Randi Weingarten Has 'Hope in the Darkness.' And Also Some Fear.
Our nation’s teachers unions have had a whiplash of a year, from the statewide teachers’ strikes that have swept the country to last week’s Supreme Court ruling in the Janus v. AFSCME case that could severely hurt their membership. America’s most powerful teachers’ union leader says there is much, much more to come.
For the past decade, Randi Weingarten has led the 1.7 million-member American Federation of Teachers. She has been a prominent voice in battles over public education, organized labor, and national politics. In the dark aftermath of last week’s Janus ruling, which will almost certainly drain members and money from public unions nationwide, she spoke to us about how working class interests can possibly try to survive and thrive in the age of Trump.
Splinter: Is it possible that the Janus ruling was even worse than you thought it would be?
Randi Weingarten: No, I expected it. I helped write the amicus brief for both Friedrichs [a nearly identical case on which the court deadlocked] and for Janus, and I had sat through the Janus hearing, which I found to be absolutely worse than the Friedrichs hearing. Gorsuch said nothing, but Alito and Kennedy clearly had their minds made up. Alito has had his mind made up for six years—how to weaponize the First Amendment against working people. And if you think about it, if you go back and read the Citizens United case, which uses the First Amendment to give corporations unfettered right to participate in politics, and now at the same time they’ve used the First Amendment to limit the rights of workers through their unions to have any power. It is the most ideological court that we’ve seen in modern history, and ideological about corporate power and about unfettered markets.
Splinter: What do you think Anthony Kennedy’s retirement means for labor law?
Weingarten: I know Kennedy gets a good rap because of what he did on marriage and what he did on sustaining Roe v. Wade. As a lesbian who just got married this March, I appreciate that. But on economic issues, Kennedy was a doctrinaire right wing, never see a labor or union or worker right kind of guy. On the economic issues, Kennedy yoked as right as the others in that majority, and it has actually hurt workers’ rights. If there’s any silver lining here, it’s that it’s clear that the union movement at its best is a movement for social and economic change. It is a movement to give workers and their families and their communities power to have a better life. To move into the middle class. And this court, including Kennedy, tried to thwart that at every step.
I’m very concerned that we will not have a democracy two years from now.
Splinter: In the post-Janus world, are public unions going to become more radical, more militant, out of necessity?
Weingarten: I think in the post-Janus world, public unions will become more activist and more political. The irony here is that state after state supported the paradigm that had been established by [Abood v. Detroit Board of Education, the case that was overturned by Janus] and by state laws because what it did was solve problems at a bargaining table rather than in the streets. And it did create labor peace. And I found it offensive that a guy like Alito, who basically ideologically didn’t want workers to have power and unions to be the vehicle for that, scoffed at the issue of labor peace. If you look at the places in this country that have robust collective bargaining, you’ve seen very few strikes and work stoppages in the public sector, because they solved those problems at the bargaining table. Now, those problems will be solved different ways. Mark my words: don’t count us out. We have prepared for this case since February of 2015, and it has been transformative for our union. Because more than any other issue, situation, case, threat, this has moved locals all throughout America to be much more member-driven in deed, not just in word.
Splinter: What does that mean, exactly?