A new Harvard-Harris poll shows that 60 percent of voters believe teachers unions should stay out of politics. A differently worded poll would likely reveal even stronger sentiment. Ask voters whether union dues pulled straight from teachers’ paychecks should fund political activity, and the numbers would likely climb higher. The public already senses what many teachers have lived: unions exist more for activism than for academics.

The National Education Association’s annual financial report confirms the imbalance. Less than 10 percent of its funding goes toward actually representing teachers. Meanwhile, more than 98 percent of its political contributions flow to Democrats in every election cycle. Roughly a quarter of teachers identify as conservatives. These educators should not feel compelled to hand over their hard-earned paychecks to causes they oppose.   

The 2018 Janus v. AFSCME decision made this choice possible. The Supreme Court ruled that public employees can no longer be forced to pay union dues as a condition of employment. That ruling upheld First Amendment rights and ended compulsory support for political speech. Independents and rational Democrats who simply want to avoid politics and focus on the basics in the classroom now have every reason to opt out as well.   

The dam is breaking on the teachers union monopoly. Some 10,000 teachers have joined the independent alternative Teacher Freedom Alliance, as more teachers are realizing they do not have to fund agendas they oppose. With genuine support now available outside traditional unions, teachers can apply pressure and hold union bosses accountable. 

The best teachers deserve the freedom to negotiate their own salaries and benefits, including liability insurance. Instead, unions drag all educators down to the level of the lowest common denominator. Seniority rules and rigid contracts protect the weakest performers while holding back those who deliver results for kids.   

Teacher salaries have remained flat over the past half-century when adjusted for inflation. Union leaders fight to hire more staff because bigger headcounts mean more leverage, a larger voting bloc, and more dues-paying members. Those decisions come at a direct cost: less money available for the teachers already doing an outstanding job. The system rewards expansion over excellence.

A teacher exodus gives union bosses an incentive to focus on their members instead of political activism. Just as school choice competition incentivizes district officials to up their game, teacher choice gives unions a reason to put classrooms first or risk losing even more support.  

The old model forced teachers into one-size-fits-all representation that served union power more than classroom needs. The new, competitive landscape lets educators keep more of their money, secure better personal protections, and stay focused on what matters most: teaching kids.   

The teachers union cartel built its power on compulsion. Janus cracked that foundation. The Teacher Freedom Alliance and similar groups are finishing the job by offering a positive alternative. Educators now have real options, real protections, and real freedom.   

Teachers deserve better than a system that treats them as dues payers first and professionals second. They deserve the chance to keep their money, protect their careers on their own terms, and stay out of endless political fights. The exodus is underway. The monopoly is crumbling. Freedom is winning.  

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