Julie Vassilatos baked a cake to celebrate the announced retirement of Rahm Emanuel as mayor of Chicago. But she is laughing and crying. He wants to be remembered as “the education mayor.” Really. Stop laughing.
Here is his real legacy. Open the link to see the whole post plus lots of links:
The closure of 50 schools. This chaotic, criminal mess was why I started this blog. Here are the open letters to Barbara Byrd Bennett and the Chicago Tribune following the first school closure hearings that kicked everything off. Later I realized all those hearings were a sham, just part of a process the Broad Center recommends when a district undertakes mass school closings in order to cut costs. Such meetings are for people to “feel heard,” although no one ever responds or answers any questions or resolves anything. We sat through many rounds of these. Years later, still they go on. I was recently at a similar hearing concerning NTA, the majority-black, successful elementary school Rahm decided to hand over to majority-non-black South Loopers for a high school. That foreordained, futile vibe you get from these events is impossible to avoid, as all major decisions actually have already been made and no comments actually impact the outcomes.
The closure process was every bit as terrible as you can imagine–actually, probably worse, and I wrote about it obsessively in every possible way I could think of until the hour board of ed voted to shutter the schools (which they managed to do without even naming the schools the vote was intended to close).
Research undertaken since the closures has shown they did not improve anyone’s educational experience, they only caused a great deal of “institutional mourning” in children, that is to say, grief. And the board who enacted this policy was summarily dismissed after CEO Byrd-Bennett was nailed for corruption and the optics of their unquestioning approval became a bad look for Rahm.
Add to that the “decimation of school libraries.”
And add to that:
The near-death of Walter H. Dyett High School and the near-death of the Dyett Hunger Strikers. Again, 100% on Rahm. I wrote too many posts on this to link (but here’s the first). Disinvesting a school in a black neighborhood was certainly not new in Chicago with this mayor. But he brought this conflict to new heights. Rahm’s refusal to meet with members of the community, as well as utter shenanigans around Requests for Proposals for the school, as well as a Rahm-beholden alderman and yet more absurd community hearings, created not just an unjust situation, not just a PR nightmare, but also almost irrecoverable health crises for the Hunger Strikers, who went to this extreme measure in order to get a meeting with their mayor. Over 34 days he never met with them. Though the cost was terrible, Dyett remained open. Whatever Rahm’s agenda was here was never made clear, but he lost that round, and the community has a whole bunch of actual, real life heroes.
And don’t forget “the traumatization of children.”
Quite a record for one Mayor. The Education Mayor.

Education Dismayor, the Purveyor of Education Mayhem
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Education Mayhemer?
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Rahmbo s Legacy
Education Mayhemer
That’s what Rahm would be
Education Maimer
That’s his legacy
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Rahmbo doing what he does best
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Remember, Rahm is the one who said that liberals are “f***ing retards”.
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dienne77–are you also Dienne, or is there a copycat/impostor (or, in this case, a possible imposter)?
Just want to make sure we’re hearing from the REAL, sassy spitfire Dienne (or dienne77 we all know & love)!!
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Rahm will be remembered as the detached, bully that tried to impose privatization of public education over the will of the people. He came on like a “wrecking ball” closing schools, rarely compromising and rarely hearing the people he served. He waged a war with the union, parents, teachers, students and communities. He is a poor example of a Democratic mayor.
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Some might say that he is a good example of a Democratic mayor.
Just not an example of a good Democratic mayor.
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But a GREAT example of a DINOcratic mayor!
Aren’t they (almost) all?
Today, Toni Preckwinkle (a longtime, former CPS teacher) tossed her hat in the ring. Aside from supporting tax assessor serial nepotist & not great assessor (& beaten–despite all odds–by a true progressive!) , in my book, she’s been pretty good.
Since so many people are running (SOOO many people), someone can, indeed, be in a runoff or win with very low percentage points.
JUST. NOT. PAUL. VALLAS. (Read Fred Klonsky’s Blog from this past Sunday–9/16/18–for the latest sad Vallas shenanigans.)
Last poll indicated (w/%age points in the teens) Vallas in SECOND place.
Frightening.
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I am sure that if you polled the people of the city of Chicago about what they think of Rahm I would guess that well over 90 percent of the people would say that Rahm was a disaster and probably ruined the city of Chicago for many years to come. Education you say? Forget it.
Come on people, Rahm destroyed the city schools and thought he was doing well as the school closures came years ago when it was scene as the vogue thing to do by closing a school and then replacing it with some charter. Today we all know that the charter schools do not perform better than our public schools as the evidence started to flow in. Then, when the data from Michigan charter schools became public, people started to realize that charter schools are scams set up by private business people trying to tap into the multi billion dollar education market in the US. Then we all learned that people like Devos are behind the schemes and really were in education just for the money profit and definitely not for the kids.
So, Rahm leaves his legacy of firearms, broken schools, murder rate higher than Irag, filthy dirty streets, more guns, schools with filth and broken windows, a city divided by a mayor who strolled in from Obama’s office in DC. Rahm was a lucky guy in that he actually worked in DC for our federal government and then mayor of Chicago. One has to ask…how can a person like Rahm achieve such higher offices when indeed we all know he is not a leader and not an effective government policy maker? Its the ole saying its not what you know its who you know.
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Not sure where you’re getting your “well over 90 percent” figure. Rahm was, after all, re-elected in 2015 even after he shuttered 50 schools in one day, closed the mental health facilities and oversaw four years of escalating street violence. I can’t prove it, now, of course, but I think there’s a good chance he might have been re-elected again this time around had he not decided to bail. The city is much whiter and wealthier than it was in 2015 and most of those wealthy white folks have benefited handily from Rahm, and all of those things you mentioned mostly affect “those” people, who are on their way out anyway, thanks to Rahm.
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Are the Pritzkers and their ilk wealthier?
Are charter school privateers still getting most everything they want?
Are Black people still being driven out of the city?
Is Obama getting his Ozymandias-style pyramid, located on parklands stolen from the public?
Yes? Then I think he and his supporters would privately say everything went according to plan.
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SO sadly true.
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I’m pretty sure Rahmses wants his OWN pyramid …
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Good RIDDANCE to RAHM-BOO.
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There are none so blind as those who will not see.
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