Mitt Romney has pledged to push
back against teachers unions as president.
The former Massachusetts governor said on "Fox News
Sunday," "But the role I see that
ought to remain in the president's agenda with regards to education is to push
back against the federal teachers unions." He continued, "Those
federal teachers unions have too much power, in some cases, they overwhelm the
states, they overwhelm the local school districts. We have got to put the kids
first and put these teachers unions behind."
Romney said he would not
"necessarily" eliminate the Department of Education, but said that it
may combined with agencies and that its "reach" into the states has
to be "pulled back."
Romney also criticized teachers
unions in the context of the No Child Left Behind Act. "I support the
principle of having states test their kids ... I did support No Child Left
Behind and do support continuing to test our kids," he said. "I want
to know which school districts are succeeding and which ones are failing and
where they are failing. I want there to be action taken to get the teacher
unions out and to get the kids once again receiving the education they
need."
The former Massachusetts governor
continued his criticism of unions on Sunday at a town hall meeting in Vernon
Hills, Ill. "We should pay our beginning teachers more," he said, according to Crystal
Lake Patch. "The national unions are too
interested in benefits for the older teachers."
The National Education Association,
the largest teachers union in the U.S., has endorsed President
Barack Obama for re-election. The American
Federation of Teachers
From Huffington Post.
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