have that power. To say what he [Edelman] did to him [Madigan]
is what the Japanese call hari-kari.”
To put Jonah Edelman and his operations in perspective, just
follow the money. Susan
Barrett quit her volunteer leadership position at SFC
in Portland because wealthy investors are now driving the
organization. “I want to make sure that people pay close
attention to who is on the SFC board, where their money
is coming from, and think critically about whether or not
the agendas they are promoting will bring the results parents
and community members hope for in public education,” Barrett
recently wrote.
SFC’s Illinois PAC amassed the
state’s largest war chest, just days before new caps
on state campaign contributions went into effect. Those
new restrictions limit individual contributions to $10,000,
with $20,000 from corporations. All of the contributions
to SFC were five- and six-figure amounts, including $250,000
from the billionaire Pritzker family, and $500,000 from
Ken Griffin, CEO of the Citadel Group and bankroller of
GOP state candidates. Sam Zell, owner of Tribune Co., contributed
$100,000. Meanwhile, of the $610,000 that Edelman gave
to legislative candidates, his PAC handed over $175,000—a
record for Illinois— to Republican state House candidate
Ryan Higgins, who lost his contest.
Stand for Children’s donor list is quite
impressive, and equally revealing. For example, last year
SFC received a $3.5 million grant from the Gates Foundation,
its largest donor. The Walton Family Foundation - of Walmart
anti-union fame - chipped in $1.4 million. And New Profit
Inc., with ties to a firm running Muammar Gaddafi’s PR campaign,
has donated nearly $1.5 million in recent years.
Meanwhile, the SFC board of directors
consists of venture philanthropists and private equity investors,
including the extremely wealthy and powerful. One would
think that a “grassroots child advocacy organization” would
have at least a token of community representation on its
board, including educators and child advocates of color.
Laurene Powell Jobs, wife of Apple CEO Steve Jobs, is a
board member, as is Emma Bloomberg, daughter of New York
City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Mayor Bloomberg, who is pro-charter school and seems to claim
personal ownership of New York’s public schools, has a history
of placing ill-prepared corporate types in charge of the
nation’s largest - and mostly black and brown - school system.
Bloomberg’s most immediate past schools chancellor, a magazine
executive named Cathleen
Black, had no experience in education whatsoever. During
her brief and painful stint as chancellor, Black offended
many with her jaw-dropping remarks, which included addressing
shortages in classroom space by asking “Could we just have
some birth control for a while? It could really help us
all out a lot.”
Black’s predecessor, Joel
Klein, now Rupert Murdoch’s deputy at News Corp., is
overseeing an investigation into the company’s infamous
phone hacking scandal. Klein is the head of Murdoch’s new
education
technology business, which Murdoch plans to spend $1
billion to build.
But the larger picture here is that corporate education reform
is big business. And the rightwing, plutocratic agenda
- of school privatization, government austerity measures
and deunionization
- clashes with the needs of poor, working class, and disproportionately
black and brown public school students.
“What I can say personally is their true colors came out.
He won’t get a base in my community.” Rev. Hood said defiantly
of Edelman. “We need to educate our kids, not get rich
folks richer. These are the same people that don’t want
you to have a living wage and adequate housing.”
Meanwhile, the education reformers, armed with a pocketful
of billionaire money, rip off communities of color. And
as they buy off legislatures, they come off looking like
the saviors of the black and brown children they just pimped.
“I wish I could be wrong, but I think they’ll be back for
vouchers,” Rev. Hood offered on a cautionary note. “They’ll
be back with a sad sack of legislators to write a bill for
vouchers.”
BlackCommentator.com Executive
Editor, David A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights
advocate based in Philadelphia, is
a graduate of Harvard College and
the University of Pennsylvania
Law School. and a contributor to The Huffington
Post, the Grio, The Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service, In These Times and Philadelphia Independent Media Center. He also blogs at davidalove.com, NewsOne, Daily
Kos, and Open Salon. Click here to contact Mr. Love.
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