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Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación

The National Educational Workers Union (Spanish: Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación, SNTE) is a trade union which represents teachers in Mexico. Its current Secretary-General and President is Alfonso Cepeda Salas.

SNTE
National Educational Workers Union
Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación
Founded1943
Location
Members
1.4million
President and General Secretary
Alfonso Cepeda Salas
AffiliationsEducation International
Websitesnte.org.mx

With over 1.4 million members, it is currently the largest teachers' union in the Americas and the largest union in Latin America. Formed in 1949, the SNTE is composed of local sections in each of Mexico's states. For much of its history, the SNTE has been a corporatist union allied with the long-ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and has been accused of having government-appointed charro leaders and anti-democratic tendencies. This resulted in a movement in the late 1970s and early 1980s in which sections from several states began demanding democratic reforms in the union structure. This movement resulted in the fall of SNTE leader Carlos Jongitud Barrios in 1989. He was replaced by Elba Esther Gordillo as president, a position she held until her arrest in late February 2013.

History edit

Origins edit

The SNTE has its roots in the struggle of teacher unions during the presidency of Porfirio Díaz, which violently suppressed all opposition. Teachers strikes in May 1919 and the strike of Veracruz in 1927 and 1928, established the need for an organisation. Both movements affected the construction and strengthening of the Mexican Confederation of Teachers.

With the building of opposition to the government, 1932 saw the formation of the Mexican Confederation of Teachers, and in 1934, the League of Education Workers (under the leadership of the Mexican Communist Party), the Workers' University and the National Federation of Education Workers. By 1935 the United Front was formed from the National Education Workers, culminating with the creation of the National Confederation of Education Workers, during a period of a huge boom in worker, peasant and popular union associations.

The SNTE began to consolidate from 1939, with the formation of various regionalised trade guilds and unions that were adhering to the Confederation of Mexican Workers (CTM), which in turn served as the labor sector of the PRI.

In 1936 the CTM supported the creation of the Union of Education Workers of the Mexican Republic (STERM Inter). From its foundation, it began to form the basis of a national educational system. But due to internal and external conflicts, the union began to splinter, forming the Revolutionary Front of Teachers (after the Mexican Union of Teachers and Education Workers).

A crisis created the emergence of SNATE, which also later created FRMM, STERM and FSTSE. Véjar Octavio Vazquez tried to unite the teachers from the top, but only managed further division. In April 1942, he agreed to a unity pact between SMMTE, SUNTE and STERM which created one national guild. With the support of CTM, the SNTE was created under the leadership of Luis Chavez Orozco, who remained in office for a year.

Corporatist era edit

During the administration of Adolfo Lopez Mateos, during the largest teachers strike in the first half of the 20th century, the government suppressed the strike, and consolidated all teacher representation under the SNTE. It was during the 1970's as well that archaeological site guards began to join the SNTE.[1]

In 1974, SNTE elected Carlos Jonguitud Barrios as its general secretary. A former elected member of PRI, whilst also serving as general director of the Institute for Social Security and Services for State Workers (ISSSTE) from 1976 until 1979, he promoted trade unionism through regular strikes.[2][3] As the union became more militant, in an audience with President Carlos Salinas de Gortari, the President demanded his resignation in 1989.[4]

Leadership of Elba Esther Gordillo: 1989 - 2013 edit

The President appointed as new SNTE general secretary Elba Esther Gordillo Morales, who after struggling under her successor Ernesto Zedillo as president, under the successor governments to the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) was able to wield the power of SNTE nationally far more effectively for the gain of the SNTE, and her own enrichment.[5]

After the election of Vicente Fox of the National Action Party (PAN) as president within the Alliance for Change, Gordillo became a personal friend and trusted adviser. As a result, she was herself ejected from PRI, and hence the union formed its own political party, the New Alliance Party (PANAL), with her daughter on the committee and with Rafael Ochoa Guzmán, the former SNTE general secretary, as the parties deputy and senator. The effect of SNTE and PANAL in the 2006 general election contributed to Felipe Calderón's victory, allowing Gordillo to negotiate further quotas of power during his administration.[5] As a result, Gordillo was made SNTE President for Life in 2008, at a conference where she presented each of the 57 regional deputies with their own personal Hummer H2.[5]

With Gordillo under increasing attack during the 2012 elections, accused by successive governments of stopping the advance of education reforms, the SNTE tried to form an alliance with the PRI, but this fell apart. New President Enrique Peña Nieto of the PRI proposed a series of educational reforms which were opposed by SNTE, but at the last minute before they were signed into legislation on the 25 February 2013, and eventually agreed by Gordillo and the SNTE.[5]

During her period in office, Gordillo became notorious for wearing luxury brands such as Hermès and Chanel. On 26 February, Gordillo was arrested by the Mexican authorities at the Toluca airport for allegedly embezzling $2 billion pesos ($156 million USD or €119 million euros) from the SNTE.[6][7] In a case laid out in court the next day by attorney general Jesús Murillo Karam, authorities alleged that although she claimed only to have earned 1.1m pesos (US$86,000) between 2009 and 2012, her expenditure included:[5]

  • $3.1 million USD at a Neiman Marcus department store in San Diego between March 2009 and January 2012.[8][9]
  • $2.0 million transferred to bank accounts in Switzerland and Liechtenstein in the name of a company 99% owned by Gordillo's mother. The company bought two properties with the money in California, including a US$1.7 million home in San Diego that she claims belongs to her mother and other family members.
  • Amassed a total of 10 properties
  • $1.4 million in transfers to a private jet company called Avemex
  • $17,260 to plastic surgery clinics in California

Objectives edit

From its formation, the STNE has presented the idea of a single trade union representing all educational workers across the country. Supported by its ties with the State and the Party of the Mexican Revolution (PRM), the SNTE became a pillar of the state, identified with nationalism and political hegemony, holding the unity of all workers in the country's education and the voice of business interests to the education authority. Currently, union members must pay one percent of their salary as union fees.[10]

The SNTE is recognized by the government in educational policy decisions as a group representing the interests of professional, technical, administrative and social labor in the education sector. It manifests itself in defense of the principles of Article 3 of the Constitution and supporting free and compulsory education provided by the State.[11]

The SNTE has been accused of indirectly benefiting the cartels against the federal government in the Mexican Drug War. A World Economic Forum report stated that Mexico invested, as of 2009, a relatively high 5.3 percent of its GDP in education, yet its primary education system ranks poorly. The WEF's report blames this underperformance on the SNTE's opposition to reforms which could increase the effectiveness of education funding.[12] This resulted in the appearance of the ninis (ni trabajan ni estudian, "neither work nor study"), an underclass of several million dropouts, of whom many ended up as combatants on the side of the cartels in the Mexican Drug War.[13][dubious ]

Organisation edit

The SNTE is composed of a National President; a General Secretariat Executive; Chartered, National Governing Bodies; Auxiliary Organizations; and Associations of Solidarity.[14] It is divided into 54 union delegations throughout Mexico.[15][16]

The union organisation and administration currently numbers over 53,000 workers, providing members with all services plus health and educational support.[17]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Holley-Kline, Sam (2022). "Archaeology, Wage Labor, and Kinship in Rural Mexico, 1934–1974". Ethnohistory. 69 (2): 197–221. doi:10.1215/00141801-9522189.
  2. ^ Cook, Maria Lorena (2004-05-04). Organizing Dissent. Penn State Press. pp. 72–. ISBN 978-0-271-02590-2. Retrieved 31 May 2011.
  3. ^ Warnock, John W. (1995). The other Mexico: the North American triangle completed. Black Rose Books Ltd. pp. 112–. ISBN 978-1-55164-028-0. Retrieved 31 May 2011.
  4. ^ de la Madrid, Ricardo Raphael. "La caída de Jonguitud". Nexos (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-02-22.
  5. ^ a b c d e Jo Tuckman (27 February 2013). "Elba Esther Gordillo accused of embezzlement". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 February 2013.
  6. ^ "Head of Mexico's powerful teachers' union detained". The Huffington Post. 26 February 2013. from the original on 12 June 2022. Retrieved 27 February 2013.
  7. ^ "Detienen a Elba Esther Gordillo por desvío de recursos". Univision (in Spanish). 26 February 2013. Retrieved 27 February 2013.
  8. ^ "Mexico teachers union head arrested". Agence France-Presse (AFP). Global Post. 27 February 2013. Retrieved 2013-02-27.
  9. ^ Archibold, Randall (27 February 2013). "Powerful Leader of Mexican Teachers' Union Arrested". New York Times. Retrieved 2013-02-27.
  10. ^ Góngora Sobreanes, J y Leyva Piña, M. A. (2007). El SNTE en su encrucijada: política o educación. México, Laboratorio de Políticas Públicas. pp 10-23.
  11. ^ Administrador. (2006). El sindicalismo magisterial. SNTE, Sección 18 Michoacán.
  12. ^ Ricardo Hausmann; Emilio Lozoya Austin & Irene Mia (2009). The Mexico Competitiveness Report 2009. World Economic Forum. p. 15.
  13. ^ Longmire, Sylvia (2011). Cartel: The Coming Invasion of Mexico's Drug Wars. Macmillan. pp. 103–104.
  14. ^ "SNTE".
  15. ^ "SNTE". SNTE.
  16. ^ "wenceslao.com.mx". www.wenceslao.com.mx.
  17. ^ "SNTE".

Further reading edit

  • Cortina, Regina. "Gender and Power in the Teacher's Union of Mexico." Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos (1990): 241–262.
  • Cortina, Regina. "Women as leaders in Mexican education." Comparative Education Review 33.3 (1989): 357–376.
  • Hecock, R. Douglas. "Democratization, education reform, and the Mexican Teachers' Union." Latin American Research Review 49.1 (2014): 62–82.
  • Larreguy, Horacio, Cesar E. Montiel Olea, and Pablo Querubin. "Political Brokers: Partisans or Agents? Evidence from the Mexican Teachers' Union." American Journal of Political Science 61.4 (2017): 877–891.
  • Lemus, María de la Luz Arriaga. "In Mexico, to defend education as a social right, we must fight for union democracy." The Global Assault on Teaching, Teachers, and their Unions Stories for Resistance. Palgrave Macmillan, New York, 2008. 221–226.
  • Levinson, Bradley A., Janet Blackwood, and Valerie Cross. "Recipients, agents, or partners?: The contradictions of teacher participation in Mexican secondary education reform." Journal of Educational Change 14.1 (2013): 1-27.
  • Street, Susan. "When politics becomes pedagogy: Oppositional discourse as policy in Mexican teachers’ struggles for union democracy." Policy as practice: Toward a comparative sociocultural analysis of educational policy 1 (2001): 145-166.
  • Torres, Carlos Alberto. "State corporatism, educational policies, and students’ and teachers’ movements in Mexico." Understanding educational reform in global context: Economy, ideology, and the state (1991): 115–150.

External links edit

  • Union website

sindicato, nacional, trabajadores, educación, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, book. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educacion news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2013 Learn how and when to remove this message The National Educational Workers Union Spanish Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educacion SNTE is a trade union which represents teachers in Mexico Its current Secretary General and President is Alfonso Cepeda Salas SNTENational Educational Workers UnionSindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la EducacionFounded1943LocationMexicoMembers1 4millionPresident and General SecretaryAlfonso Cepeda SalasAffiliationsEducation InternationalWebsitesnte wbr org wbr mx With over 1 4 million members it is currently the largest teachers union in the Americas and the largest union in Latin America Formed in 1949 the SNTE is composed of local sections in each of Mexico s states For much of its history the SNTE has been a corporatist union allied with the long ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party PRI and has been accused of having government appointed charro leaders and anti democratic tendencies This resulted in a movement in the late 1970s and early 1980s in which sections from several states began demanding democratic reforms in the union structure This movement resulted in the fall of SNTE leader Carlos Jongitud Barrios in 1989 He was replaced by Elba Esther Gordillo as president a position she held until her arrest in late February 2013 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Corporatist era 1 3 Leadership of Elba Esther Gordillo 1989 2013 2 Objectives 3 Organisation 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory editOrigins edit The SNTE has its roots in the struggle of teacher unions during the presidency of Porfirio Diaz which violently suppressed all opposition Teachers strikes in May 1919 and the strike of Veracruz in 1927 and 1928 established the need for an organisation Both movements affected the construction and strengthening of the Mexican Confederation of Teachers With the building of opposition to the government 1932 saw the formation of the Mexican Confederation of Teachers and in 1934 the League of Education Workers under the leadership of the Mexican Communist Party the Workers University and the National Federation of Education Workers By 1935 the United Front was formed from the National Education Workers culminating with the creation of the National Confederation of Education Workers during a period of a huge boom in worker peasant and popular union associations The SNTE began to consolidate from 1939 with the formation of various regionalised trade guilds and unions that were adhering to the Confederation of Mexican Workers CTM which in turn served as the labor sector of the PRI In 1936 the CTM supported the creation of the Union of Education Workers of the Mexican Republic STERM Inter From its foundation it began to form the basis of a national educational system But due to internal and external conflicts the union began to splinter forming the Revolutionary Front of Teachers after the Mexican Union of Teachers and Education Workers A crisis created the emergence of SNATE which also later created FRMM STERM and FSTSE Vejar Octavio Vazquez tried to unite the teachers from the top but only managed further division In April 1942 he agreed to a unity pact between SMMTE SUNTE and STERM which created one national guild With the support of CTM the SNTE was created under the leadership of Luis Chavez Orozco who remained in office for a year Corporatist era edit During the administration of Adolfo Lopez Mateos during the largest teachers strike in the first half of the 20th century the government suppressed the strike and consolidated all teacher representation under the SNTE It was during the 1970 s as well that archaeological site guards began to join the SNTE 1 In 1974 SNTE elected Carlos Jonguitud Barrios as its general secretary A former elected member of PRI whilst also serving as general director of the Institute for Social Security and Services for State Workers ISSSTE from 1976 until 1979 he promoted trade unionism through regular strikes 2 3 As the union became more militant in an audience with President Carlos Salinas de Gortari the President demanded his resignation in 1989 4 Leadership of Elba Esther Gordillo 1989 2013 edit Main article Elba Esther Gordillo The President appointed as new SNTE general secretary Elba Esther Gordillo Morales who after struggling under her successor Ernesto Zedillo as president under the successor governments to the Institutional Revolutionary Party PRI was able to wield the power of SNTE nationally far more effectively for the gain of the SNTE and her own enrichment 5 After the election of Vicente Fox of the National Action Party PAN as president within the Alliance for Change Gordillo became a personal friend and trusted adviser As a result she was herself ejected from PRI and hence the union formed its own political party the New Alliance Party PANAL with her daughter on the committee and with Rafael Ochoa Guzman the former SNTE general secretary as the parties deputy and senator The effect of SNTE and PANAL in the 2006 general election contributed to Felipe Calderon s victory allowing Gordillo to negotiate further quotas of power during his administration 5 As a result Gordillo was made SNTE President for Life in 2008 at a conference where she presented each of the 57 regional deputies with their own personal Hummer H2 5 With Gordillo under increasing attack during the 2012 elections accused by successive governments of stopping the advance of education reforms the SNTE tried to form an alliance with the PRI but this fell apart New President Enrique Pena Nieto of the PRI proposed a series of educational reforms which were opposed by SNTE but at the last minute before they were signed into legislation on the 25 February 2013 and eventually agreed by Gordillo and the SNTE 5 During her period in office Gordillo became notorious for wearing luxury brands such as Hermes and Chanel On 26 February Gordillo was arrested by the Mexican authorities at the Toluca airport for allegedly embezzling 2 billion pesos 156 million USD or 119 million euros from the SNTE 6 7 In a case laid out in court the next day by attorney general Jesus Murillo Karam authorities alleged that although she claimed only to have earned 1 1m pesos US 86 000 between 2009 and 2012 her expenditure included 5 3 1 million USD at a Neiman Marcus department store in San Diego between March 2009 and January 2012 8 9 2 0 million transferred to bank accounts in Switzerland and Liechtenstein in the name of a company 99 owned by Gordillo s mother The company bought two properties with the money in California including a US 1 7 million home in San Diego that she claims belongs to her mother and other family members Amassed a total of 10 properties 1 4 million in transfers to a private jet company called Avemex 17 260 to plastic surgery clinics in CaliforniaObjectives editFrom its formation the STNE has presented the idea of a single trade union representing all educational workers across the country Supported by its ties with the State and the Party of the Mexican Revolution PRM the SNTE became a pillar of the state identified with nationalism and political hegemony holding the unity of all workers in the country s education and the voice of business interests to the education authority Currently union members must pay one percent of their salary as union fees 10 The SNTE is recognized by the government in educational policy decisions as a group representing the interests of professional technical administrative and social labor in the education sector It manifests itself in defense of the principles of Article 3 of the Constitution and supporting free and compulsory education provided by the State 11 The SNTE has been accused of indirectly benefiting the cartels against the federal government in the Mexican Drug War A World Economic Forum report stated that Mexico invested as of 2009 a relatively high 5 3 percent of its GDP in education yet its primary education system ranks poorly The WEF s report blames this underperformance on the SNTE s opposition to reforms which could increase the effectiveness of education funding 12 This resulted in the appearance of the ninis ni trabajan ni estudian neither work nor study an underclass of several million dropouts of whom many ended up as combatants on the side of the cartels in the Mexican Drug War 13 dubious discuss Organisation editThe SNTE is composed of a National President a General Secretariat Executive Chartered National Governing Bodies Auxiliary Organizations and Associations of Solidarity 14 It is divided into 54 union delegations throughout Mexico 15 16 The union organisation and administration currently numbers over 53 000 workers providing members with all services plus health and educational support 17 See also editEducation in MexicoReferences edit Holley Kline Sam 2022 Archaeology Wage Labor and Kinship in Rural Mexico 1934 1974 Ethnohistory 69 2 197 221 doi 10 1215 00141801 9522189 Cook Maria Lorena 2004 05 04 Organizing Dissent Penn State Press pp 72 ISBN 978 0 271 02590 2 Retrieved 31 May 2011 Warnock John W 1995 The other Mexico the North American triangle completed Black Rose Books Ltd pp 112 ISBN 978 1 55164 028 0 Retrieved 31 May 2011 de la Madrid Ricardo Raphael La caida de Jonguitud Nexos in Spanish Retrieved 2022 02 22 a b c d e Jo Tuckman 27 February 2013 Elba Esther Gordillo accused of embezzlement The Guardian Retrieved 27 February 2013 Head of Mexico s powerful teachers union detained The Huffington Post 26 February 2013 Archived from the original on 12 June 2022 Retrieved 27 February 2013 Detienen a Elba Esther Gordillo por desvio de recursos Univision in Spanish 26 February 2013 Retrieved 27 February 2013 Mexico teachers union head arrested Agence France Presse AFP Global Post 27 February 2013 Retrieved 2013 02 27 Archibold Randall 27 February 2013 Powerful Leader of Mexican Teachers Union Arrested New York Times Retrieved 2013 02 27 Gongora Sobreanes J y Leyva Pina M A 2007 El SNTE en su encrucijada politica o educacion Mexico Laboratorio de Politicas Publicas pp 10 23 Administrador 2006 El sindicalismo magisterial SNTE Seccion 18 Michoacan Ricardo Hausmann Emilio Lozoya Austin amp Irene Mia 2009 The Mexico Competitiveness Report 2009 World Economic Forum p 15 Longmire Sylvia 2011 Cartel The Coming Invasion of Mexico s Drug Wars Macmillan pp 103 104 SNTE SNTE SNTE wenceslao com mx www wenceslao com mx SNTE Further reading editCortina Regina Gender and Power in the Teacher s Union of Mexico Mexican Studies Estudios Mexicanos 1990 241 262 Cortina Regina Women as leaders in Mexican education Comparative Education Review 33 3 1989 357 376 Hecock R Douglas Democratization education reform and the Mexican Teachers Union Latin American Research Review 49 1 2014 62 82 Larreguy Horacio Cesar E Montiel Olea and Pablo Querubin Political Brokers Partisans or Agents Evidence from the Mexican Teachers Union American Journal of Political Science 61 4 2017 877 891 Lemus Maria de la Luz Arriaga In Mexico to defend education as a social right we must fight for union democracy The Global Assault on Teaching Teachers and their Unions Stories for Resistance Palgrave Macmillan New York 2008 221 226 Levinson Bradley A Janet Blackwood and Valerie Cross Recipients agents or partners The contradictions of teacher participation in Mexican secondary education reform Journal of Educational Change 14 1 2013 1 27 Street Susan When politics becomes pedagogy Oppositional discourse as policy in Mexican teachers struggles for union democracy Policy as practice Toward a comparative sociocultural analysis of educational policy 1 2001 145 166 Torres Carlos Alberto State corporatism educational policies and students and teachers movements in Mexico Understanding educational reform in global context Economy ideology and the state 1991 115 150 External links editUnion website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educacion amp oldid 1208505117, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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