Politico.com reports on some of the finances of Michelle Rhee’s StudentsFirst and StudentsFirst Institute, based on the 990 tax form that her group is required to file. During the fiscal year from August 2012 to July 2013, her organizations raised $28.6 million, down slightly from the previous year. She does not disclose the names of her donors (we can all guess: the Koch brothers? Rupert Murdoch? Michael Bloomberg? Eli Broad? Members of the Walton family? Art Pope? Hedge fund managers? Who else disdains public education?).
She spent $2 million for the consulting services of SKDKnickerbocker, which is run by Anita Dunn, who worked closely with President Obama in his first term. She also paid $1.7 million to Change.org, which hosted many of her petitions (“do you want great teachers, sign here”). The article says Change.org cut ties with that lucrative client because of protests by organized labor but that is an overstatement. Many supporters of public education and teachers objected to Change.org presenting itself as “progressive” while promoting a group tat funds rightwing candidates and attacks umbilical education. I am embarrassed to say that I was tricked into signing one of those petitions. When I blogged about it, I got an email from a real person at Change.org informing me that I was a member of StudentsFirst after signing that misleading petition.
She gave hundreds of thousands of dollars to conservative supporters of charters and vouchers.
Her salary is nearly $350,000 a year, not including speaking fees (last reported to be $50,000 per speech but negotiable). A good gig. Sure beats being a teacher.
In addition, Rhee “spent heavily on political activism in the year covered by the tax forms. StudentsFirst gave $500,000 to a business-backed committee in Michigan that successfully worked to defeat a union effort to enshrine collective bargaining rights in the state constitution. It also spent $250,000 to support a charter-school campaign in Georgia. StudentsFirst gives to candidates and committees from both parties but many of its biggest political donations went to Republican caucuses and conservative alliances in states including Florida, Maine, Michigan and Pennsylvania.”
When she started StudentsFirst, Rhee said she would raise $1 billion for her agenda to destroy teachers unions, de-professionalize teaching, and turn public education over to private entities. So far, she has raised $62 million. Guess the rightwing billionaires are not as generous as she anticipated. Or maybe the lingering questions about the D.C. Cheating scandal tarnished her image, even among the true believers.

“Intentional” is the kindest way to describe it. “Calculated” is more truthful. The language of the public school/tenure attack includes insinuations of pedophiles and “bad” teachers lurking in classrooms protected by insurmountable union nepotism and red tape. “The most important IN SCHOOL factor…” is repeated often, with such stress placed on “in school” that this truth becomes clear:
The market-worship policies hamstringing the majority of our population is not only the reason these edu-vampires can find plenty of blood to suck, it is also too great an opponent to take on. Public schools and the educators in them are easy pickin’s comparatively.
As bad as Rhee is, as much as everyone can see the theater she participates in: she does not own the theater. Same with Campbell Brown. They are financed. They are fed the lines to say, told where to go. They are just dancers, not choreographers.
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Theatre is a good way to describe it and recognizing that is the only way to survive it.
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As long as Michelle Rhee and Campbell Brown participate in, and profit from the efforts to destroy public education, they are both fair game. They may not be choreographers, but they are very enthusiastic dancers.
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So the billionaires are the pimps and they are the ______.
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Lap dancers, specifically, for the 1%…
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The problem is Capitalism.
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Your sentence is incomplete. It should add “without democracy”, or “with control and manipulation like sneaky, betrayal and idiot leaders in communism”.
What do you really understand about communism in order to have a nickname as communist teacher? Please tell me your own experience of living under communist country. Please travel to Russia, China, Viet Nam (especially southern part of VN), Eastern Germany, and North Korea in order to see and hear with your own widen opened eyes from educators (at 60 + years old, or near death monkey wrench who has no fear of death) in those communist countries.
How old are you exactly, communist teacher, may I ask? Probably, you have degree without experience in both world war I and II historical knowledge. Back2basic (Yes, in Capitalism, we, citizens can participate in discussion in order to find our solution on the website like this. Most importantly, we have no fear for retaliation, or for our safety, or being forced to go concentrated camp…)
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I would hope (and assume) that Communist Teacher does not support the totalitarian regimes you mentioned. Communism has a number of variants, so we would need clarification from the OP in order to obtain an accurate understanding of his/her ideology.
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Rhee is a shill and shield for the privatizers, be they republican or democrat, she cares not. Super paycheck she’s getting for her non-profit – it rivals Wendy Kopp’s handsome salary. These two are twins, like 2 sides of the same coin, in it for themselves, in the name of saving the children. I am reviled by each of them. ALL THAT MONEY could have been so better spent. The monies that Walmart donates to dismantle the middle class and create future clerks could have been given to its employees, who could then afford health care and pull themselves out of working poverty. Shameful.
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“Guess the rightwing billionaires are not as generous as she anticipated.”
Or maybe they’re waiting to see what results she produces before committing more. I don’t believe she’s on the right track to produce the results she’d promise.
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When StudentsFirst goes into working class communitiez in Michigan, do they mention they’re backers of the campaign to destroy private sector unions in that state?
I think ed reformers have to explain how they can be on the side of “students” while working as hard as they can to drive down the incomes of families.
We need a crawl running under celebrity lobbyists when they appear on tv as “experts”. We should be informed who is paying them.
Why did Arne Duncan campaign for Michelle Rhee in DC?
She’s an anti-labor activist. Why is the Obama Administration promoting her?
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Is there anyone in the Obama Administration who values public schools?
If it was going to be a 100% charter promotion operation, I think President Obama had a duty to reveal that to public school parents and supporters who voted for him.
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Our Secretary of Transportation, Anthony Foxx, is a good guy. Maybe he supports public education.
I think they are just so far removed from masses of children and that even since its beginning the DOE has been slightly uninterested in what teachers think. Not defending it–I just think they, well haven’t a clue what to do, really.
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It’s the cold-hearted disdain that Michele Rhee shows for so many that is her defining characteristic, in my opinion, and it could be perceived as sociopathic. Her infamous bee-eating incident for instance. The teachers I admire would have seen that as an opportunity to teach about the catastrophic bee die-offs, the importance of pollinators, etc.- a way to impart useful knowledge, the opportunities abound with that topic – assuming the dreaded testing schedule allowed for it. Michele Rhee saw it as an opportunity to scare her students with an example of how cruel she could be, admiring their fear of her acting like a spider eating a fly.
What perplexes and saddens me is how our society is perversely incentivising these political predators. Our first mistake was giving her any credibility at all.
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Agree.
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I still can’t fathom from where her credibility is derived. She was a self-contained classroom teacher who put tape on children’s mouths and had them bleeding. She ‘team taught’ for two years, because it was universally accepted that she could not handle a classroom by herself. Which regardless of how you color it, is a definite demotion.
After her short and uneventful stint in a classroom, she’s firing principals and teachers? I mean, can you imagine how the teachers in the D.C. schools responded to that?
To recap, she was a failure as an individual teacher, with dubious ‘improvement’ with her class as a team teacher.
She had a suspect tenure as a chancellor with cheating scandals unresolved.
And now, she’s an expert?
Seriously, can someone explain this set of circumstances to me, so that it makes sense?
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Keith Gray: I still can’t fathom from where her credibility is derived.
She somehow impressed Joel Klein enough for him to recommend her to D.C. Mayor, Adrian Fenty. Superficially, she can talk a good story and make a compelling case. Problem is that in digging deeper to her line of thinking, it falls apart.
I think the problem lies in how reformers relate to poverty. I’m skeptical that Rhee really understands the environment of poverty. I also think that’s the case with Bill Gates, David Coleman, Wall Street investors, etc. It’s a narrative disconnect of privileged people patronizing poor people, telling them what’s wrong with their lives, and mostly rationalizing their poverty as a personal flaw, and the result of poor decisions.
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While we are on the topic of privatization and charters, I thought it interesting that in all the joyous reporting of the last minute wheeling and dealing which resulted in the Pennsylvania legislature approving a $2 per pack cigarette tax to help close some, but not all, of the Phila. school district deficit, there has been little mention of the fact that an amendment was approved to the bill which will now give any charter applicant whose application is rejected by the school district a right to appeal the denial to a state board of review. So charterization should continue apace in Philadelphia as so-called conservatives continue to take local control away from school districts and boards.
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Why hasn’t this woman been prosecuted based on the testing scandal? She belongs in prison.
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Rhee, Kopp, Duncan, Canada, Comm. White of NY, Kevin Huffman of TN, Cuomo, Christie, and their like, are “political assets” financed by the billionaire boys’ club. They are very well-paid and earn their keep by being agents for DFER or Broad or Walton or Gates. Some stumble or over-reach, like Christie. Best assets for Wall ST looting of the public sector–Duncan of course and the NY Four Geoff Canada, Eva Moskowitz, Kopp, and Cuomo. Our has some brilliant assets but no billionaires funding them–Diane is asset extraordinaire; Anthony Cody; Jersey Jazzman; Leonie Haimson is a jewel; Mark Naison is one-of-a-kind, a nonstop one-person opposition; Peg Robertson is superb; Karen Lewis is inspiring and effective; Barbara Madeloni has returned from her firing in UMass to lead Mass EA; then there are Fairtest, Rethinking Schools, incredible Providence Student Union; John King in Texas, please add to this list. The only difference betw our assets and theirs: billionaires and mass media backing them up. Big money and big media are winning so far, imo, but where are they vulnerable? In our continuing use of social media; in our efforts to consolidate in mass opposition for a targeted action; they need us to buy their goods, shop till we drop, and vote for the people they put up; abandoning the Democratic Party is an especially impt tactic to create headaches much earned by Cuomo who needs mass adulation to run for the white house.
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I get giddy every time I hear of one of these uber-wealthy folks losing big in an election. Let them keep pounding their money down a rat hole for supporting losing causes.
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I would also add bloggers Peter Greene, Darcie Cimarustie, Marie Corfield and Mercedes Schneider to your list.
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I would add the reporters and newspapers that have covered the charter corruption, Laura Bischoff and Josh Swigart at the Dayton Daily News, Doug Livingston at the Akron Beacon Journal, the Detroit Free Press, Hartford Courant…
Valerie Strauss at the Wash. Post?
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Nothing beats teaching Diane!
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With such a tainted leader, any wonder why Campbell Brown has emerged as the pub’ic face of attacking teachers?
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public face…windows 8 keyboard….
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I don’t have any background on Eli Broad. It surprised me to see him on the list of those who are anti public education. His foundation gives out a prize every year to an outstanding large urban school district. Is this not at cross purposed to being against public education?
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Broad Foundation-trained superintendents are disciples of administrative and teacher “churn.” (Because why would you want experience and stability in an urban school, where those qualities are essential to urban kids’ education?) The Foundation’s goal is to inject leaders who will use business principles to whip school districts into shape–business principles that look a lot like privatization. The whole Broad Prize process leans heavily on test score data and its manipulation. Our super is a Broadie. Most of us would like our super to become someone else’s super as soon as feasibly possible.
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