Life is full of challenges, and Randi Weingarten faced many. Discover key struggles and how they were overcome.
Randi Weingarten is a prominent American labor leader, attorney, and educator. She is the current president of the American Federation of Teachers (AFT) since 2008, a major labor union affiliated with the AFL-CIO. Before leading the AFT, Weingarten served as president of New York City’s United Federation of Teachers (UFT). Her career includes roles as the UFT’s chief negotiator and counsel, and as a social studies teacher at Clara Barton High School. She is recognized as the first openly gay person to head a national American labor union.
In spring 1998 in the City Journal, Sol Stern dismissed Weingarten's claim to support school reform as "pure union propaganda."
In 1999, Sol Stern contrasted "Milwaukee's healthy approach to school choice" with what he termed Weingarten's promise to "fight with every resource at [her] disposal any attempt by the mayor to create a voucher system" in New York.
In early September 2000, Randi Weingarten began negotiating her first contract as UFT president with the Giuliani administration.
On November 15, 2000, the UFT contract expired without a new agreement being reached.
By March 2001, negotiations between Randi Weingarten and the Giuliani administration had deadlocked, and a state mediator was called in.
In 2002, Randi Weingarten and the UFT endorsed Republican George Pataki for re-election as Governor of New York.
On May 31, 2003, the UFT's contract expired, leading to contentious negotiations.
In 2003, Randi Weingarten and the UFT advocated for amending the New York City Charter to mandate smaller class sizes; however, the charter revision became embroiled in lawsuits and was ultimately abandoned, although Weingarten persisted in advocating for smaller class sizes.
In January 2004, New York City School Chancellor Joel Klein proposed a merit-pay deal.
In late March 2004, Randi Weingarten rejected proposals from Mayor Bloomberg and Chancellor Klein and asked for state mediation.
On June 1, 2005, nearly 20,000 teachers attended a rally at Madison Square Garden where Randi Weingarten denounced Bloomberg and Klein, asked for a strike vote, and requested state arbitration.
On June 16, 2005, Nicole Gelinas wrote in the conservative City Journal that "Weingarten declared that merit-pay plans 'pit teachers against each other instead of encouraging a collaborative school culture.' What Weingarten and the union do not see ... is that competition is healthy."
On November 3, 2005, the UFT contract was ratified with 63 percent of UFT members in favor.
In November 2006, Randi Weingarten opposed proposals to allow parents to use tax credits to help pay to send their children to private school, comparing it to reimbursing people who drink bottled water instead of tap water.
On October 19, 2007, Andrew Wolf, in an op-ed in the New York Sun entitled "Socialism for Schools," argued that despite some observers' perception that "Mayor Bloomberg and Chancellor Klein [had] won a victory over the teachers' union by gaining approval of a merit pay scheme," the real winner was Weingarten, who had gained power for the UFT.
In 2007, Randi Weingarten negotiated a controversial contract which paid teachers bonuses if their students' test scores rose.
In 2008, Randi Weingarten and District of Columbia public schools chancellor Michelle Rhee reached an agreement that allowed the termination of Washington Teachers' Union members evaluated as ineffective, after a one-year period.
On June 25, 2009, Sol Stern argued that an agreement reached between Randi Weingarten and the Bloomberg administration on teacher pensions would "probably wind up harming Gotham's students."
On July 7, 2009, The Wall Street Journal reacted to Weingarten's statement that New York City is "the best laboratory in the world for trying new things" by asserting this could be true "if it weren't for Ms. Weingarten's union," and wrote that the UFT under her direction had done everything possible "to block significant reforms to New York's public schools."
On September 30, 2009, in the City Journal, Sol Stern asserted that "the UFT and the Bloomberg administration [had] increasingly developed a cartel-like working relationship, with New York taxpayers paying the price."
In a 2009 essay by Steven Brill in The New Yorker, New York City Schools Chancellor Joel Klein was quoted as calling the teacher tenure policies defended by the UFT "ridiculous"—with Klein asserting that "the three principles that govern our system are lockstep compensation, seniority, and tenure. All three are not right for our children."
In 2010, Randi Weingarten and the AFT were accused of interfering in the Washington Teachers Union (WTU) local elections. Weingarten imposed a deadline for the election and ultimately took over the election, which was met with objections.
In a February 2011 interview, Randi Weingarten acknowledged that "tenure needs to be reformed," noting that the AFT had adopted recommendations for tenure reform.
In 2011, Randi Weingarten offered a plan that would rely on a teacher-evaluation system with multiple parts—including assessment of student improvement on tests—to give tenured teachers rated unsatisfactory one year to improve, and allow the firing of teachers who fail to meet that deadline within the next 100 days.
In 2011, a speech given by Randi Weingarten was found to have been plagiarized from a NY1 series about a flawed Board of Education computer system, leading to accusations of plagiarism.
In 2012, Randi Weingarten criticized what she calls "merit pay schemes".
In March 2013, Randi Weingarten was among 19 people arrested while protesting a Philadelphia School Reform Commission meeting on school closures.
In April 2013, the Wall Street Journal editorial board painted Randi Weingarten as "trying to strong-arm pension trustees not to invest in hedge funds or private-equity funds that support education reform." Weingarten tried to sandbag hedge fund investor Dan Loeb at a conference sponsored by the Council of Institutional Investors, describing her as troubled by the fact "that Mr. Loeb puts his own money behind school reform and charter schools."
In 2013, an AFT study charged some hedge-fund managers with a conflict of interest, stating that while managing teachers' defined benefit pensions, some fund managers had "support[ed] groups like the Manhattan Institute, which has recommended replacing pensions with 401(k)-type plans, and Students First, whose national branch advocates eliminating defined-benefit plans."
In 2014, Randi Weingarten attacked those who advocate converting defined benefit pensions to 401(k) plans, arguing that retirees are likely to receive less under the new plans than they need to get by.
In 2014, Randi Weingarten resisted attempts to curtail tenure protections for public-school teachers, arguing that removing tenure would hurt classroom instruction quality. She stated that states with the highest academic performance have the strongest due process protections for teachers and that at-risk kids need experienced teachers who need support and the ability to voice concerns.
In 2015, the AFT prepared a report that concluded that hedge fund investments "exacted a high cost, had laggard returns and generally moved in tandem with the overall stock market."
In 2015, the AFT, during Randi Weingarten's presidency, released a report co-authored with In the Public Interest, criticizing the Walton Foundation's pursuit of a "market-based model" for education.
In November 2022, Mike Pompeo referred to Randi Weingarten as the "most dangerous person in the world," alleging that American schools are failing to educate children in basic skills and instead teach them inappropriate content.
In a 2023 interview, Randi Weingarten made controversial statements regarding advocates for "school choice" and "parental rights," drawing criticism and accusations of racism and religious bias.
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