Chicago teachers stage big rally amid hopes of strike’s end

Updated 16 September 2012
Follow

Chicago teachers stage big rally amid hopes of strike’s end

CHICAGO: Thousands of striking Chicago teachers marched again yesterday to keep the pressure on Mayor Rahm Emanuel.
Emanuel angered the Chicago teachers by trying to ram through proposals to radically reform teacher performance evaluations and weaken job protection for teachers whose schools are
closed or perform poorly academically.
Led by a tough-talking former high school chemistry teacher, Karen Lewis, the union staged its first strike in 25 years, leaving 350,000 Chicago students with no school this week.
Emanuel retreated from some of his proposed reforms, although details of what he has agreed with the union have not yet been released. Negotiators for the mayor and the union announced on Friday a tentative agreement that could lead to an end to the strike.
But the union is wary of Emanuel, who has been called a “bully” and a “liar” by union leader Lewis.
If all goes well in the negotiations between Emanuel’s Chicago School Board and the union this weekend, Lewis said that today she will ask some 800 union activists to suspend the strike and teachers will return to classrooms on Monday morning.
“They (union members) are very suspicious. You have to understand that we have been burnt by the (school) board in the past,” Lewis said at a press conference on Friday.
The strike is the biggest US labor dispute in a year and has galvanized the national labor movement. It also has shone a light on a fierce US debate over how to reform struggling urban schools across the country.
Both sides agree that Chicago public schools are not doing well. Students perform poorly on standardized tests of math and reading and the high school graduation rate is 60 percent compared with 75 percent nationally and more than 90 percent in some affluent Chicago suburban high schools.
The union has railed against Chicago’s unelected school board, which is stacked with representatives of business such as Penny Pritzker, an executive of Chicago’s billionaire Pritzker conglomerate and a major fundraiser for US President Barack Obama. They say the board is trying to privatize and corporatize the public school system.
They have criticized Chicago’s effort to open more publicly funded non-union charter schools, sometimes run by philanthropists, while some poor-performing traditional community public schools are being closed.
The confrontation has exposed a rift within the Democratic party with many prominent mayors and politicians supporting Emanuel, a former White House chief of staff for Obama. But other Democrats have sided with the unions, which are major financial supporters of the party and are needed to help Obama in his reelection effort.


Junta leader Gen. Mamdi Doumbouya is declared winner of Guinea’s election, provisional results show

Updated 5 sec ago
Follow

Junta leader Gen. Mamdi Doumbouya is declared winner of Guinea’s election, provisional results show

CONAKRY, Guinea: Junta leader Gen. Mamdi Doumbouya was declared the winner of Guinea’s election held over the weekend, according to provisional results released late on Tuesday.
Doumbouya won 86.72 percent of the votes counted so far, according to the General Directorate of Elections. The election on Sunday was the country’s first election since a 2021 coup, as analysts said a weakened opposition would result in Doumbouya’s win.
The vote was the culmination of a transition process that began four years ago after Doumbouya ousted President Alpha Condé. The junta leader has proceeded to clamp down on the main opposition and dissent, critics say, leaving him with no major opposition among the eight other candidates in the race.