The 2024 presidential election defined this year鈥檚 American Federation of Teachers convention as a host of speakers, including Vice President Kamala Harris, called on the nation鈥檚 second-largest teachers鈥 union to rally behind Democrats in November.
The biennial convention, which took place here last week, was the 1.8 million-member union鈥檚 opportunity to bring 3,500 delegate teachers, paraprofessionals, university professors, nurses, and other federal and state employees together to vote on a slate of resolutions and elect their governing council.
But this year鈥檚 convention, which kicked off the day President Joe Biden announced the end of his reelection campaign and endorsed Harris to replace him, focused primarily on the upcoming presidential election.
Here are some key events from the union鈥檚 five-day convention.
1. AFT becomes first union to endorse Harris for president
Just hours after Biden announced his departure from the race, the AFT executive council, which had already endorsed the president for reelection, met to determine next steps.
It was a 鈥渘o-brainer鈥 to shift the union鈥檚 endorsement to Harris, said AFT President Randi Weingarten, who previously pushed back against calls for Biden to step down after his poor debate performance in June launched a flurry of conversations about his age and ability to beat former President Donald Trump.
鈥淚f his vice president was willing to take up the baton and run with it, why wouldn鈥檛 you go with his vice president?鈥 Weingarten said in an interview with 澳门跑狗论坛. 鈥淲hy would you go with somebody who wasn鈥檛 part of the administration?鈥
The convention鈥檚 delegates ultimately agreed with AFT leaders, voting unanimously to ratify on Monday, July 22.
Harris herself visited the convention on July 25, just days after becoming the likely Democratic nominee, denouncing 鈥渆xtremist鈥 conservative efforts to cut education funding and restrict instruction on certain topics in schools. She spoke about her own 1st grade teacher and the role she played in shaping the vice president鈥檚 career.
鈥淵ou see the potential of every child,鈥 Harris said. 鈥淵ou foster it, you encourage it, and in so doing you shape the future of our nation, which is why I say we need you so desperately right now.鈥
2. AFT leaders paint Project 2025 as dangerous and extreme
The convention was as much an opportunity to endorse Harris as it was to denounce Trump, the GOP鈥檚 official platform, and Project 2025, an expansive conservative policy agenda created by the Heritage Foundation and a number of former Trump administration officials and Trump allies.
Project 2025, from which Trump has tried to distance himself, calls for the elimination of the U.S. Department of Education, phasing out Title I funding, expanding private school choice, and drastically scaling back the federal role in education. The GOP鈥檚 official platform, which party delegates approved at their July convention, also calls for the elimination of the Education Department and universal school choice.
In speeches and panels throughout the convention, Weingarten and other union leaders called Project 2025 鈥渆xtremist,鈥 taking issue with proposals in the 900-page document to rescind the congressional charter for the National Education Association and limit union bargaining power in the public sector as well as its education policy recommendations.
鈥淲e are truly at a crossroads in this moment,鈥 Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, who was a teacher and union organizer with the Chicago Teachers Union before his election as mayor last year, said in a speech. 鈥淎nd while we base our movement in faith, our enemies base theirs in fear.鈥
The delegates at the convention passed two resolutions about Trump and Project 2025, is a 鈥渞oad map for how a new, far-right, anti-democratic presidential administration can concentrate power and authority and override the checks and balances outlined in our Constitution without congressional approval.鈥
3. Delegates pass resolutions addressing AI and 鈥渙ver-testing鈥
In total, convention delegates passed 44 resolutions on topics ranging from artificial intelligence to better working conditions for paraprofessionals.
In a , the union called for 鈥渢ransparency, accountability, corporate responsibility, respect for intellectual property and creative outputs, and the protection of workers鈥 rights and privacy鈥 to be considered as AI continues to develop and as it鈥檚 used in classrooms and other workplaces. It also states that the union will work with policymakers, technology developers, educational institutions, and other organizations to 鈥渆stablish clear, ethical guidelines and standards for the use of AI and social media within educational, governmental and healthcare settings.鈥
The resolution mirrors an AI policy statement the NEA approved at its representative assembly in Philadelphia earlier in July, which the union released alongside guidance for educators in using AI.
Another resolution called on policymakers and school leaders to The issue was especially important to Weingarten, who said in her opening speech on July 22 that federal standardized testing doesn鈥檛 capture the full picture of student learning. Teachers鈥 unions have long criticized standardized tests and their expansion under federal policy.
In an interview, Weingarten said she鈥檇 like to see the federal government prioritize 鈥渆xperiential learning,鈥 in which students are measured on their mastery of concepts and skills like critical thinking, over standardized test scores in evaluating schools鈥 and teachers鈥 performance.
鈥淚f it鈥檚 only about reading and math scores, then it means you鈥檙e not teaching kids context, you鈥檙e not teaching reason, you鈥檙e not teaching critical thinking, you鈥檙e not doing relationship-building,鈥 Weingarten said.
The union also passed a resolution calling on Congress to pass a U.S. Senate resolution introduced last November that calls for paraprofessionals and education support staff to 鈥渂e compensated at a rate that is a livable, competitive wage,鈥 and to have access to health care benefits and paid leave. The resolution, which wouldn鈥檛 have direct policy implications, has not made it through the Senate.
4. Delegates call for a ceasefire in Gaza after heated debate
One of the most hotly debated resolutions at the convention wasn鈥檛 directly related to education at all. For over an hour, delegates went back and forth on to the conflict between Israel and Palestine.
Those who supported the resolution, including Weingarten, who joined delegates on the convention floor to speak in favor, said it was important for the union to advocate for peace in the Israel-Hamas war. Opponents argued the resolution should be amended to further denounce Israel鈥檚 role.
The proponents ultimately won out, but the debate showcased how the Israel-Hamas war has so commonly bred division.
Earlier this month, protestors gathered outside the NEA鈥檚 representative assembly to protest the Israel-Hamas war and its toll on Gaza. Protestors called on the NEA to adopt over a dozen new business items dedicated to the issue, but none were considered on the convention floor.
5. Weingarten wins re-election
Weingarten, who has served as AFT鈥檚 president since 2008 and has been a prominent voice鈥攁nd Republican bogeyman鈥攊n national education debates, won reelection for another term, which lasts two years.
Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called her 鈥渢he most dangerous person in the world鈥 in 2022, and Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives accused Weingarten during a hearing last year of conspiring with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to keep schools closed during the pandemic.
鈥淭here clearly is something about what we do that鈥檚 working, because we have been vilified鈥擨 have been vilified in particular鈥攂y the extreme right wing for the last two years relentlessly,鈥 Weingarten said.