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The first online-only news site in state history to get media credentials to cover the state capitol and Seattle city hall, PubliCola has been called a “must-read” by the Seattle Post Intelligencer and a hot “New Media Mover and Shaker” by Seattle Magazine—which also cited our own Erica C. Barnett as the city's No. 1 news nerd.

WEA Email Intimates Quid Pro Quo, Says Rep. Eddy

In this morning’s Morning Fizz, we reported that Rep. Deb Eddy (D-48, Redmond, Bellevue) had flagged letters that local councils of the Washington Education Association (the teachers union) recently sent to legislators. 

PubliCola has now obtained one of the letters—this one to Speaker of the House Rep. Frank Chopp (D-43, Wallingford). The letter condemns a pair of education reform bills. It says, in part: 

“Our members have contributed time, effort and dollars to candidates we respect and who share our educational values. We have been active and generous regarding candidates on the state level as well…

I hope you will be able to alleviate our concerns by ending any consideration of any bill containing the onerous provisions of of HB 1410 and SB5444 in any form or fashion.” 

HB 1410 and SB 5444 are education reform bills that do things like allow the state to intervene in failing schools and upgrade graduation requirements—provisions the WEA opposes in lieu of funding, but provisions that reform advocates support. The reformers argue that despite the lack of funding right now, the state must put “a stake in the ground” so specific reforms are queued up when funding becomes available. They also argue that without these specifics, Washington state will lose out on federal dollars. The WEA argues that this is no time to define or mandate reforms, given that schools are reeling from cuts. 

Rep. Eddy, who supports the education reform bills, says, “I hope legislators don’t cave to this quasi threatening letter. I hope we do the right thing and pass an education reform bill.” 

Eddy also pointed out that these WEA letters were similar to the controversial emails the Washington State Labor Council (WSLC) sent out earlier this year about a different bill—a bill that protected workers from captive anti-union meetings—which the WSLC supported. A now-infamous WSLC email threatened that Democrats wouldn’t get “one dime” unless they voted WSLC’s way on the bill. 

“I don’t know how what they’re [the WEA] is saying is substantively different from the [WSLC] letter,” Eddy says. Eddy acknowledges that the WEA and the WSLC has every right to make support contingent on voting records and says this type of lobbying goes on all the time, but says she thinks it’s inappropriate when financial support is made contingent on one vote. 

The Democrats—infamously now—didn’t cave to the WSLC threat earlier this session, and Rep. Eddy hopes they don’t cave to the WEA threat. “What kind of signal do we send?” Eddy asks, “if we cave.” 

Because of the alleged WSCL threat, the big three atop the Democratic Party—Gov. Chris Gregoire, Sen. Majority Leader Sen. Lisa Brown and Chop—said the WSLC emails raised ethical questions, and so, they didn’t vote WSCL’s way. 

Now that Rep. Eddy has outed the WEA letters, will Democratic leadership be consistent and—to make a similar  point—thumb its nose at the WEA’s power play? 

wea

I have calls in to both the WEA and Rep. Chopp’s office to get their statements on the WEA letters.


  • Bill Wilson

    I utterly disagree with the WEA on many points (as a teacher, I am a member). In particular I differ with my Union leaders on these reform bills and how we have managed the situation in Olympia this session.

    However, these letters are standard fair and the various WEA bodies have every right to send them. The Democratic Leadership blundered using the WSLC emails as a “reason” to try and kill the bills.

    I disagree with my Union, but they have every right to leverage their efforts and access to cause a “caving”. This is politics.

    Now any email asking for action from a supporter is brought into question. Hogwash.

  • Bill Wilson

    I utterly disagree with the WEA on many points (as a teacher, I am a member). In particular I differ with my Union leaders on these reform bills and how we have managed the situation in Olympia this session.

    However, these letters are standard fair and the various WEA bodies have every right to send them. The Democratic Leadership blundered using the WSLC emails as a “reason” to try and kill the bills.

    I disagree with my Union, but they have every right to leverage their efforts and access to cause a “caving”. This is politics.

    Now any email asking for action from a supporter is brought into question. Hogwash.

  • http://publicola.net/ Josh Feit

    Bill,

    I agree with you: Teacher’s union had every right to send the letter. Completely standard.

    And so did the WSLC.

    The question I’m interested in is this: Will Democratic leadership (which didn’t support the WSCL before the infamous email anyway), but supports the WEA regardless, treat both instances the same?

  • Bill Wilson

    With all the horse trading going on on all the bills, I doubt we will see much consistency.

    The case is now, which union can the Dems stomach upsetting? Who represents more votes and money?

    I have no figures, but my sense is that the WEA carries more weight. But thier tactis have not helped them.

    It would be great to see the Senate pass the same version of Ed Reform as the House (2261) and see what the Governor does.

    Her ideals or her friends? Which would win?

  • Bill Wilson

    With all the horse trading going on on all the bills, I doubt we will see much consistency.

    The case is now, which union can the Dems stomach upsetting? Who represents more votes and money?

    I have no figures, but my sense is that the WEA carries more weight. But thier tactis have not helped them.

    It would be great to see the Senate pass the same version of Ed Reform as the House (2261) and see what the Governor does.

    Her ideals or her friends? Which would win?

  • Trevor

    @2: No. Because the stunt didn’t work. Referring the WSLC email to the state patrol made the Governor and her Boeing buddies look both dishonest and incompetent.

    I really think something else is going on here.

    The corporate liberals in the Democratic Party (DLC types like Clinton) have been struggling for over 20 years to convince civil society organizations that, in the words of Margaret Thatcher, “there is no alternative” to anti-tax politics and public-private partnerships. This has left progressives fighting each other for a shrinking piece of the economic pie while the finance sector made money hand over fist.

    Now, the pie is gone. The Democratic Party patronage system that kept corporate liberals in control is collapsing under the strain of the economic crisis. With the drying up in corporate giving to non-profits and rising unemployment, combined with political leaders’ suicidal budget cuts and refusal to support tax reform, the Democratic Party has lost its ability to manage conflict within its coalition. It has no action (ie money) to put behind its words. Its corporate liberal leadership is enacting Herbert Hoover’s agenda, not FDR’s.

    Becoming oversensitive to email criticism isn’t going to stop the rising tide of dissatisfaction with Democrats’ lack of vision or political courage. Who cares if we have a Democratic Party supermajority, if it comes at the cost of the end of the social safety net, the privatization of education, flagrant illegal union-busting by employers, and the postponement of environmental regulations while the ice caps continue to melt?

  • Trevor

    @2: No. Because the stunt didn’t work. Referring the WSLC email to the state patrol made the Governor and her Boeing buddies look both dishonest and incompetent.

    I really think something else is going on here.

    The corporate liberals in the Democratic Party (DLC types like Clinton) have been struggling for over 20 years to convince civil society organizations that, in the words of Margaret Thatcher, “there is no alternative” to anti-tax politics and public-private partnerships. This has left progressives fighting each other for a shrinking piece of the economic pie while the finance sector made money hand over fist.

    Now, the pie is gone. The Democratic Party patronage system that kept corporate liberals in control is collapsing under the strain of the economic crisis. With the drying up in corporate giving to non-profits and rising unemployment, combined with political leaders’ suicidal budget cuts and refusal to support tax reform, the Democratic Party has lost its ability to manage conflict within its coalition. It has no action (ie money) to put behind its words. Its corporate liberal leadership is enacting Herbert Hoover’s agenda, not FDR’s.

    Becoming oversensitive to email criticism isn’t going to stop the rising tide of dissatisfaction with Democrats’ lack of vision or political courage. Who cares if we have a Democratic Party supermajority, if it comes at the cost of the end of the social safety net, the privatization of education, flagrant illegal union-busting by employers, and the postponement of environmental regulations while the ice caps continue to melt?

  • seabos84

    I can’t answer with my teacher hat, cuz you all aren’t underage AND I’m not being paid by the community to educate you.

    1. these bills are NOT paid for. they are MORE powerpoint hand waving unpaid for bull-stuff.

    can we PLEASE recognize the same senseless patterns at General Motors and large financial institutions and the military-industrial complex AND the education bureaucracies – there is NO incentive to do a better job for senior management, there is only incentive to $tay employed and to $tay on top.

    that the goals of the bills are laudable makes it even more despicable that the goals are NOT paid for.

    2. this is NOT hardball, this is pathetic-ball.

    when a group of people work their butts off to try to elect people to do the right thing for us bottom 85%, and those electeds chose to operate 17 degrees off of far right because that is all they’re capable of doing, then,

    that group should get NEW electeds, OR

    those sell out electeds SHOULD keep selling that group out!

    If people want to advocate nonsense that is a few degrees off of Discovery Institue baloney, then go work for the Discovery Institute, stop taking a seat from a REAL democrat.

    rmm.

  • http://LOMG!!! seabos84

    I can’t answer with my teacher hat, cuz you all aren’t underage AND I’m not being paid by the community to educate you.

    1. these bills are NOT paid for. they are MORE powerpoint hand waving unpaid for bull-stuff.

    can we PLEASE recognize the same senseless patterns at General Motors and large financial institutions and the military-industrial complex AND the education bureaucracies – there is NO incentive to do a better job for senior management, there is only incentive to $tay employed and to $tay on top.

    that the goals of the bills are laudable makes it even more despicable that the goals are NOT paid for.

    2. this is NOT hardball, this is pathetic-ball.

    when a group of people work their butts off to try to elect people to do the right thing for us bottom 85%, and those electeds chose to operate 17 degrees off of far right because that is all they’re capable of doing, then,

    that group should get NEW electeds, OR

    those sell out electeds SHOULD keep selling that group out!

    If people want to advocate nonsense that is a few degrees off of Discovery Institue baloney, then go work for the Discovery Institute, stop taking a seat from a REAL democrat.

    rmm.

  • Bill Wilson

    Seabos 84,

    I do not even know where to start. You ask for accountability for our administrators and I agree. Yet our Union steadfastly opposes any bill that builds accountability into the system. The whole system, from the legislators on down, needs more accountability. Teachers have to be willing to accept this and do our part. Good for the goose, goose for the gander.

    The current bills have the SAME funding mechanism our Union pushed at the beginning of the session in our own legislation. To support it early, then oppose it late, is disingenuous.

    We have every right to pressure our electeds, but they have the right and responsibility to do what is RIGHT. I am lucky to be nearing retirement. If you love the status quo so much, with our COLAs rarely funded, schools failing, and too many of our students not getting what they need because our brethren are overwhelmed with unfunded mandates, enjoy it because that is what we have argued for. The STATUS QUO.

    Our argument is that there is nothing wrong, no reforms needed, send more money. Bad policy, bad for teachers, bad for kids.

  • Bill Wilson

    Seabos 84,

    I do not even know where to start. You ask for accountability for our administrators and I agree. Yet our Union steadfastly opposes any bill that builds accountability into the system. The whole system, from the legislators on down, needs more accountability. Teachers have to be willing to accept this and do our part. Good for the goose, goose for the gander.

    The current bills have the SAME funding mechanism our Union pushed at the beginning of the session in our own legislation. To support it early, then oppose it late, is disingenuous.

    We have every right to pressure our electeds, but they have the right and responsibility to do what is RIGHT. I am lucky to be nearing retirement. If you love the status quo so much, with our COLAs rarely funded, schools failing, and too many of our students not getting what they need because our brethren are overwhelmed with unfunded mandates, enjoy it because that is what we have argued for. The STATUS QUO.

    Our argument is that there is nothing wrong, no reforms needed, send more money. Bad policy, bad for teachers, bad for kids.

  • Trevor

    I believe that the union’s argument is that cutting funds and demanding reforms at the same time is counter productive. Let’s talk real reform when you’re serious about education (ie willing to pay for it). Otherwise, it’s just another shell game that blames teachers and not politicians for the effects of underfunded schools.

  • Trevor

    I believe that the union’s argument is that cutting funds and demanding reforms at the same time is counter productive. Let’s talk real reform when you’re serious about education (ie willing to pay for it). Otherwise, it’s just another shell game that blames teachers and not politicians for the effects of underfunded schools.

  • Brooke Valentine

    Mr. Wilson,

    I get the feeling that you are a GREAT TEACHER! Thank you for speaking up and speaking out for our kids. And thank you for seeing through to the the truth of things, that is what we need more of in this state.
    Keep up the good work.

  • Brooke Valentine

    Mr. Wilson,

    I get the feeling that you are a GREAT TEACHER! Thank you for speaking up and speaking out for our kids. And thank you for seeing through to the the truth of things, that is what we need more of in this state.
    Keep up the good work.

  • seabos84

    @6 and @8 – I see that you didn’t read, or couldn’t understand

    “these bills are NOT paid for. they are MORE powerpoint hand waving unpaid for bull-stuff.”

    I did NOT defend the status quo, or did I defend our barely competent union.

    Let me read into your comments stuff which you didn’t write, but sure seems logical from your comments -

    How about finding some new flat earth philosophies to yap about, instead of blaming unions? Does either of you realize that your anti-union spouts and thoughts are written by the powerful who want to turn this country into some kind of 3rd world squalor?

    These people claim to care about the kids future and about the future of our society – keep believing them, and keep their corrupt flat earth thoughts alive!

    Has either of you ever heard of this stuff called money? I’d LOVE to see ANY ideas paid for, from the ridiculous right wing nonsense to the ridiculous left wing nonsense, OR

    how about something reasonable in between?

    ciao.

  • http://LOMG!!! seabos84

    @6 and @8 – I see that you didn’t read, or couldn’t understand

    “these bills are NOT paid for. they are MORE powerpoint hand waving unpaid for bull-stuff.”

    I did NOT defend the status quo, or did I defend our barely competent union.

    Let me read into your comments stuff which you didn’t write, but sure seems logical from your comments -

    How about finding some new flat earth philosophies to yap about, instead of blaming unions? Does either of you realize that your anti-union spouts and thoughts are written by the powerful who want to turn this country into some kind of 3rd world squalor?

    These people claim to care about the kids future and about the future of our society – keep believing them, and keep their corrupt flat earth thoughts alive!

    Has either of you ever heard of this stuff called money? I’d LOVE to see ANY ideas paid for, from the ridiculous right wing nonsense to the ridiculous left wing nonsense, OR

    how about something reasonable in between?

    ciao.

  • Brooke Valentine

    Umm not sure where your reading but I never said a thing that was anti-union. I am not and never have been, I like to think that I am pretty middle of the road. I just want the legislature to put the needs of the Students first when it comes to education and to me that means a plan for schools that puts more money in early learning, adds more accountability and provides for 24 credits in high school so that students can get into college if they wish. Do I know how they are going to provide for the things students need? No I do believe that if we had passed a bill like HB2261 4 years ago we wouldn’t be facing such drastic cuts in the education budget.

  • Brooke Valentine

    Umm not sure where your reading but I never said a thing that was anti-union. I am not and never have been, I like to think that I am pretty middle of the road. I just want the legislature to put the needs of the Students first when it comes to education and to me that means a plan for schools that puts more money in early learning, adds more accountability and provides for 24 credits in high school so that students can get into college if they wish. Do I know how they are going to provide for the things students need? No I do believe that if we had passed a bill like HB2261 4 years ago we wouldn’t be facing such drastic cuts in the education budget.

  • http://publicola.net/ Josh Feit

    Bill,

    I agree with you: Teacher's union had every right to send the letter. Completely standard.

    And so did the WSLC.

    The question I'm interested in is this: Will Democratic leadership (which didn't support the WSCL before the infamous email anyway), but supports the WEA regardless, treat both instances the same?