NEA Strong Public Schools 2020 Presidential Forum

– video: NEA  |  C-SPAN  

Friday, July 5, 2019 at the George R. Brown Convention Center in Houston, TX.

10 CANDIDATES: Biden, Castro, de Blasio, Harris, Inslee, Klobuchar, O'Rourke, Ryan, Sanders, Warren.

Background: The forum was part of the NEA's Representative Assembly, the annual gathering attended by as many as 10,000 NEA members and guests.  Each candidate had 10 minutes, comprising one-minute opening remarks and answering three questions, one by video and two written, submitted by educators.  NEA president Lily Eskelsen García posed the two written questions.  Candidates had no more than three minutes to respond to each question.  (Also note that several of the candidates released education policy proposals leading up to and coinciding with this event: de Blasio, Inslee, Klobuchar and Ryan).




National Education Association

June 26, 2019

NEA Announces #StrongPublicSchools Presidential Forum

America’s largest labor union will host candidates at annual Representative Assembly in Houston

WASHINGTON - June 26, 2019 - Today, the National Education Association announced a first-ever #StrongPublicSchools Presidential Forum focused on issues that impact students, educators, and neighborhood public schools, to be held at the union’s annual Representative Assembly in Houston, TX, on July 5, 2019. The forum will provide 2020 candidates the opportunity to answer questions from America’s educators about the future of public education for our students. Confirmed attendees include former Vice President Joe Biden, former HUD Secretary Julián Castro, Sen. Amy Klobuchar, Gov. Jay Inslee, former Rep. Beto O’Rourke, Sen. Bernie Sanders, and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, with other confirmations expected in the coming days. The forum will be moderated by NEA president Lily Eskelsen García.

"For more than a year, the national #RedForEd movement, led by educators and supported by parents and students in communities across the country, has seen hundreds of thousands of people taking action to ensure every student has equal opportunity regardless of where they live or how well off their families are," said García. "Educators are poised to play a major role in choosing the president of the United States. And now we are taking this energy to the 2020 campaign where we will lead a conversation about the schools our students deserve."

The #StrongPublicSchools Presidential Forum will occur on the afternoon of July 5 where each candidate will answer questions from NEA members about their plans for public education including how to provide opportunity for every student, how they plan to provide the resources and tools that attract and retain educators to the profession, and how they will listen to the voices of the professionals who know the names of the students in America’s classrooms. Other core NEA issues can be found on NEA’s Strong Public Schools website.

The NEA’s Representative Assembly is the world’s largest democratic deliberative body, larger than the RNC and DNC combined, in which nearly 7,000 educators chart the course for the future of the organization. With more than 3 million members, the NEA is the largest labor union in America and the world’s largest professional association of educators. One in 100 Americans is an NEA member and 1 in 39 voters reside in an NEA household. Educators are poised play a major role in choosing the president of the United States, and NEA members represent sought after demographics including college-educated women and suburban professionals swinging elections from coast to coast.

The #StrongPublicSchools Presidential Forum will be open press with ground rules and logistics to follow. NEA will provide space for journalists who wish to attend. Requests for credentials should be sent as soon as possible to press_info@nea.org. Credentials for the forum do not grant access to other NEA events in Houston. If you would like to cover other events please indicate that in your request.
Follow NEA on Twitter at @NEAmedia
http://www.strongpublicschools.org

###

The National Education Association is the nation’s largest professional employee organization, representing 3 million elementary and secondary teachers, higher education faculty, education support professionals, school administrators, retired educators and students preparing to become teachers. Learn more at www.nea.org.

CONTACT:
Richard Allen Smith, NEA Communications

National Education Association
May 2, 2019

NEA president: Educators will play a major role in choosing the next president

Largest labor union launches Strong Public Schools campaign aimed at engaging its three million members

WASHINGTON - May 02, 2019 - The National Education Association jumped into the 2020 presidential campaign for the first time during a national conference call with reporters—highlighting what is at stake in this election and declaring that its more than three million members will have a powerful and unique voice in selecting the next president of the United States.

“We are choosing more than the next president of the United States in the 2020 election,” said NEA President Lily Eskelsen García. “We are defining who we are as a country and determining the core values and principles that will guide this great nation moving forward. Educators plan to be front and center in this conversation. We will make our presence felt in this election and will play a major role in choosing the next president of the United States.”

With more than 3 million teachers and education support professionals as members, the National Education Association is the largest union in the U.S., representing one out of every 100 Americans. NEA members live in every state, in every Congressional District, and in every ZIP code. They are a trusted and influential voice in every community who consistently exercise their right to vote.

Hundreds of thousands of educators have taken action in the past two years alone, and the power of educators as activists has been on full display in cities and states across the country. In the 2018 campaign, educators also played an outsized role with NEA members engaging in record activism and helping to elect to public office more than 1,000 educators.

NEA launched Strong Public Schools 2020, a campaign aimed at engaging and listening to its members, lifting up their voices, and engaging candidates. Via strongpublicschools.org, NEA will inform members and the public about where the candidates stand on key issues, share events, submit candidate questions, watch videos, provide news from the campaign trail, as well as take action to support public education. The hub also includes important information about the Association’s presidential recommendation process.

Educators from three early primary and caucus states, Iowa, New Hampshire, and Nevada, joined Eskelsen García on the call to discuss what is happening as presidential candidates meet students and educators on the ground.

“Our nations’ public schools instill and nurture a great sense of community, offer a wide array of educational choices, and have a deep commitment to success of all our students,” said Megan Tuttle, NEA-New Hampshire President. “As educators, it is our duty to advocate on their behalf since our working conditions are their learning conditions. We will remain active participants in the process that ultimately determines who is elected at the local, state, and national level because nothing less than our children’s future is at stake.”

“The need to address our mental health crisis, the rising cost of health care, poverty, food scarcity, and bullying are all issues that enter our classrooms every day,” said Mike Beranek, president of the Iowa State Education Association. “Our members understand the impact these problems have on our students, their learning potential, and futures. Candidates are doing a lot of listening right now and we are hopeful that our stories will have a large impact on good policy.”

“Nevada educators are instrumental in electing pro-public education candidates at the local, state, and national levels,” said Ruben Murillo, president of the Nevada State Education Association. “Now, we have an opportunity to use our unique, collective voice in educating candidates on issues that are important to the success of our students. Not only do our members attend and participate in the all-important caucuses in the Silver State, but by channeling the spirit of the national #RedforEd movement, we will lift our voices and demonstrate our commitment through our deeds and actions in this election to the success of public education and our students.”

For more than a year, educators have marched in the heat, rallied in the rain, knocked on doors, and put their names on the ballot. They forced politicians to listen, to begin to address to the years of financial neglect that have taken a toll on students and public education. The #RedforEd movement changed the public discourse about public education priorities and delivered political victories that will improve the lives of students in communities across the country.

“With the wind at our back and the momentum of the national #RedforEd movement, we are ready to continue fighting in the 2020 campaign to ensure our students have the opportunity and the public schools they deserve,” concluded Eskelsen García.

Follow NEA on Twitter at @NEAmedia http://www.strongpublicschools.org

The National Education Association is the nation’s largest professional employee organization, representing 3 million elementary and secondary teachers, higher education faculty, education support professionals, school administrators, retired educators and students preparing to become teachers. Learn more at www.nea.org.


Contact
: Miguel A. Gonzalez

National Education Association
April 30, 2019

NEA president to host first media briefing about 2020 presidential campaign

Educators from Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada to discuss efforts to engage members and candidates

WASHINGTON - April 30, 2019 - As the 2020 presidential campaign kicks into gear, the National Education Association will host its first media briefing to discuss its member and candidate engagement efforts and how educators will be leading the effort to make students and public education a central issue in the presidential race. This briefing will have on-the-record comments by Lily Eskelsen García as well as by educators from four early primary and caucus states: Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada. NEA’s political director Carrie Pugh also will participate.

Educators, parents and students from Arizona to California to West Virginia and beyond have united in a national #RedforEd movement to advocate for the schools their students deserve. NEA is building this momentum and politicians have taken notice. Presidential candidates are actively seeking to tap into that energy on the campaign trail, regularly touting support from educators while already putting forth pro-public education proposals in an effort to win over educators.

NEA members will have a powerful voice in deciding the next president. More than 3 million teachers and education support professionals are members of the National Education Association. That’s one out of every 100 Americans. NEA members live in every state, in every Congressional district, and in every ZIP code. NEA members are educated, involved, and dependable voters who consistently exercise their right to vote. In the 2018 campaign, educators also played an outsized role with NEA members engaging in record activism and more than 1,000 educators being elected to public office. Join this call to hear more about NEA’s large-scale, campaign to lift up the voice of educators across the country and engage our members in the 2020 election.

To learn more about the NEA presidential recommendation process, visit StrongPublicSchools.org.  
Who: Lily Eskelsen Garcìa, president, National Education Association
  Mike Beranek, president of the Iowa State Education Association
  Megan Tuttle, president of NEA-New Hampshire
  Ruben Murillo, Jr., president of the Nevada State Education Association
  Carrie Pugh, National Education Association political director
What: Telephone briefing with reporters about role NEA and educators will play in the 2020 presidential campaign
When: 12:30 – 1:30 p.m. EST, Thursday, May 2
Where: Via telephone. Please email mgonzalez@nea.org to RSVP and to obtain call-in information.
 
The National Education Association is the nation’s largest professional employee organization, representing 3 million elementary and secondary teachers, higher education faculty, education support professionals, school administrators, retired educators and students preparing to become teachers. Learn more at www.nea.org.
https://educationvotes.nea.org/presidential-2020/2020-election-faq/
How does NEA decide whom to recommend in the primaries? In order to be considered for a recommendation in the presidential election, candidates must complete and return the NEA 2020 Presidential Questionnaire and participate in a video interview with NEA President Lily Eskelsen García.

As for the recommendation itself, the NEA PAC Council – comprised of representatives from every state, NEA caucus and our Executive Committee – has the authority to put forward a presidential primary recommendation for consideration by the NEA Board of Directors.