STATEMENT: Labor Day Violence Raises Questions About Efficacy of More Police

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

September 5, 2017

CHICAGO- Following is the statement of Emma Tai, Executive Director of United Working Families (UWF) on Chicago’s Labor Day weekend violence.

“As the summer comes to an end, media outlets report that 30 people were shot this Labor Day weekend, adding to the growing number of shootings and homicides in 2017. Our thoughts and prayers are with those affected by the ongoing tragedy playing out in Chicago’s hypersegregated neighborhoods.

“The political response to this crisis continues to fall far short of what working families need and deserve. Mayor Rahm Emanuel deployed 1,300 more police officers to the streets this weekend. But with 30 shootings taking place this weekend--to say nothing of the $662 million spent on payouts and settlements for violent cops last year--we question whether this is truly the best use of the city’s considerable resources.

“Black unemployment in Chicago is on par with the Great Depression, far outpacing the national average. If Mayor Emanuel is serious about stopping Chicago’s violence, he needs to demand that his wealthy donors pay their fair share of taxes so that the city can create good-paying jobs and flourishing schools. Only real public investment in the people and families of Chicago’s south and west sides--not downtown CEO’s--will stop violent crime.”

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United Working Families is an independent political organization by and for the 99%, established in 2014 by the Chicago Teachers Union, SEIU Healthcare, Action Now, and Grassroots Illinois Action.

STATEMENT: Governor Rauner Continues to Demonstrate he Only Governs for the 1%

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

August 25, 2017

CHICAGO- Following is the statement of Emma Tai, Executive Director of United Working Families following Gov. Bruce Rauner’s veto of Senate Bill 81, legislation to raise the minimum wage in Illinois to $15 by 2022.

"Over the past thirty years, the income gap between the 1% and the rest of us has doubled and today Governor Rauner widen that gap by vetoing SB 81. At a time when Chicago’s African-American unemployment rates are on par with Great Depression, we need political leadership that will stand up for good jobs and living wages, not more padding of corporate profit. Our working families will only prosper when they have access to jobs that pay a minimum wage. Today, he vetoed the path forward for the 2.3 million Illinois workers, who would have benefited from Senate Bill 81.”

“The Illinois minimum wage has remained at $8.25 since 2010, while the cost of living continues to escalate. Our working families need leadership that will advocate on their behalf not veto them. In 2018 it is imperative that Illinois voters elect someone, who governs for the 99%, not just the 1%.”

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United Working Families is an independent political organization by and for the 99%, established in 2014 by the Chicago Teachers Union, SEIU Healthcare, Action Now, and Grassroots Illinois Action.

United Working Families is hiring!

We are an independent political organization by and for the 99%. Funded completely by working-class people and their organizations—labor unions, community groups, and committed individuals—UWF represents over 100,000 working people across Illinois. UWF combines the experience, resources, and mass base of organized labor with the energy and innovation of the grassroots to recruit, train, and run candidates, and to build durable, year-round, volunteer political organization. UWF member organizations include: Action Now, Chicago Teachers Union, Cook County College Teachers Union, Grassroots Illinois Action, SEIU Healthcare Illinois Indiana, Workers United CMRJB, 22nd Ward Independent Political Organization, 25th Ward Independent Political Organization, and 33rd Ward Working Families. Organizing Director: United Working Families seeks an Organizing Director to build out robust year-round political organizing programs that recruit the electorate to a bold left agenda and to the people-powered political organization required to realize it. Candidates should be experienced community and/or labor organizers with management experience, and should have excellent verbal and written communication skills and a sophisticated analysis of the current political landscape. This is an organizing position in a collaborative, fast-paced, and innovative environment; the work will require travel, weeknight, and weekend hours. This position is based in Chicago. Read the full job description here.

Political Director: United Working Families seeks a Political Director to develop and execute UWF’s workplan to build durable political will, organization, and a candidate pipeline to move a bold left agenda. Candidates should have a proven track record of managing complex electoral, legislative, and organizing campaigns, with excellent verbal and written communication skills and a sophisticated analysis of the current political landscape. This is a political position in a collaborative, fast-paced, and innovative environment; the work will require travel, weeknight, and weekend hours. This position is based in Chicago. Read the full job description here.

How to Apply: Please submit a RESUME and PERSONAL ESSAY (1-2 pages) that describes your interest, commitment, and any relevant personal background to jobs@unitedworkingfamilies.org, with the position you are interested in as the subject line. United Working Families is an Equal Opportunity Employer.  People of color are strongly encouraged to apply.

Charlottesville and Chicago

It's not news, but it bears repeating: white supremacy is alive and well in America. Our thoughts and prayers are with our sisters and brothers who were killed and injured by racist terrorists in Charlottesville this weekend. If you can, please contribute to funds to assist with their medical costs.

Yet our rage and sorrow go unanswered in the political response to this latest tragedy. Donald Trump and Bruce Rauner waffled on terminology rather than swiftly condemn the Nazi sympathizer who killed peaceful protestor Heather Heyer. And statements of condemnation ring hollow from the Mayor who closed 50 Black schools, covered up the police killing of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald, and negotiated with segregationists in the Trump White House.

We don't have statues of Confederate leaders in Chicago. But we do have elected officials who benefit from racism, segregation, and violence while concentrating our city and state's prosperity in fewer and fewer hands. Help us hold them accountable.

Statement on Chicago School Budgets

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE July 20, 2017

 

United Working Families Statement on Chicago School Budgets

CHICAGO - Following is the statement of Emma Tai, Executive Director of United Working Families, on the school budgets provided to Chicago principals today:

“Today, principals across Chicago received woefully inadequate school budgets that will mean yet another round of brutal cuts for students, parents, and teachers.

“Bruce Rauner and Rahm Emanuel continue to pass the buck for the the laid-off teachers, the short-term borrowing schemes, and the overcrowded classrooms. It’s the other guy’s fault, they say. There’s not enough money, they say.

“They are lying. We live in the fifth-richest state in the richest country in the history of the world. The problem is not lack of money, but lack of political will.

“For evidence of the bounty of our local economy, we need look no further than the hundreds of millions of dollars that these men spend on their personal political ambitions. Bruce Rauner and the Democratic frontrunner, billionaire J.B. Pritzker, will spend over $300 million on the 2018 election. Chicagoan Ken Griffin—one of the richest men in the world, and a prominent donor to both Rauner and Emanuel—has already donated a record-breaking $20 million to Rauner’s re-election campaign. Emanuel has pledged to raise $30 million for his own 2019 campaign.

"School cuts are not a fact of nature. A 25% African-American unemployment rate is not inevitable. A 10-year-old boy shot in the street is not predestined. This suffering is the result of decisions made by those who are more interested in protecting the profits of the rich than the good of the public.

“Rauner and Emanuel like to point fingers at each other, but the reality is that they are cut from the same cloth: new political bosses for our new gilded age, protecting their wealthy friends at the expense of every one else."

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United Working Families is an independent political organization by and for the 99%, established in 2014 by Action Now, the Chicago Teachers Union, Grassroots Illinois Action, and SEIU Healthcare.

 

Summer 2017 Update: Berwyn United, Knock Your Block, First Thursdays, and more!

Summer is off to a busy start for us here at United Working Families, where we're building the people power we need to elect progressive champions for racial, social, and economic justice. Check out some of our updates below!

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Berwyn United Holds the Line on Worker Rights!

After Cook County raised the minimum wage and secured earned sick time for workers, suburban towns began caving to corporate pressure and opting out of the county ordinances--but not Berwyn!

Business interests tried to get the town to opt out of raising the minimum wage and providing paid sick time to their employees. But together with workers and residents from Progressive Indivisible Berwyn, Berwyn Immigration Working Group, and Arise Chicago, the four aldermen from the progressive Berwyn United slate refused to give in. Longtime Mayor Robert Lovero was forced to take his "opt-out" proposal off the table, and Berwyn workers were victorious!

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#KnockYourBlock: Building Political Power at the Precinct Level!

The victory in Berwyn is just one more example of the difference that local elections can make on the issues that matter to us. We need to be laying the groundwork NOW if we want to win in 2018, 2019, and beyond!

That's why volunteers from Our Revolution and United Working Families came together on June 24 to learn how to be precinct captains for the political revolution! We made plans to knock the doors on our own blocks, practiced having good organizing conversations, and studied past election results to map out the path to victory for progressives in Chicago and Illinois.

We'll be holding these trainings on an ongoing basis. Click here if you want to make sure you're at the next one!

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July First Thursday with Chicago Teachers Union Vice President Jesse Sharkey

 

On July 6, over 50 people came together at the Chicago Teachers Union for our monthly First Thursday meeting. Hosted by UWF board member Jesse Sharkey, participants discussed the political challenges facing organized labor in this moment, a reportback from Knock Your Block, and how we build our own progressive political organization. Our speakers included board member Tony Johnston of Cook County College Teachers Union and organizer Ryan Kelleher. Thanks to all who joined us--save the date for the next conversation on Thursday, August 3!

Grassroots Progressive Efforts Quadruple Turnout in Bolingbrook Election

Suburban Voters Fire Warning Shots for Trump, Rauner, Complacent Dems BOLINGBROOK – United Working Families, an independent political organization powered by progressive labor and community organizations, congratulates mayoral candidate Jackie Traynere and the progressive grassroots organizing efforts that powered the Bolingbrook United slate's historic turnout levels.

Following is the statement of Emma Tai, Executive Director of United Working Families, on Tuesday’s unofficial results:

“United Working Families congratulates Jackie Traynere, the progressive Bolingbrook United slate, and the grassroots volunteers who powered historic turnout levels on Tuesday despite being significantly outspent by a Republican super PAC.

“This matters for 2018. Progressive grassroots organization quadrupled municipal election turnout from the last election, turning out over 6,000 Bolingbrook voters for a union organizer and Bernie delegate who rejected Trump's rhetoric and instead projected a vision of robust public services and government by and for the people.

"Tonight’s historic turnout is a warning shot. In Bolingbrook, Berwyn, Chicago, and across Illinois, people are coming together to take politics back from the 1% and fight for the future we deserve. Trump, Rauner, and complacent members of both parties should be worried.

“This is only the beginning."

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United Working Families is an independent political organization by and for the 99%, established in 2014 by Action Now, Chicago Teachers Union, Grassroots Illinois Action, and SEIU Healthcare.

Berwyn United Slate Fires Shot Across the Bow for Complacent Democrats

People-Powered Progressive Slate Shakes up Suburban Primary with Eight Electoral Victories BERWYN - United Working Families, an independent political organization powered by progressive labor and community organizations, congratulates Berwyn United on its victories in Tuesday's primary. Berwyn United, a 15-candidate slate mounting a progressive challenge to the Berwyn political establishment, picked up eight seats on Tuesday.

Following is the statement of Emma Tai, Executive Director of United Working Families, on the Berwyn United victories in Tuesday's primary.

"United Working Families congratulates the progressive Berwyn United slate and their people-powered challenge to a complacent political establishment.

"This is the first shot across the bow for Democrats in the Trump era. The 15-candidate Berwyn United slate--composed of rank-and-file union members, four LGBTQ candidates, and six Latinos in a rapidly diversifying municipality--mounted a serious, volunteer-led challenge to the political establishment in Berwyn.

"At a time when elites in both parties are helping the rich get richer, the leadership of Berwyn United will fight for a much-needed change in direction. We commend Marge Paul, Cynthia Gutierrez, and the six other Berwyn United candidates who were elected on Tuesday for their commitment to keeping business interests out of politics, funding our public schools, and defending our unions from corporate attacks, and protecting immigrant families from Trump's attacks.

"United Working Families congratulates Berwyn's new City Clerk, City Treasurer, Aldermen, and Township Trustees. We look forward to working together to advance independent, progressive politics in 2017 and beyond."

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United Working Families is an independent political organization by and for the 99%, established in 2014 by the Chicago Teachers Union, SEIU Healthcare, Action Now, and Grassroots Illinois Action.

Teachers, healthcare workers, and union members came together last weekend to talk with our neighbors in Berwyn about the need for political change!

STATEMENT: Rauner's "Grand Bargain" is a Raw Deal for the 99%

For Immediate Release
February 15, 2017
United Working Families Statement: Rauner's "Grand Bargain" is a Raw Deal for the 99%
 
CHICAGO - Following is the statement of United Working Families Executive Director Emma Tai in response to the Governor's non-budget address:
"Over the past thirty years, the income gap between the 1% and the rest of us has doubled. Bruce Rauner's 'Grand Bargain' is yet another raw deal for all the Illinoisans who are struggling to make ends meet.
"Bruce Rauner says he is an 'outsider' who wants to shake things up, but he's just another political boss looking out for his friends and donors. He says he's 'frustrated' with political gridlock while lavishly funding a network of lobbyists and interest groups to buy the silent complicity of his own caucus. He preaches 'compromise' while pushing for unchecked authority to make massive cuts at will. Today was no budget address, but a 'non-budget' address made up of the same stale ideas and recycled propaganda that got us into this mess in the first place.
"Illinoisans have borne the high cost of the Rauner agenda. Chicago State University, a predominantly African-American university and economic engine on Chicago's job-starved south side, is on the brink of closure. Public universities across the state--Northeastern, Eastern, Southern--are in similarly precarious positions. Sixty-two domestic violence shelters have been forced to cut services and eliminate jobs. Unemployment rates are twice the national average in parts of southern Illinois, while violence has skyrocketed in Chicago's African-American neighborhoods.
"We deserve better. We reject any 'Grand Bargain' that pays for tax cuts for the rich by cutting jobs, schools, services, and pensions for everyone else.
"Illinois has the fifth-largest economy in the nation. Under a graduated tax system in which the wealthy contribute adequately to the public good, there would be more than enough money to create bountiful jobs, flourishing schools and universities, and a world-class system of health care and human services. But instead of asking his rich buddies to chip in and get the job done, Bruce Rauner offered Illinoisans another raw deal."
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United Working Families is an independent political organization by and for the 99%, established in 2014 by the Chicago Teachers Union, SEIU Healthcare, Action Now, and Grassroots Illinois Action.

Elena and Aaron fight for the future of education

We’d like you to meet a couple of fierce progressive organizers who are working for change in the 15th Ward and across Chicago. Elena and Aaron are volunteer leaders with Grassroots Illinois Action and United Working Families, building power in their neighborhood and organizing to elect Rafael Yañez as alderman and Jesus “Chuy” Garcia to the mayor’s office. ElenaRios_final

Elena got involved with grassroots organizing when her daughter became ill and needed to take medicine every two hours. Because the school no longer had a nurse, Elena spent her time in the school parking lot waiting to administer her daughter’s medication. Soon she was volunteering at the school and speaking up for students.

Elena met Rafael Yañez when he attended one of the Local School Council (LSC) member trainings she leads, and now she is volunteering in the 15th ward, working to elect Yañez to the City Council and Chuy Garcia as mayor, and fighting for a more progressive future for Chicago. “I refuse to let another parent lose the opportunity to fight for their children’s future,” Elena says.

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Aaron works at Back of the Yards High School, so he sees firsthand how cuts to the education budget have affected students. “These kids don’t have the quality of education that they deserve,” he said. To him, education is the most important issue at stake right now, especially the need for school programs to help kids escape violence.

Aaron volunteers to help Chuy Garcia and Rafael Yañez because they are involved in their communities the same way he is. Like Garcia, Aaron has studied urban planning. And Aaron appreciates Yañez’s work in community policing and violence prevention. “We need politicians who are working for the people, not the businesses,” he says.

Join Elena and Aaron and United Working Families by getting involved in your community today.

"Culture of Corruption." Rahm Donor Protection Program On Display in First Runoff Debate

CHICAGO (March 16, 2015)-Following is the statement of United Working Families Executive Director Kristen Crowell in response to the first Chicago mayoral runoff debate Monday.

"Whether it was executives who profit from his dangerous privatization and closing of public neighborhood schools, or the culture of cronyism that led to the red-light camera program he fought to expand just five months after he took office, Rahm Emanuel continued his donor protection program in tonight's debate.
"Rahm said he "inherited" a "culture of corruption." In fact, all he's done is expand it and dress it in a pricier suit."

BREAKING: $250K Gift From Billionaire Rauner Republican To Prop Up Rahm Emanuel Anti-Worker Agenda

Ken Griffin Is Patron Saint of Union-Busting "Right To Work For Less" Movement, Chicago "Forward" CHICAGO (March 10, 2015)--News is breaking that the anti-union billionaire who was Gov. Bruce Rauner's main donor, and who is the main contributor to the "Right to Work for Less" movement in Illinois, has given $250,000 to support Rahm Emanuel's anti-worker bid for re-election.

Ken Griffin, the "Richest Man in Illinois," is now the biggest donor to Emanuel AND Chicago Forward, having given at least $580,000.

The news came on the same day that Rauner "hero" Scott Walker stripped Wisconsin workers of rights by signing "Right to Work For Less" legislation into law in that state.

Following is the statement of United Working Families Executive Director Kristen Crowell in response:

"There is a reason that right-wing Republican billionaires like Bruce Rauner and Ken Griffin love Rahm Emanuel and Chicago Forward: They know they're committed to the Republican movement to crater wages, strip workers of basic protections and plunder pensions.

"The richest man in Illinois doesn't believe in living wages or the dignity of the worker. He believes that wealth should rule and workers should beg. Rahm Emanuel and Chicago Forward have embraced this Republican idolatry.

Humiliated Rahm Can't Disentangle Himself from Rauner Budget

"Progressive" Rebranding a Total Farce

CHICAGO (March 4, 2015)--Humiliated by recent election results, Mayor Rahm Emanuel is attempting to distance himself from wine club and donor-sharing pal Bruce Rauner and his austerity budget.

Following is a response from United Working Families Executive Director Kristen Crowell to Emanuel's latest efforts, his Wednesday press conference:

"Rahm Emanuel and Bruce Rauner are of like minds when it comes to cutting core services for the poor and vulnerable, so it is a total farce watching him try, at this late hour, to distance himself and re-brand himself as a progressive.
"Cuts to education and childcare are just one of the consequences of the Rahm-Rauner pro-corporate agenda. Rahm's hapless press conference today is another pathetic example of how his words ring as hollow as an empty bottle of pricey cabernet."
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United Working Families Joins Tim Meegan in Call for Recount in 33rd Ward

Mell machine Election Day shenanigans raise questions about vote count

CHICAGO (February 27, 2015) -- Following is a statement from United Working Families Executive Director Kristen Crowell on the news that Ald. Deb Mell may have avoided a runoff election with progressive challenger Tim Meegan by just two votes in the 33rd Ward:

"United Working Families fully supports the Tim Meegan campaign in its demand for a recount and his continued fight against an entrenched machine. There were too many reports of questionable conduct by Mell-affiliated election workers in precincts on Election Day. The machine deserves no benefit of the doubt.

"Tim Meegan has pledged to get back in the streets and continue his work talking to voters about the urgently needed change of leadership in the 33rd Ward.

"One thing he can count on: United Working Families will be right there with him."

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By the Numbers: In Its First Major Test, United Working Families Plays Vital Role in Tuesday’s Progressive Change

CHICAGO (February 26, 2015)--In the first major test since it was founded, United Working Families (UWF) played a vital role in the election results that shook the Chicago political landscape Tuesday.

From the success of Jesus “Chuy” Garcia, to defending Progressive Reform Caucus members, to forcing runoffs for Rahm rubber-stamp aldermen, to winning passage for the elected, representative school board question, UWF field and data-driven expertise was rewarded.

The new political affiliation of the Chicago Teachers Union, SEIU Healthcare Illinois, Grassroots Illinois Action and Action Now worked for 17 endorsed candidates, and Garcia, providing resources and organization at all levels.

A list of the endorsed candidates is here.

89: The cumulative percentage support for an elected, representative school board in the 37 wards where UWF helped place it on the ballot, which was opposed by Rahm Emanuel.

153,000: The number of doors knocked by UWF-affiliated canvassers on Election Day.

70,000: persuasion phone calls made over GOTV weekend to undecided voters

2: UWF-endorsed newcomers who won outright.

7: Out of seven, the number of Rahm-targeted Progressive Reform Caucus members who either won outright or advanced to runoff elections.

4: The number of UWF-endorsed candidates that forced runoffs against machine-backed candidates.

16: Out of 17, the number of UWF wards in which Rahm Emanuel lost votes compared to 2011. The exception was the 10th Ward, where the machine vote was split between Rahm and Gery Chico in 2011.

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Behind Chuy Garcia, Chicago Tosses Out the 1 Percent Agenda

United Working Families Plays Critical Role in Historic Vote

CHICAGO (February 24, 2015)--Following is the statement of United Working Families Executive Director Kristen Crowell.

"Tonight Jesus “Chuy” Garcia and our progressive sisters and brothers did the impossible - we forced the first mayoral run-off in the city’s history. Voters turned out to say that the corporate elite have no place here.

"Entering the run-off election six weeks from now, Chuy Garcia has demonstrated that Chicagoans are hungry for a new direction, a new vision, and a progressive agenda that unites all 50 wards in our great city.

"The story here is that the candidate matters. In addition to helping Chuy Garcia forward, United Working Families also won victories and forced runoffs throughout the city, fueled by the energy of our 17 great candidates.

"Thousands of volunteers knocked on more than 150,000 doors. The result? New progressive voices in City Council, a rebuke to Rahm’s rubber-stamp alderman and a continued conversation about the direction of our city.

"This is an historic victory for progressives. Chicago rejected an agenda for the 1 percent and, with Chuy Garcia leading us, we are poised in six weeks for even greater victories for the 99 percent.”

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Memo to Reporters: Chicago On the Verge of Rejecting Rahm Emanuel’s Attempt to Elminate Opposition to His Pro-Corporate, Anti-Democratic Agenda

Progressive bulwark growing, in City Hall and communities

From: Kristen Crowell. Executive Director, United Working Families

On Tuesday, as Chicagoans go to the polls, there stands a good chance that Rahm Emanuel’s efforts to eliminate all opposition to his pro-corporate, anti-democratic agenda will have been stopped in its tracks.

And we’re not just talking about Rahm himself, who faces the possibility of being the first Chicago mayor ever to be forced into a runoff--thanks to progressive firebrand Jesus “Chuy” Garcia’s strong challenge.

Flash back to only a few months ago. That’s when the combined news of Karen Lewis’s withdrawal from the race and the growing pot of cash in Rahm’s Chicago Forward super PAC was leading certain political observers to all but call off today’s vote.

Chicago Forward was going to wipe out the pesky Progressive Reform Caucus that has led the lonely charge in the City Council against everything from massive closures of neighborhood schools and mental health clinics; to the near-criminal giveaways to Rahm’s corporate cronies; to the attacks on the retirement incomes of public-sector employees; to the administration’s actions that put in danger a disproportionate number of people of color.

Rahm and Chicago Forward were going to support the rubber-stamp aldermen who control City Hall and who vote with Emanuel 100 percent of the time.

And Rahm and his coalition of the 1 percent was going to stifle the discussion and sow confusion over the referendum on elected, representative school boards, which themselves would have prevented the closure of 50 neighborhood schools, the move that sparked of so much resistance to Emanuel’s policies.

As it turns out, it’s a hard thing to quash dissent, and the voice of the people dies hard. Rahm is about to find out just HOW hard.

This is not by accident, but by the work of thousands of grassroots volunteers and organizers from all backgrounds from all across Chicago who, almost from scratch, began the underdog effort to take back City Hall and regain the momentum following Karen’s difficult decision.

United Working Families was born from this resistance, and, along with protecting the members of the Progressive Caucus, our challenger candidates have placed several of Rahm’s rubber stamp Council members on defense. This, in turn, has led to new discussions about the direction of their wards and of Chicago. United Working Families’ rookie candidates, many of them political newcomers, came to speed, fueled by a real appetite for change and our intensive candidate training and mentorship program.

United Working Families has signed up thousands of new members who want a political voice in a process that, like Rahm, has excluded them. They’re in it for the long haul.

Chuy Garcia’s campaign, meanwhile, has galvanized the opposition and reminded Chicago how their voices were not heard during the school closure debate and how government should serve working families, not just corporate contributors.

And, in 37 wards throughout the city, voters today are expected to say “yes” in overwhelming numbers to scrapping the current system and replacing the mayoral-appointed school board with a representative body elected by the people, the case in every other school district in Illinois.

This is not to mention the organizations our candidates have built in the wards that, win or lose, will stay engaged in the discussion across their wards and position a new bench of non-machine candidates to organize, win and restore progressive values for Chicago in the future.

Make no mistake: the work of United Working Families and the thousands of Chicagoans we have engaged doesn’t end after today, or after the runoff on April 7.

The stories leading up to the election were about the size of Rahm Emanuel’s war chest, and the corporate donors who have engorged it, and the inevitability of his efforts to eliminate all dissent.

The job will not be complete when we wake up Wednesday. But I’m confident that, as we enter the home stretch in the campaigns, not only will the opposition to the Emanuel corporate agenda be alive and well, but you will see poured the foundation for greater victories to come.

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Chicagoans Poised to Reject Rahm’s Rubber-Stamp School Board

Advisory referendum in 37 wards across city launches next step for democracy to Chicago education, dealing Emanuel a major defeat

CHICAGO (February 23, 2015) -- For twenty years, Chicago’s mayor has appointed members of the Chicago Board of Education. Tomorrow, voters in 37 wards across the city will be given a voice with an advisory referendum on whether to end this practice and achieve true democracy with an elected, representative school board.

Citing 20 years of abject failure with an appointed school board, including the closure of some 50 neighborhood schools, United Working Families joined with the Campaign for an Elected, Representative School Board this fall in gathering signatures and allowing Chicago voters to voice their will for reform.

The likely passage of the referendum Tuesday would represent a major defeat for Mayor Rahm Emanuel and a victory for democracy in Chicago education.

“Whether it’s his undemocratic school closures or cronies like Deborah Quazzo raking in millions of taxpayer dollars, Rahm Emanuel’s rubber-stamp school board has been a total disaster.

“We expect the people to reject Rahm’s status quo Tuesday and then we’ll go to Springfield to show lawmakers that Chicago taxpayers want to elect their school board members,” said Kristen Crowell, executive director of United Working Families.

BACKGROUND:

Chicago is the only K-12 district in the state without an elected board and just one of the few in the nation.

Mayoral control with an appointed school board started with the 1995 Amendatory Act – a state law that changed the school code. Failed reforms from Mayor Richard M. Daley’s Renaissance 2010 and Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s closing of 50 schools in 2013 were rammed through by the rubber-stamping boards, despite overwhelming community opposition.

In 2012, an ERSB measure was on the ballot in 13% of Chicago precincts and 87% voters in those precincts voted “yes” to an elected school board.

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The Campaign for an Elected, Representative School Board is a coalition of community activists dedicated to bringing democracy and accountability to the Chicago Public Schools. Member organizations are:  Northside Action for Justice, Communities United, Logan Square Neighborhood Association, Raise Your Hand, Parents for Teachers, Teachers for Social Justice, Blocks Together, Enlace, Brighton Park Neighborhood Council, Action Now, KOCO, Pilsen Alliance, Grassroots Illinois Action, Chicago Teachers Union, United Working Families, Jobs with Justice, CODE – Communities Organized for Democracy in Education

United Working Families is a Chicago-based affiliation of the Chicago Teachers Union, SEIU Healthcare Illinois, Action Now and Grassroots Illinois Action.

Cutting Limbs, Not Fat: The Bruce Rauner Budget

CHICAGO (February 18, 2015) -- Following is the response of United Working Families Executive Director Kristen Crowell to the budget proposal presented today by Gov. Bruce Rauner.

"Gov. Bruce Rauner's budget presented today represents a wholesale surrender of our state's future to corporate greed.

"Retirement savings demolished. Education irreparably harmed. Working families denied life-saving healthcare.

"This will be done in the name of 'efficiency.'  But Rauner is asking so much of the people who can least afford it and so little of the people who can afford it most.

"This budget is a living monument to the failed 'trickle-down' policies of Reagan and Bush and deliberately excludes the 99 percent of working families who, unlike him, don't own multiple luxury homes or hide their fortunes in foreign countries.

"This budget doesn't trim the fat of state government, it cuts limbs and will harm working families and the middle class just as they begin to emerge from a recession caused by the reckless greed of people like Rauner.

"This budget lays bare Rauner's true priorities. He'd sooner slash vital service and put Illinoisans' lives at risk than demand that his millionaire and billionaire friends pay their fair share.

"United Working Families will fight back against this heinous budget. We call on the members of the General Assembly to denounce this budget and stand with us. We will support the elected officials who fight this budget with us.  And we will remember those who didn't."

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Medicaid Playbook of Right-Wing Rauner Adviser Includes Privatization, Dangerous Cuts, Political Panels Placing Limits on Prescription Drugs

“Done in the name of efficiency...which in fact never was true.”

CHICAGO (February 18, 2015) -- The woman chosen by Gov. Bruce Rauner to preside over massive cuts to Medicaid and other social programs has previewed her playbook of privatization, dangerous cuts and having political appointees decide what drugs Medicaid recipients should and shouldn't get.

Following, and referenced in these clips, are some of Donna Arduin’s greatest hits over the years, advising Govs. George Pataki, Rick Scott, Arnold Schwarznegger, among others, in how to enact devastating social programs to the neediest.

Cutting Medicaid for the sake of cutting, then hoping “for the best”

Before she became more polished in selling her massive cuts to Medicaid, Arduin experienced a rare moment of candor, explaining massive cuts to Medicaid acknowledging that there was nothing to support an argument that it produced efficiency.

In 1995, as a deputy budget director for New York Gov. George Pataki, she told the New York Times: “The first thing you can do is hope that the cut will force industries to create efficiencies. We can only hope for the best there.” (“In New York The Dying Days of Expansive Government” The New York Times, May 8, 1995)

Replacing more effective drugs with down-brand, generic alternatives

Arduin proposed a cost-cutting plan for then-Florida Gov. “Jeb” Bush  to replace effective drugs for Medicaid recipients with down-brand, less-effective generic alternatives. “If they started switching people from the new drugs to the old drugs, it would turn the clock back years,” one critic told the St. Petersburg Times in 1999. (“Plans Push Cheaper Medicines” St. Petersburg Times, February 28, 1999)

Political appointees limit drugs to Medicaid patients

Arduin’s radical plan for Jeb Bush included installing a politically-appointed panel that “would describe which drugs require authorization,” according to the St. Petersburg Times. (“Medicaid Cost-Cutters looking to lose Viagra” St. Petersburg Times, April 19, 1999)

Getting “compassionate conservative” rhetoric down, Arduin begins to claim that limiting Medicaid drugs was to benefit other social programs

Where before Arduin provided no “compassionate conservative” justification,  in 2000, she justified a draconian program to limit Medicaid drugs by claiming (falsely) that it was being done to expand other social spending. She told the Ledger that, “We’re trying to manage our funds better so we can use the funds for other needs like developmental disabilities and improving student achievement.” (“Bush Aims to Cut Medicaid Drug Costs” The Ledger [Lakeland, Fla] February 21, 2000)

Arduin’s “efficiency” rhetoric is a sham

As Arduin continued to work for Republican governors seeking to cut Medicaid and social services, her game plan was clear. A Florida lobbyist described it thusly in 2003: “There have been a lot of serious cuts proposed...It was always done in the name of efficiency and streamlining, and the rhetoric always followed that it was not going to hurt the delivery of servides, which in fact never was true.” (“Budget auditor may target social services” Sacramento Bee [California] October 19, 2003)

Cuts to therapy for the disabled and AIDS programs and reduced payment rates for Medicaid

As part of her controversial 2003 proposal of cuts to California’s Medicaid program, Arduin targeted disabled children and immigrants with AIDS. As well, she sought lower payments to doctors and hospitals for Medicaid patients.(“Schwarzenegger Aide Offers First List of Proposed Budget Cuts” The New York Times November 26, 2003)

Would put tens of thousands of children on a waiting list for Medicaid

Arduin proposed placing tends of thousands of California children on a waiting list for Medicaid benefits as part of her 2003 proposal. (“Schwarzenegger proposal alarms children health advocates” Associated Press December 1, 2003)

“Donna Arduin is (Gov. Schwarznegger’s) John Ashcroft.”

As she proposed massive cuts to California’s Medicaid program, Arduin was compared in 2004 to the ideologically pure member of George W. Bush’s cabinet. “Her history has been one of slashing and burning on social programs,” one legislator said. (“Governor’s Hard-Nosed Budget Boss; Arduin Known for Tough Fiscal Views” San Jose Mercury News March 8, 2004)

Draconian proposals included ending access protections for developmentally disabled

Arduin’s massive cuts to Medicaid and social programs were rejected in budget talks in California in 2004, but not before she proposed ending legislation guaranteeing access to programs for the developmentally disabled, care for homebound family members and a string of Medicaid caps. (“Revised budget backs off cuts; $103 billion plan mostly spares health services” Sacramento Bee [California] May 14, 2004)

Rejects legislative oversight and storms out of hearing

During Schwarznegger’s first week in office, according to the Los Angeles Times, Arduin stormed out of a committee hearing during a question. She left the position in California after 11 months and in controversy. (“Audit to Leave Finance Position” Los Angeles Times October 14, 2004)

Sought to end $10 million program for strays and more quickly euthanize cats and dogs

As part of her round of cuts in California, Arduin proposed ending $10 million in aid to shelters which would have “shortened the length of time dogs and cats are kept alive at shelters.” ("A Florida Transplant, Arduin was on Job for Less than a Year” San Francisco Chronicle October 14, 2004)

Anti-ObamaCare, free-market Medicaid voucher program a failure

Arduin has been a critic of ObamaCare and has proposed vouchers as a replacement. A pilot plan in Florida she supported was a total failure. “Hardly any of the 300,000 Medicaid patients enrolled in the pilot project…” the Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel reported. (“Skimming Through the GOP Gubernatorial Job Plans” Sun-Sentinel [Fort Lauderdale, Florida] July 29, 2010)