Last spring, four teachers in Calcasieu Parish in Louisiana decided “enough is enough” when Governor Bobby Jindal rushed through his legislation targeting teachers and attacking public education. They decided they would launch a campaign to recall Jindal and House Speaker Chuck Kleckley. None had ever been politically active before.
You have to understand that Bobby Jindal–at this moment in time–owns Louisiana politics, lock, stock, and barrel. The teachers’ campaign was akin to a petition drive against the emperor of Rome.
Their campaign didn’t get very far. They didn’t have an organization or money, and they didn’t collect enough signatures to get on the ballot.
“The petitions required signatures from at least one-third of the registered voters in an election district. In the case of Jindal, it would have been about 965,000 signatures statewide. For Kleckley, it was roughly 9,000 signatures.
In each case the required reports were filed 56 days late. When they were filed, the reports reflected little financial activity.
The Jindal recall campaign showed $525 in receipts and no disbursement.
The Kleckley effort showed $1,600 in receipts and no disbursements.”
The Republican party spent $100,000 to quash the recall effort, and it filed a complaint with the state Ethics Board because the teachers did not file their campaign disclosure documents in the required 45 day period; they were 11 days late.
The two teachers who led the effort, such as it was, were fined $1,000 each.
I had planned to ask readers of this blog to raise the money to pay their fines, but an anonymous donor in Louisiana has already stepped up and done it.
The teachers were acting on their own, as citizens in a democracy. I would have gladly shown my support for them.
This is the same Ethics Board that ruled a few weeks ago that it was no conflict of interest for a member of the State Board of Education to award a contract to a business that had given him or her a campaign contribution.
So when do these teachers start the recall effort again? Getting the Republican Party to spend $100,000. is a win in itself and well worth $2,125!
I was thinking the same thing!
Keep shining light on the battles of the “Davids” of the world.
These teachers are heroes, in the truest sense.
”
“Success is not measured by what a person accomplishes
but by the opposition encountered and the courage that is
maintained in the struggle against overwhelming odds…”
– Orisen Swett Marden
What a wonderful quote!
Thank you, Diane. Marden was an American author who endured incredible hardship throughout his life.
This quote uplifts me as I struggle with the educational “reforms” in my local school system. My colleagues and I have “lost” many of these struggles but we never consider our efforts to be failures.
I am so encouraged by these four incredible teachers. Impressive!
Wow, that is a quote for the ages. I have a church friend who came in second for a Metro Council position in Baton Rouge. She was the first known transgendered person to run for office in Louisiana and does not know of any others in the country. She was proud of placing second. The ladies of Calcasieu need to be proud too because they tried and stood up to a Republican machine that gave us a governor who is little less than a dictator, Bobby Jindal. They are brave souls. And then the folks in Tangipahoa Parish and some others (yall just have to get used to pronouncing Louisiana words) stood up to the dictator and got part of the voucher law declared unconstitutional—the part that gave taxpayer money to private schools. That was amazing. The teachers here are not going to die under the jackboots of oppression. They have more fight in them than I ever thought possible.
Diane — inquiring minds in New York are also concerned about ETHICS. Will Pearson Publishing be a major contributor in a Presidential campaign for the Governor in 2016?? Who in the State Education Department holds stock in Pearson??
Inquiring minds want to know??
Any investigative journalists out there??
Any pro bono lawyers put there??
Marge
Courageous is the perfect word to describe them! I would gladly donate money for a cause like this ! We need to spread this kind of teacher activism around the country.
Thank you for telling what we were up against here in Louisiana, and what kind of obstacles we faced. I agree with the idea that our getting the Republicans to spend money like that against a grassroots, politically naive, and near penniless movement is a success of sorts. Someone else could indeed file a new petition. In the meantime, Bobby is getting national attention for smearing Mitt Romney immediately after MR’s loss. Bobby’s true colors shine brightly if people will look closely enough. Diane, I absolutely love your likening our effort to going up against the emperor of Rome! That was too perfect! He thinks himself an emperor, that’s for sure!
In other words, in the Jindal-esque political world, as, sadly, in too much of our political world, you do get what you pay (the most) for.
It’s that pesky Golden Rule: “Whoever Hath the Gold, Maketh the Rules.”
You see, the problem may not be how far some of our kids lag behind the rest of the world in education, the problem may just be how far behind are some of our so-called leaders.
Napoleon Jindal-parte. He did deserve to be taken down, and the bar in Louisiana law is very high. It would have taken a massive organizational effort and an actual army of foot-soldiers going TO all the voters in the state, as happened in Wisconsin. Unfortunately as heroic as these teachers were in beginning their effort, they did not have the skills to mount such an effort, nor the wisdom to let others take it and run with it.
It could have been done….
Maybe if every reader of this blog could give them $5 they would have enough to mount a bigger campaign. It should have been easier to get rid of Chuck Kleckley so Jindal could have been undermined. A bully cannot do his thing without his posse so they need to get the posse.
Shame shame shame. Of course, Jingles will not feel shame. He feels nothing but what he can get out of a situation. Recall him, please. Those teachers deserve medals.