Teachers say “Time to fight!”
Written by: Alice M. on 27 March 2026
(Photo supplied)
Teachers say "Time to Fight!
With many years of being sold out by Labor governments more teachers and parents know that they must rely on their own united mass struggle on the ground, not on parliamentary parties.
After years of deteriorating pay and working conditions, along with cuts in government spending on public education, 40,000 Victorian state school teachers, education support staff and principals drew a line in the sand and took strike action on 24 March. Over 40,000 withdrew their labour, closing down more than 500 schools across the state. It was the first teachers’ strike in 13 years and the biggest Australian Education Union (AEU) strike in Victorian history.
In a show of solidarity, over 35,000 defiant AEU members clad in red union T-shirts, rallied outside the Victorian Trades Hall and marched to state parliament, demanding a 35% pay increase over 4 years, improved working conditions and more funding for public education.
After 9 months of phony negotiations with an arrogant state Labor government offering a miserable 17% pay increase over 3 years with no improvement in working conditions, AEU Victorian Branch members said they’d had enough, with 98% voting members supporting protected strike action.
Victoria already has the lowest funded state school funding and the lowest paid teachers nationally. Victorian state schools are chronically underfunded and understaffed. The state governments’ 17% pay increase offer will worsen the existing chronic staffing and workload crisis in the state school system with teachers leaving in droves. The rising cost of living crisis and worsening working conditions will drive even more teachers out of state schools and out of teaching which they love.
In 2022 union leadership agreed to a measly 2% pay increase which led to over 1,000 members resigning from the union in protest. In 2023 teachers and parents were further outraged to learn that the Labor government secretly cut $2.4 billion from state schools funding.
Teachers mobilising for the fight
In 2024 AEU members voted in new leadership promising industrial action, including strikes. The new union leadership began engaging members in drafting their next log of claims (EBA), and mobilising members to fight for better pay, conditions and proper funding for public education. The new leadership took the teachers’ campaign to parents and communities, forging broader alliances.
Many former members rejoined the union and more teachers joined for the first time. In some schools AEU membership grew to 100%. In many schools, in the weeks before the strike, thousands of AEU members wore their union T-shirts.
The state Labor government, used to dealing with a compliant union and smugly taking for granted teachers’ dedication to public education, the strike announcement sent them into panic. The government called on retired and casual teachers to scab on their fellow teachers. It tried to sow divisions amongst AEU members by offering lower pay to education support staff, and tried to divide and antagonise the wider community against striking AEU members.
But the Labor government’s attempts to isolate and divide striking workers and weaken their union only backfired. Instead, their divisive tactics galvanised solidarity between teachers and education support staff, and strengthened community support for the striking teachers and their union. Parents Victoria, the state’s peak parents’ organisation came out in support of the strike, saying it supported “the principle behind the strike”, and that the Victorian state teachers’ relatively low wages was a serious threat to quality education in government schools.
After years of acquiescing to the Labor government, more teachers and the union are angry, feeling betrayed and used by Labor.
Teachers and parents unite
This time the union mobilised its members and engaged more broadly with the community in a common fight for better pay and conditions for teachers, and better funding for state schools.
Justin Mullaly, the newly elected President of AEU Victoria, told members, “There is a strong sense that we need to fight the Labor government, that there can’t be any cosy settlements, and that we will fight them just as hard as we will fight a Liberal government.”
The Labor government’s only ally was the bosses’ Australian Industry Group Victoria complaining and threatening that the strike would keep parents away from work and disrupt $billions profit making for the bosses.
At the core of this struggle is the clash between the needs and demands of working people and the capitalist ruling class. Under capitalism public education is always underfunded. Capitalism funds public education only as far as it requires minimally educated and obedient working class in the production and extraction of profit, an education system that maintains the power of the profiteering capitalist class. On the other side are teachers, students and working class parents fighting for public education that prioritises the needs of working people for secure livelihoods, and empowers the people as agents of change for a better world, an education system that nurtures the builders of a society that looks after the people and the environment.
Just like the LNP, the ALP is a party of capitalism serving the needs of monopoly capitalism. In a socialist society, run by workers and working people, the education system will serve the collective wellbeing of all working people.
The magnificent strike by AEU members relying on the combined power of their own and community strength has inspired many.
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