In case you missed it, Governor Chris Christie of New
Jersey, erstwhile presidential candidate, declared on CNN Sunday that teachers
unions need a “punch in the face.” Faced with declining numbers in the polls
and with being out bullied by Donald Trump, Christie has decided to come out
swinging – at teachers.
Of course the teachers union has no literal face and the
leaders of both major teachers unions, Randi Weingarten of the American
Federation of Teachers and Lily Eskelson Garcia of the National Education
Association are women. I don’t think even a Republican candidate for president
could get away with punching a woman in the face. Belittling them, yes.
Berating them, yes. Taking away the choice of what they do with their bodies,
yes. But not striking a woman, especially with a Hillary running on the
Democratic side.
So, taking all this into consideration, I would like to step
up and offer Christie my face to punch.
I am well qualified for the job. I have been a public school
teacher and administrator for 45 years. I have been the president and the chief
negotiator of my local teachers union. I have been sharply critical of Christie’s
education policies on my blog. I deserve that punch in the face. I have earned
it. Not only that, I live just a stone’s throw from the statehouse in Trenton, so
I could meet the Governor there at any time, if he ever happens to get back to
New Jersey.
I am sure it would give Christie a boost in the polls and
solidify his standing as a violent, bullying looney worthy of Republican voter
support. It might even be enough to get him on the stage at one of the primary
debates where he could punch Wolf Blitzer in the face and garner even more
support.
Better yet, forget the debate and let Trump and Christie
duke it out in a steel cage wrestling match.
No doubt Christie’s spin doctors will be out today declaring
that Christie has no animus toward teachers, just teachers unions. Christie,
Scott Walker, Jeb Bush, Andrew Cuomo and others seem to forget that a union is
made up of teachers and that while individual teachers may not agree with every
action of their unions, those unions represent the desires and aspirations of
millions of hard working teachers across the country – imperfectly perhaps, but
emphatically for the better of teachers and children and public education
overall.
When teacher unions fight for better working conditions for
teachers, they are also working for better learning conditions for children.
When unions fight for job protections for teachers, they are also working to
ensure that children have access to the best knowledge and the best
instructional strategies available unfettered by flavor-of-the-day ideology.
When teacher unions fight for reasonable pay, they are fighting to attract high
quality candidates to the profession.
What has Christie’s teacher bashing, vitriol against unions,
stripping of job protections, attacks on pensions done for the children of New
Jersey? How have his repeated attacks on
teacher unions improved education for the children of New Jersey? How has his
hiring of political hacks to bring unpopular education policies to the
impoverished cities of New Jersey helped school children?
The answer is, of course, not at all. The children of New
Jersey are worse off educationally than they were when Christie took office.
And yet, those teachers he loves to hate keep soldiering on, doing their best
in the face of the intolerable and deteriorating conditions to provide a good education for New Jersey's children.
If Christie wants to punch the teachers unions in the
face, he needs to realize that he is punching every teacher in the face. He is punching each
and every dedicated teacher who has been working to improve the lives of
children for decades before Christie discovered that bashing teachers is a
winning campaign strategy.
So, Governor Christie, here is my face. Take your best shot.
I won’t hit back. I will just pick myself up, dust myself off and go back to
being the best teacher I can be. To paraphrase Nathan Hale, "I regret that I have only one face to give for my profession."
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