Tough Liberal

Tough Liberal

Albert Shanker and the Battles Over Schools, Unions, Race, and Democracy

In Woody Allen's 1973 film, Sleeper, a character wakes up in the future to learn that civilization was destroyed when "a man by the name of Albert Shanker got hold of a nuclear warhead." Shanker was condemned by many when he shut down the New York City school system in the bitter strikes of 1967 and 1968, and he was denounced for stirring up animosity between black parents and Jewish teachers. Later, however, he built alliances with blacks, and at the time of his death in 1997, such figures as Bill Clinton celebrated Shanker for being an educational reformer, a champion of equality, and a promoter of democracy abroad.

Shanker lived the lives of several men bound into one. In his early years, he was the "George Washington of the teaching profession," helping to found modern teacher unionism. During the 1980s, as head of the American Federation of Teachers, he became the nation's leading education reformer. Shanker supported initiatives for high education standards and accountability, teacher-led charter schools, and a system of "peer review" to weed out inadequate teachers. Throughout his life, Shanker also fought for "tough liberalism," an ideology favoring public education and trade unions but also colorblind policies and a robust anticommunism—all of which, Shanker believed, were vital to a commitment to democracy.

Although he had a coherent worldview, Shanker was a complex individual. He began his career as a pacifist but evolved into a leading defense and foreign policy hawk. He was an intellectual and a populist; a gifted speaker who failed at small talk; a liberal whose biggest enemies were often on the left; a talented writer who had to pay to have his ideas published; and a gruff unionist who enjoyed shopping and detested sports. Richard D. Kahlenberg's biography is the first to offer a complete narrative of one of the most important voices in public education and American politics in the last half century. At a time when liberals are accused of not knowing what they stand for, Tough Liberal illuminates an engaging figure who suggested an alternative liberal path.
  • Contents
  • Introduction
  • I: NEW YORK
    • 1: The Early Years: Rising from Humble Beginnings and Establishing Values 1928–1952
    • 2: Creating the Untited Federation of Teachers 1952-1962
    • 3: Rising Within the UFT: Labor and Civil Rights Together 1962-1965
    • 4: Black Power and the 1967 Teachers' Strike 1966-1968
    • 5: The Ocean Hill-Brownsville Strike and the Liberal Assult on Labor 1968
    • 6: Ocean Hill-Brownsville: The Fallout 1969
    • 7: Rebuilding: Recruiting the Paraprofessionals, Launching the "Where We Stand" Column, and Seeking Teacher Unity 1969-1972
    • 8: Becoming President of the American Federation of Teachers and Battling the New Politics Movement 1972-1974
    • 9: "A Man by the Name of Albert Shanker": Sleeper and the Controversy of Power 1973-1975
    • 10: Losing Power: The New York Fiscal Crisis and the Decline of Labor 1974-1976
  • II: WASHINGTON
    • 11: Jimmy Carter and the Rise of the Reagan Democrats 1976–1980
    • 12: Being a Social Democrat Under Ronald Reagan: Domestic Policy 1980–1988
    • 13: Being a Social Democrat Under Ronald Reagan: Foreign Policy 1980–1988
    • 14: Education Reform: A Nation at Risk, Merit Pay, and Peer Review 1983–1984
    • 15: Beyond Special Interest: Making Teaching a Profession 1985–1987
    • 16: Charter Schools and School Restructuring 1988–1997
    • 17: The Early Education-Standards Movement 1989–1994
    • 18: The Rise of the Angry White Males and the Gingrich Revolution 1992–1995
    • 19: Reviving the Education-Standards Movement and the Final Days 1995–1997
  • III: LEGACY
    • 20: The Legacy of Albert Shanker
  • Acknowledgments
  • Abbreviations
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index