United States | Militant tendency

Is the most powerful teachers union in America overreaching?

Chicago’s teachers have become a model for radical left-wing organising

Teachers march through Chicago in 2019
PaybackPhotograph: Getty Images
|CHICAGO

As election-night parties go, the mood was bleak. On March 19th primary-election voters in Chicago were asked to vote on a ballot measure that would have raised the transfer tax on properties worth over $1m so as to generate money to pay for homelessness relief. The measure was backed by the city’s entire progressive establishment. Its opponents, mostly from the real-estate industry, did not even bother to organise a rival event. And yet by 9pm on election night, “No” was leading by around eight percentage points. “Let’s just pretend,” said Myron Byrd, from the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless, an activist group, mournfully, before he belted out a song he had wanted to perform to celebrate victory. The party ended with chants of “we will not give up”, long after most attendees gave up and left.

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This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Militant tendency”

From the March 23rd 2024 edition

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