CTU

Chicago Teachers Union Spent $1.5M on Lobbying: Report

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Students march with members of Service Employees International Union (SEIU) and Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) in downtown Chicago on October 14, 2019. CTU and SEIU members, totaling 35,000 workers, are preparing to strike on October 17 if contract negotiations with the city are not finalized. (Photo by Max Herman/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

The Chicago Teachers Union spent almost $1.5 million on political activity including lobbying, in the months leading up to a two-week strike in the fall, according to a published report.

The money, spent between March 2018 and July 2019, was in addition to $1.2 million the union's two political action committees gave to candidates and political organizations, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

The newspaper reviewed tax and campaign-finance filings, along with documents the union had to file for the first time with the U.S. Department of Labor.

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot tells reporters that Chicago Public Schools and the Chicago Teachers Union have reached a deal to end the teachers strike.

The money came from dues collected from roughly 24,000 members. Union members pay a flat $55.85 in dues per pay period, according to the Sun-Times.

Some union members have questioned how their dues are spent on political candidates. The union put $215,000 into Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle's unsuccessful bid for Chicago mayor.

Jennifer Johnson, the CTU’s chief of staff, said the union's work is “inherently political,” though members can decide if their dues go to the union's political action committees.

“We’re fighting for public education in a sphere where public education is under the realm of the mayor, who is an elected political leader,” Johnson said. “So you can’t just parse the work that simply.”

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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