Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
How Germany handles teacher strikes
How Germany handles teacher strikes
May 13, 2025 1:39 AM

As the U.S. school year wound to a close, teachers unions waged statewide strikes in West Virginia, Arizona, and Oklahoma, and inspired associated teacher strikes in Colorado, Kentucky, and North Carolina. The walkouts, celebrated by the media as the “Red State Revolt,” received adulatory media coverage despite keeping millions of children out of school for bined total of more than a month.

From across the Atlantic, the social democracy of Germany offered a much different response to teacher strikes. This week, its high court reaffirmed that the German constitution bans labor stoppages by public servants.

Four teachers – supported by the teachers unions German Education Union (GEW) and the Federation of German Trade Unions (DGB) – argued that being disciplined for illegally taking part in a strike violates the European Convention on Human Rights.

On Tuesday, Germany’s Federal Constitutional Court ruled that public servants (Beamte or Beamtinnen in German) cannot strike, because it violates the very nature of service. “A right to strike for civil sector workers … would undermine [the] fundamental principles” of civil service, said Andreas Voßkuhle, president of the court.

Roughly three-quarters of the nation’s 800,000 teachers are classified as public servants – and public servants are to have a higher loyalty than other employees. As Ciarán Lyng, who worked for a government union before taking a post in the Irish government, explains:

The original idea behind civil servants was developed as part of the “enlightened monarchical rule” as practiced in 18th century Prussia and other German states. The idea was that whoever represents the state by doing official duties that only the state may legally provide (hoheitliche Aufgaben), such as issuing official documents, teaching state-approved curricula to students, preaching in state-approved churches, wielding lethal power in the name of the state, or making any other kind of official decisions, should have a special kind of employment with the state – an employment marked by a higher-than-normal degree of loyalty. Ideally, that loyalty works in both directions, with the Beamte having a special duty of serving (Dienstpflicht) that goes beyond the merely economic self-interest of the salaried worker, and the state having a special duty of seeing to their welfare (Fürsorgepflicht) that likewise goes beyond what would be expected of mercial employer.

As part of this arrangement, German public servants receive benefits private-sector employees do not enjoy, “most importantly, the virtual impossibility of losing one’s job – basically, the state may transfer Beamte who do not perform well to other, often less desirable, posts, but may only terminate employment entirely in cases of serious disciplinary issues.”

In return, Germany denies Beamte the right to strike to assure “public administration on a federal, state, and local level remain functional and cannot be ‘incapacitated’ during a strike.”

President Franklin D. Roosevelt shared these sentiments. FDR opposed collective bargaining for public sector employees, especially direct action like strikes. “Particularly, I want to emphasize my conviction that militant tactics have no place in the functions of any organization of Government employees,” he wrote to a union official in 1937. “Such action, looking toward the paralysis of Government by those who have sworn to support it, is unthinkable and intolerable.”

One can easily imagine how he would have responded had that “paralysis” included grinding education to a halt.

FDR may have had the German model in mind when he sketched the ideal relationship of government employees to the workplace. But 81 years after his letter, the United States has the worst hybrid of bureaucracy. The taxpayer has provided government employees with better-than-average benefits and job security, but with no mitment by those employed not to strike.

In some states teachers’ legal protections trump, not just students’ education, but their physical well-being. A new bill would give the Delaware Education Department power to suspend teachers’ licenses “if they are arrested or indicted by a grand jury for a violent felony, or where there is a clear and immediate danger to student safety or welfare,” local media report. Lawmakers cited specific examples of teachers keeping their licenses, or continuing to work in state schools, although they are a menace to students, including a teacher who shoved an autistic child and a man accused of inappropriately touching girls’ thighs and making ments.

Such “job security” is so generous as to be lethal. If criminals and miscreants remain eligible to teach, can the profession be said to need greater employment protections?

People of faith should be concerned about teacher strikes in part because we strive for peace and social harmony. Strikes are by nature divisive, stir discontent, and are sometimes physically violent. When John the Baptist confronted public servants of his day, he told them, “Do violence to no man, neither accuse any falsely; and be content with your wages” (St. Luke 3:14).

Pope Leo XIII in Rerum Novarum regards strikes as something to be lamented rather than celebrated. Such a “grave inconvenience” as the “paralysing of labor not only affects the masters and their work people alike, but is extremely injurious to trade and to the general interests of the public.”

Teacher strikes are especially grievous, since they deny young people an education, which teacher unions always present as the highest social good. TheCatechism of the Catholic Churchteaches that a strike es morally unacceptable” when it is “contrary to mon good.”

Does the “grave inconvenience” of denying children an education for days or weeks serve mon good? The German high court has rendered its verdict.

Silvercloud / Shutterstock. For editorial use only.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Holodomor
——————– Start of message from list: eni-summary ——– Ecumenical News International News Highlights 24 November 2008 Ukrainian church marks 20th century ‘genocide’ Russia disputes Warsaw (ENI). Ukraine’s largest Orthodox church has marked the anniversary of an early 1930s’ Soviet-engineered famine, in which millions died, by describing it for the first time as an “act of genocide”, a description rejected by the Russian government. “A crime like this could only happen in an environment hateful of God and man,” the holy...
The Pope’s Economic ‘Prophecy’
Linked yesterday on the Drudge Report and picked up by news outlets all over the world is a brief Bloomberg report on a statement from the Italian Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti. Tremonti attributed to Pope Benedict XVI a “prophecy” dating from over twenty years ago concerning the current global financial meltdown. Again, the story is quite brief, and here’s the gist: “The prediction that an undisciplined economy would collapse by its own rules can be found” in an article written...
Religion and Liberty: An Interview with Mustafa Akyol
The Spring issue of Religion & Liberty is now available online. The feature is an interview with Turkish scholar Mustafa Akyol. Akyol was a faculty member at Acton University last summer. The title of the interview is “Turkey: Islam’s Bridge to Religious and Economic Liberty?” In the interview Akyol notes: So Turkey will not change the world in one day, but if it shows that a Muslim society can achieve democracy and lives in peace with the western world, that...
Pirate Morality
By now you’ve read one or more stories about the increasing levels of piracy on Africa’s east coast, brought into the spotlight by the recent capture of a Saudi oil tanker. Piracy is, of course, simply a specific form of theft, a vice that like all basic vices will be with us to the end of time. Sometimes there is a fine line between state military conflict and piracy, as the case of Sir Francis Drake attests (to the English,...
Bragging on an Undergrad
The latest issue of Religion & Liberty contains an essay I wrote for Acton about whether the relationship between social conservatives and libertarians can be saved. A student at my university (Houston Baptist University) read the essay and formulated a number of thoughts on his own. I was so affected by what this undergraduate sent me, I had to pass it along: I have strong beliefs about limited government, states rights, individual liberty, free-markets, etc. But these e under fire...
Review of Lawler on Boston Catholicism
Appearing in the next issue of Religion & Liberty will be my review of Philip F. Lawler’s The Faithful Departed: The Collapse of Boston’s Catholic Culture (Encounter Books, 2008). There is no point in dwelling on how well-written and insightful the book is, as it has already won plaudits from other, more significant reviewers, but I can give my own “Acton spin” to Lawler’s exceptional work. Here is the piece in full, an exclusive preview for PowerBlog readers: Lord Acton’s...
The Common Good as an Excuse to Override Human Dignity
I cannot tell you how many times Catholics have used mon good” as an excuse for more government involvement in peoples’ lives and the installing of socialistic, “spread the wealth” programs. This version of mon good is the foundation for some people’s idea of distributive justice, but actually it is based on the “Robin Hood fallacy” of robbing from the rich and giving to the poor. How did e to this conclusion? I did so merely by reading Aristotle and...
Nation’s Top 50 Catholic High Schools Announced for 2008
The National Catholic High School Honor Roll announced its fifth selection of the best 50 Catholic secondary schools in the United States. The purpose of the Honor Roll is to recognize and encourage excellence in Catholic secondary education. It is a critical resource for parents and educators that distinguishes those schools that excel in three categories: academic excellence, Catholic Identity, and civic education. This year’s list includes 10 new honorees as well as eight schools that have earned recognition in...
No More Bretton Woods
Acton’s Sam Gregg on Public Discourse: On November 15th, leaders of the world’s largest economies will gather in Washington, D.C., to discuss the ongoing international financial crisis. Figures such as Britain’s Prime Minister Gordon Brown view the summit as an opportunity to reform international financial structures and perhaps create new ones. He and others have spoken of a “new Bretton Woods”—the 1944 international meeting that sought to design an international financial structure for a post-war world. Today, relatively little is...
Trees, Evil, and Negative Externalities
It is monplace in discussions of environmental economics to consider so-called “negative externalities,” a technical term for the bad or damaging consequences of an activity that affects those outside the realm of economic decision-making. For instance, I can make the choice to plant a tree in my yard on my own (presuming there are no regulatory hurdles to jump). A negative externality for my neighbor might be that my tree dumps a lot of leaves into his or her yard...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved