FYI - Change.org may be kosher again.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/19/changeorg-michelle-rhee_n_1610760.html?1340155014
Change.org Drops Michelle Rhee Group Under Pressure From
Progressives
Posted: 06/19/2012 9:16 pm Updated: 06/19/2012 9:26
pm
WASHINGTON -- In a surprising reversal, Change.org, the progressive
online powerhouse that channels grassroots energy into petition-based
activism, has dropped two anti-union clients, including Michelle Rhee's
StudentsFirst, according to multiple sources familiar with the decision.
The move comes after intense pressure from the labor movement and other
progressive allies, who accused the for-profit company of betraying its
liberal roots by partnering with Rhee, the former head of Washington,
D.C., public schools, and the similarly aligned group Stand for Children
headed by education advocate Jonah Edelman. The ouster of StudentsFirst
and Stand for Children was confirmed by a Change.org spokesman.
Leaders of Rhee's group were outraged. "We're surprised at their
decision," Nancy Zuckerbrod, spokeswoman for StudentsFirst, told
HuffPost. "When we spoke to them this afternoon, they couldn't point
to a single one of our petitions on their site that violated either the
terms of use or spirit of their organization. Not a single one. In fact,
they said they agreed that much of the work of our members were in line
with the progressive values of the organization. And it's clear that the
Change.org community does as well, as tens of thousands of them signed
our petitions fighting for the civil rights of all children to receive a
high-quality education. For instance, more than 47,000 people signed our
petition in support of the Dream Act, compared to fewer than 4,000 who
signed the heavily organized protest petition on a different site against
Stand for Children."
Change.org's meteoric rise has included a host of glowing profiles and
the
Time magazine stamp of approval when it named CEO and founder
Ben Rattray one of the
100 most influential people in the world. It is staffed by some of
the most talented progressive organizers in the country -- many of whom
are well known and liked in the tight-knit liberal community, making the
feud that much more bitter. And Edelman is the son of liberal champions
Marian
Wright Edelman and
Peter Edelman.
StudentsFirst and Stand for Children oppose teachers unions as obstacles
to education reform, and advocate on behalf of tying teacher pay to test
scores and other student metrics. Change.org started working with Rhee's
Students First in March 2011, five months after her resignation as
Washington's public schools chancellor, and with Jonah Edelman's Stand
for Children in October 2011.
Rhee's group, aware of its reputation as an enemy of organized labor, has
consistently avoided activism around union issues on Change.org's
platform, focusing instead on immigration reform, anti-bullying, and
other issues that resonate with progressives and don't alienate labor.
Labor officials and other Washington-based liberal activists have, over
the course of the last year, been publicly and privately pressing
Change.org to draw a line that refuses business from anti-union groups,
just as it currently rejects business from organizations with an
anti-immigrant or anti-gay bias. They made little progress until Stand
for Children launched an anti-union petition.
It was Change.org's
recent controversial petition, criticizing the Chicago Teachers�
Union vote two weeks ago to authorize a strike in the fall, that set off
the current firestorm of protest. The letter, sent to the Chicago Board
of Education and CTU President Karen Lewis, was authored by the Illinois
chapter of Stand for Children:
- 400,000 Chicago students could be locked out of Chicago classrooms
because contract negotiations are starting to break down, causing a
premature strike-authorization vote to occur before anyone knows what is
in the contract proposal. We strongly call for all parties to bargain in
good faith to reach a new agreement. Don�t hold our students hostage in a
negotiation where they have no voice!
The petition
provoked a barrage of responses, with Chicago teacher Jennifer Jones
drafting a letter on a MoveOn.org-affiliated site, SignOn.org, to the
founder of Change.org, demanding that the website �Stop Supporting
Union-Busters.� Jones� letter has collected roughly 4,000 signatures.
MoveOn.org has used the controversy to promote its own petition project,
which it notes is nonprofit and doesn't face the same pressures as a
private company. (Change.org, despite its URL, is a for-profit company.)
"We�re nonprofit, and we can�t be bought. SignOn.org is entirely
funded by small donations from our members. And unlike other petition
sites, we never promote petitions because someone paid us to -- we only
promote the petitions that MoveOn members support," reads
SignOn.org's mission
statement, which MoveOn has been flogging to the progressive
community.
The Washington-based progressive community has been attacking Change.org
both publicly and privately. "For Change.org to claim to be a
progressive organization or support the progressive movement while
soliciting and accepting cash from corporate front groups is, at best,
disingenuous," Aniello Alioto, national political director for
ProgressNow, told HuffPost before the decision to drop Rhee was
disclosed.
John Aravosis, who writes the pro-gay-rights AMERICABlog.com, said that
Change.org, despite its petition-based strategy, is still a political
consulting firm -- a reality that liberals ought to recognize. "I'm
glad they're not allowing anti-gay campaigns, but why allow
anti-union?" Aravosis said. "You just don't do that. Big, evil
consulting firms that liberals attack all the time do that. The netroots
has found itself in bed with a typical old Washington organization that
plays both sides, except they're built by the netroots, and we're
supposed to be better than that."
Change.org leaders, for their part, said they think some of the outrage
resulted from a misunderstanding of the company's goal, which is not to
spread American-style progressive values around the globe, but rather to
empower as many people as possible under the theory that the world will
be better as a result. By not embracing American progressivism, the
company said it hopes to make its platform more welcoming to people
around the globe who might see such an association as imperialist or
anti-Muslim.
"At the heart of Change.org mission is an open, democratic
philosophy: we believe our platform should be open to people from a range
of viewpoints who share a common interest in changing their world for the
better. It is in that spirit that we agreed to accept Stand for Children
as a client," Change.org spokesman Benjamin Joffe-Walt told
HuffPost. "In the last few days, we have listened closely to the
community of Change.org users, who have voiced their concerns in response
to this decision. After careful consideration, we have agreed to end the
contract with Stand for Children, and the petition is now
closed.
"At Change.org, we believe in open dialogue, and we try to listen as
we grow. We appreciate that the broader Change.org community cares enough
about our company to weigh in, foster discussion, and directly share
their points of view with us. We're going to to pursue our strategy of
empowering people around the world and are looking forward to tackling
the difficult questions that all organizations face as they
grow."
Zuckerbrod, of StudentsFirst, said that Change.org officials told the
organization bluntly that the progressive pressure drove the
decision.
"Instead of making this decision based on values and principles,
they pointed to a number of business and operational factors with their
high-value partners who were pressuring them to take this step,"
Zuckerbrod said. "We believe this is an unfortunate decision on
their part, and we imagine a disconcerting one for progressives --
whether they agree with the work we are doing or not -- that instead of
standing by their principles, Change.org is standing by their
pocketbook.
"It�s the wrong decision -- and those are the wrong priorities --
but our million-plus grassroots members will continue to fight for the
civil rights of children no matter what obstacles the status quo puts in
front of us," Zuckerbrod continued. "As for Change.org -- we'll
leave the anti-bullying petition we started up for their
review."
Cole Stangler contributed reporting.