Eskelsen Keynotes WEAC-R's Annual Conference
 |
NEA Secretary-Treasurer Lily Eskelsen speaks
to members during the WEAC-Retired conference May 14. |
NEA
Secretary-Treasurer Lily Eskelsen focused on the Bush administration's
agenda to privatize public services like Social Security, Medicare and
public education during her keynote address at the WEAC-Retired conference
May 14 in Wisconsin Dells.
"It's déjà voodoo all over again," Eskelsen
said of the privatization agenda, using a reference to George Herbert
Walker Bush's 1980 criticism of Ronald Reagan's supply-side economics
policy. "Some essential services don't fit a private model."
Eskelsen said Bush's federal tax cuts left less money for states to
adequately fund public education. With the implementation of the Elementary
and Secondary Education Act — sometimes referred to as the "No
Child Left Behind" law — states are facing severe budget
crises.
Because ESEA imposes sanctions on schools that fail to demonstrate
adequate yearly progress on the required standardized tests, districts
are choosing to cut music, art and vocational classes and have larger
class sizes, she said. "If it's not on the test, it's in jeopardy."
Bush's strategy, according to Eskelsen, is to reduce the quality of
public education until taxpayers are so dissatisfied that they resent
paying taxes for schools and demand further cuts. Then, proponents of
privatization "identify government as the problem and offer a solution:
privatization," she said.
Eskelsen said the privatization agenda is also at work in the country's
Social Security and Medicare systems.
The Social Security system is under increasing pressure as Baby Boomers
reach retirement age, Eskelsen said. "In 25 years, if we do nothing,
there will not be enough money from payroll taxes to cover Social Security
benefits."
To strengthen Social Security, Bush has proposed diverting a portion
of money collected in payroll taxes to private accounts. "Privatization
does nothing to prepare for the Boomers," Eskelsen said. "It
drains the fund."
Instead, she said, Bush's proposal benefits financial advisors who
charge fees to investors to help them privately invest Social Security
dollars. "Privatization destroys Social Security, and that's the
plan."
Eskelsen said pharmaceutical companies were the big winners under Bush's
Medicare Prescription Drug Act, which became law in December 2003. The
act provides prescription drug coverage to Medicare subscribers, but
prohibits Medicare from negotiating lower drug prices with pharmaceutical
companies.
Eskelsen urged WEAC-Retired members to get involved to prevent the
privatization agenda from further damaging public services. "We
have got to move like it matters," she said. "Because it does."
"If you decide in your hearts and minds that you are going to
change hearts and minds, you will."
Posted May 17, 2004