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National Education Association

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National Education Association
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Basic facts
Location:Washington, D.C.
Type:501(c)(5)
Top official:Becky Pringle, President
Year founded:1857
Website:Official website


The National Education Association (NEA) is a 501(c)(5) nonprofit organization based in Washington, D.C. The organization is a professional association representing teachers that describes itself as "the voice of education professionals. Our work is fundamental to the nation, and we accept the profound trust placed in us."[1]

Background

A group of ten state education associations founded the organization as the National Teachers Association (NTA) in 1857. The organization adopted its current name in 1870. It merged with the majority-Black American Teachers Organization in 1964. During the 1980s, it expanded its membership to also include education support professionals.[2]

As of September 2025, the organization had the following mission statement:[1]

Our mission is to advocate for education professionals and to unite our members and the nation to fulfill the promise of public education to prepare every student to succeed in a diverse and interdependent world.[3]

Leadership

As of September 2025, the following individuals held senior leadership roles at the National Education Association:[4]

  • Becky Pringle, president
  • Princess R. Moss, vice president
  • Noel Candelaria, secretary-treasurer
  • Kim Anderson, executive director
  • Bill Farmer, executive committee
  • Mark Jewell, executive committee
  • Gladys Fátima Márquez, executive committee
  • Ron Duff Martin, executive committee
  • Shannon McCann, executive committee
  • Dr. Tia T. Mills, executive committee

Work and activities

Electoral activities and influence

2016 elections

In October 2015, NEA President Lily Eskelsen García announced that the NEA would endorse 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton. García stated the following:[5]

The National Education Association proudly supports Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton to be the Democratic nominee for president of the United States. Clinton is a strong leader who will do what is best for America’s students. For more than four decades, Clinton has fought to make sure all children have a fair opportunity to succeed regardless of their ZIP code. Clinton will continue to advocate on behalf of students, educators and working families because she understands the road to a stronger U.S. economy starts in America’s public schools.[3]

2014 elections

As of November 2013, NEA has spent $1,646,370 in the 2014 election cycle: $310,370 went to Democratic candidates, $55,500 to Republicans and the remaining $1,280,000 was soft money given to political organizations.[6]

2012 elections

NEA spent $14,899,964 in the 2012 election cycle: $2,260,847 on Democratic candidates, $177,707 on Republicans, and $12,486,260 as soft money given to political organizations.[6]

2012 expenditures

The following table displays the top 10 candidates who received the most money from NEA.[7]

Top 10 largest National Education Association expenditures in 2012[6]
Candidate Party State Office Total Desired Result
Barack Obama Democratic Party N/A President $61,577
Yes.png
Kathleen Hochul Democratic Party NY House $19,000
No.png
Tammy Baldwin Democratic Party WI House $17,080
Yes.png
Derek Kilmer Democratic Party WA House $16,000
Yes.png
Christopher Donovan Democratic Party CT House $15,000
No.png
Elizabeth Esty Democratic Party CT House $15,000
Yes.png
Pete Gallego Democratic Party TX House $15,000
Yes.png
Chris Murphy Democratic Party CT House $15,000
Yes.png
Elizabeth Warren Democratic Party MA Senate $14,550
Yes.png
Ron Barber Democratic Party AZ House $14,250
Yes.png

Notable endorsements

See also: Ballotpedia: Our approach to covering endorsements

This section displays endorsements this organization made in elections within Ballotpedia's coverage scope.

Notable candidate endorsements by National Education Association
EndorseeElectionStageOutcome
Amie Baca-Oehlert  source  (D) U.S. House Colorado District 8 (2026) Primary
David Trone  source  (D) U.S. Senate Maryland (2024) PrimaryLost Primary
Trudy Busch Valentine  source  (D) U.S. Senate Missouri (2022) GeneralLost General

Affiliations

As of September 2025, the following organizations were affiliated with the National Education Association:[8]

  • Alabama Education Association
  • NEA-Alaska
  • Arizona Education Association
  • Arkansas Education Association
  • California Teachers Association
  • Colorado Education Association
  • Connecticut Education Association
  • Delaware State Education Association
  • Federal Education Association
  • Florida Education Association
  • Georgia Association of Educators
  • Hawaii State Teachers Association
  • Idaho Education Association
  • Illinois Education Association
  • Indiana State Teachers Association
  • Iowa State Education Association
  • Kansas National Education Association
  • Kentucky Education Association
  • Louisiana Association of Educators
  • Maine Education Association
  • Maryland State Education Association
  • Massachusetts Teachers Association
  • Michigan Education Association
  • Education Minnesota
  • Mississippi Association of Educators
  • Missouri NEA
  • Montana Federation of Public Employees
  • Nebraska State Education Association
  • Nevada State Education Association
  • NEA-New Hampshire
  • New Jersey Education Association
  • NEA-New Mexico
  • New York State United Teachers
  • North Carolina Association of Educators
  • North Dakota United
  • Ohio Education Association
  • Oklahoma Education Association
  • Oregon Education Association
  • Pennsylvania State Education Association
  • NEA Rhode Island
  • The South Carolina Education Association
  • South Dakota Education Association
  • Tennessee Education Association
  • Texas State Teachers Association
  • Utah Education Association
  • Vermont-NEA
  • Virginia Education Association
  • Washington Education Association
  • Education West Virginia
  • Wisconsin Education Association Council
  • Wyoming Education Association

Finances

The following is a breakdown of the National Education Association's revenues and expenses from 2004 to 2024. The information comes from ProPublica.

National Education Association financial data 2004-2024
Year Revenue Expenses
2004 $294.5 million $295.3 million
2005 $304.1 million $299.4 million
2006 $322.1 million $314.5 million
2007 $341.0 million $328.8 million
2008 $357.4 million $336.7 million
2009 $366.9 million $366.6 million
2010 $376.6 million $360.4 million
2011 $376.5 million $373.2 million
2012 $380.7 million $356.2 million
2013 $384.6 million $341.7 million
2014 $384.2 million $343.0 million
2015 $370.6 million $343.4 million
2016 $371.6 million $373.5 million
2017 $374.4 million $361.0 million
2018 $383.8 million $362.8 million
2019 $377.1 million $356.6 million
2020 $396.5 million $377.1 million
2021 $396.8 million $380.7 million
2022 $378.2 million $389.2 million
2023 $388.4 million $399.4 million
2024 $402.8 million $411.1 million

Noteworthy events

Call for Education Secretary Arne Duncan's resignation

A July 4, 2014 vote by members of the National Education Association called for Education Department Secretary Arne Duncan's resignation. A majority of the 9,000 delegates attending the convention in Denver, Colorado made the vote because "the Department's failed education agenda focused on more high-stakes testing, grading and pitting public school students against each other based on test scores." The vote originated from the California Teachers Association after Duncan commented on the court case Vergara v. California, which dealt a blow to tenure rules in the state. Motions calling for Duncan's resignation have been raised at each of the NEA's annual meetings since 2010, but none had received the majority vote for passage.[9] Then-NEA former President Dennis Van Roekel defended the vote, claiming the union would continue to push the administration to put forward policies "that are influenced by those who know best— educators working in our classrooms and in our schools — rather than profiteers." When asked to for Duncan's comments on the vote, a department spokesperson stated, "Secretary Duncan looks forward to continuing to work with NEA and its new leadership."[10]

The American Federation of Teachers approved a motion on July 13, 2014, urging Duncan's resignation if he did not make improvements.[11]

See also

External links

Footnotes