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BOOK REVIEW: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
By Nathan Glazer
An honest look at union hero Albert Shanker
Tough Liberal: Albert Shanker and the Battles
over Schools, Unions, Race, and Democracy
By Richard D. Kahlenberg
Columbia University Press, 2007, $29.95; 552
pages.
As reviewed by Nathan Glazer
“Madman or Visionary?” reads the
publicity material that accompanies this biography of Albert
Shanker. The dust jacket describes the paradigmatic moment in Woody
Allen’s 1973 movie, Sleeper, in which a future Rip Van Winkle
awakens to learn that civilization was destroyed when “a man
by the name of Albert Shanker got hold of a nuclear warhead.”
Five years earlier, Shanker, leader of the New York City teachers
union, shook the city with a series of strikes to defend the rights
of teachers who had been dismissed from Brooklyn schools. The
schools were part of an experiment in “community
control,” an approach to school reform then favored by
liberals and black activists. The community in this case was black,
and those governing the schools under the experimental program
demanded black teachers and black principals. There were few in the
New York City public schools at the time. Many teachers and
principals were Jews, and members of that religious group, as
schoolteachers, social workers, shopkeepers, and small landlords,
were seen by black militants as the exploiters of African
Americans. These Jewish occupational specialties were hardly at the
heights of the economy, or the power structure, but from the
perspective of the black ghetto, they were the power structure.
Among whites with whom poor blacks came into contact, the book
notes one observer saying, only the policeman was not Jewish.
Community control over city schools pitted blacks
against Jews. When, during one of these disruptive strikes, an
anti-Semitic leaflet appeared, Shanker did not hesitate to reproduce it
in the hundreds of thousands to paint his black opponents as
Jew-haters. He was denounced for exacerbating group tensions in a
difficult time.
In the early 1960s, Shanker had played a
leading role in organizing 50,000 of New York City’s public
school teachers. He was one of a group of tough union leaders who
in defiance of state law led strikes by public employees, disrupted
the lives of millions, and went to jail as a result. Mike Quill,
the leader of the transit workers union, shut down the subways, to
the outrage of millions of commuters, and went to jail as a result.
Who remembers Quill? But everyone remembers Al Shanker, who once
said in response to a question about the rights of schoolchildren, “they don’t pay the dues in this
union.”
Despite the similarities and the similar headaches
they gave Mayor John Lindsay, Shanker was very different from Mike
Quill. He was drawn from a radically different milieu, the Jewish
working class, and those origins foreshadowed his transformation.
Alongside his defense of teachers’ rights, there was always a
larger vision, which made it possible for him to escape from the
execration that liberals heaped on him in the 1960s.
Shanker graduated from fierce union leader to
education statesman and leader in the world of education reform.
Indeed, he does warrant a biography; no trade-union leader of the
last 40 years, in the age after John L. Lewis, Sidney Hillman,
Walter Reuther, David Dubinsky, and other shapers of American
unionism, is so worthy of one.
Shanker came from a world that no longer
exists, one in which bright young people with political interests
were divided between Socialists and Communists. The conflicts
between the two—in school arguments, in college
organizations, in trade unions, in local politics—shaped a
generation that was defined by two dominant traits, an unbending
anti-Communism and a defense of unions and worker’s rights.
One can only understand Shanker, and the paradoxes he presents to
contemporary liberalism, from the point of view of those origins.
Shanker attended New York’s Stuyvesant
High School, an examination school for the gifted, where he
excelled in debate, and the University
of Illinois, where he joined the Young
People’s Socialist League and showed his organizational talents
by drawing unexpectedly large audiences for Norman Thomas, the
perennial Socialist candidate for president. His heroes were John Dewey
and Sidney Hook, and he went on to study for a Ph.D. in philosophy at
Columbia. But he ran out of “money and patience,” and at
the age of 24 took a job as a teacher in a “tough East Harlem
elementary school.” At the time, 1952, we are told, there were
106 teachers’ organizations in the New York City school system.
The Teachers Guild, which Shanker joined, was part of the American
Federation of Teachers (AFT). John Dewey held card #1 in the New York
City local. The Communists were at the time powerful in New York
City’s white-collar unions of teachers, social workers, and the
like. The Teachers Guild and the AFT were fiercely anti-Communist,
demanded collective bargaining (then controversial for teachers), and
held a larger progressive social vision than most unions. For example,
the AFT refused to charter segregated locals and filed an amicus brief
in support of desegregation in Brown v.
Board of Education.
Shanker rose rapidly in the union ranks,
becoming president in 1964. Liberals (and Socialists, as Shanker
was) were then united around the issues of civil rights,
workers’ rights, and anti-Communism. In the wake of the
community control struggle, this unity dissolved. Affirmative
action split the liberals: Shanker was for affirmative action, but
always against quotas. At the time, he even had important black
allies, such as civil rights activist Bayard Rustin. Complicating
the anti-Communist cause was the war in Vietnam. Shanker supported
the war; to him it was a means to prevent the expansion of
Communist totalitarianism, but to many other liberals and
Socialists it was a doubtful effort at American hegemonism. Even
workers’ rights divided liberals: with the rise of identity
politics, and the shift of blue-collar voters to Nixon in protest
of liberals’ anti-Vietnam war and pro–affirmative
action stance, trade union issues lost their pristine value to many
liberals. Shanker thought of himself as a liberal, indeed a
Socialist; but for many liberals he seemed a racist conservative,
as he maintained his fierce anti-Communist stance, supported
American military power in defense of democracy, and insisted on
the primacy of the trade-union movement in making a better society.
One detects in this complex of attitudes the
seeds of present-day “neoconservatism,”
which evolved among Socialist anti-Communists, and in time became
the intellectual footing for a militant American foreign policy.
Shanker was deeply committed to this orientation and defended
strongly the AFL-CIO’s international work in support of free
trade unions and against Communism. But that was only one of the
roles he played. More significantly, he began to look at the
problems of education from a larger perspective than that of
organized teachers’ rights. He was an early proponent of
charter schools, but turned against them as he saw some launched by
black militants or religious conservatives. He wanted to implement
a professional model for school teachers and supported peer review
and tests for veteran teachers, which were not popular with the
rank and file. Influenced by E. D. Hirsch, he supported a national
curriculum and serious and high-stakes national tests and was a
major figure in the painful evolution of this effort. In these
enterprises, he became close to leading businessmen, governors, and
presidents. For more than two decades as the leader of the smaller
but more energetic and enlightened of the two major national
teacher organizations, he became perhaps the single most important
figure in the difficult effort to improve American schools.
Richard Kahlenberg is well known for his
advocacy of affirmative action on the basis of economic criteria
rather than racial identity, which was also Shanker’s strong
preference. Kahlenberg has written a richly detailed and
well-researched account of Shanker’s development, the
positions he adopted, the influential roles he played. He finds
little to criticize in Shanker’s career, and it was indeed
for the most part an admirable one. It has no equal in American
teacher unionism, or in the world of organized labor generally, and
his story is an important contribution to the history of American
education reform.
Nathan Glazer is professor emeritus of
education and sociology at Harvard University.
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