AMERICA’S HYPERPOLITICIZED TEACHERS UNIONS. About 70% of the nation’s public school teachers belong to a union or employees’ association. The two largest teachers unions, the National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers, together represent about 4.7 million members. Politically, according to a study by Pew Research, about 58% of public school K-12 teachers identify with or lean toward the Democratic Party, compared to about 35% who identify with or lean toward the Republican Party.
Last year, NEA President Rebecca Pringle told a Philadelphia public radio station that her organization’s membership is “nearly evenly split between Democrats, Republicans, and independents.” Whether that is true or not, we’ve known for a long time that the union’s leadership does not reflect the diversity of its membership. It donates the vast majority of the organization’s money to liberal, progressive, and Democratic causes and candidates. A new compilation of data shows just how much.
Defending Education is a group that says it seeks to free schools “from activists imposing harmful agendas” and to “fight indoctrination in classrooms and on campus to promote the reestablishment of a quality, non-political education for all students.” Recently, it released an accounting of $43,524,125 donated to left-wing causes by the NEA and AFT in two years, from July 1, 2022, to July 30, 2024.
Starting with the biggest numbers, the NEA contributed $9,500,000 to the State Engagement Fund, an organization that in turn parcels out the money among progressive groups. NEA also contributed $6,950,000 to the For Our Future Action Fund, a liberal political action committee focused on electing Democrats in the key states of Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Nevada, and Florida. AFT contributed an additional $2,350,000 to the fund, for a total of $9,300,000 between the groups for Democratic candidates in those states.
The money, of course, came from the dues of teachers belonging to the unions.
The NEA gave $2,415,000 to Protect Our Schools KY, an organization that fights Republican education reforms in the Bluegrass State. NEA gave $620,000 to the Democracy Alliance, another left-wing pass-through that distributes money to progressive groups.
The NEA gave $500,000 to the Hopewell Fund, $500,000 to the Color of Change Education Fund (AFT gave another $100,000), $500,000 to Defend Our Constitution (AFT gave another $150,000), $500,000 to the Center for American Progress (AFT gave another $200,000), $500,000 to Future Forward USA Action (AFT gave another $250,000), and $645,000 to the State Power Action Fund.
To take one example, if you haven’t heard of the Hopewell Fund, it is a nonprofit group associated with Arabella Advisors, a notorious “dark money” network for Democratic causes. (The nation’s largest charity, the Gates Foundation, recently cut ties with Arabella Advisors.) The Hopewell Fund, according to the monitoring group Influence Watch, “primarily exists to sponsor a number of ‘fake’ groups: websites designed to look like standalone nonprofits … [that] typically exist to effect an issue advocacy campaign pushing left-wing policies and may disappear after the campaign is finished.”
If you did not recognize Future Forward, it was the biggest political action committee for the Joe Biden reelection campaign and, after Biden withdrew, the Kamala Harris presidential campaign.
Defend Our Constitution, for its national-sounding name, is actually an Alaska group dedicated to stopping Republican initiatives in that state. According to Influence Watch, its top three contributors are the Sixteen Thirty Fund, which the New York Times called a “cryptically named entity that has served as a clearinghouse of undisclosed cash for the left”; the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees; and the National Education Association.
Speaking of the Sixteen Thirty fund, AFT gave the group $175,000, and NEA gave it $325,000.
AFT gave $1,600,000 to the House Majority PAC, which seeks Democratic control of the House, and $1,250,000 to the Senate Majority PAC, which seeks Democratic control of the Senate.
AFT gave $870,000 to a group called Red Wine and Blue, which is involved in many left-wing political causes. AFT gave $100,000, and NEA gave $85,000, to Al Sharpton’s National Action Network, which is involved in promoting Sharpton.
NEA gave $30,000 to GLSEN, which used to be known as the Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Network but now just goes by GLSEN. NEA gave $60,000 to the LGBT organization Human Rights Campaign, and $29,250 to something called Gender Inclusivity, which appears to refer to a company called Gender Inc., which says it seeks to “create a gender-sensitive and inclusive environment supportive of the transgender community.”
The Defending Education report includes many other lefty organizations to which the nation’s top two teachers unions have contributed. And the $43,524,125 listed in the report is not the entire amount the unions spent on political and ideological causes. But you get the idea. The report is not a surprise, and this kind of spending has been going on for years. Still, it is stunning to confront the hyperpoliticized priorities of unions that are supposedly devoted to education.