Joanne Barkan has written a series of brilliant articles about the corporate reform movement and its wealthy supporters for “Dissent” magazine. She wrote this article for this blog. In it, she reflects on the venture capitalists’ belief that they are leaders of a new civil rights movement.
Joanne Barkan writes:
They Shall Overcome
Rooted in the gospel tradition, the song “We Shall Overcome” became an anthem of the African American Civil Rights Movement in the 1950s and 1960s and then an assertion of struggle and solidarity worldwide. Solidarity is at the heart of both the song and the phrase “we shall overcome.”
Given that history, it’s both perverse and predictable that Philanthropy magazine titled its spring 2013 cover story “They Shall Overcome.” The long article—written by then editor-in-chief Christopher Levenick—profiles five of the wealthiest backers of free-market K-12 education reform (charter schools, vouchers, test-based teacher accountability, closing large numbers of public schools, and the like).
At first I thought the title inadvertently reflected the top-down, donors-know-best approach of “big philanthropy”: we do our good works for low-income and minority children in urban public schools, and as a result they shall overcome the difficult circumstances of their lives. But as soon as I began reading, I realized that the title refers to the rich folks, to the philanthropists who—with their money and the correct political strategy—shall overcome. They shall overcome opposition to their brand of “ed reform,” especially the opposition of teachers, their unions, and parents.
The political strategy boils down to this: it’s not enough to have the right policy ideas or even to build public support for them; donors must spend their money to elect like-minded politicians who will translate ed-reform ideas into law. To implement the strategy, major philanthro-ed-reformers should set up 501(c)3, 501(c)4, and 527 tax-exempt organizations. Together these organizations allow a donor to pour unlimited amounts of money into “educating” anyone and everyone on the issues, lobbying lawmakers, and funding political campaigns.
The article breaks no new ground. People who follow the struggle over ed reform have probably seen the video of Jonah Edelman’s notorious presentation on political strategy at the Aspen Ideas Festival in June 2011. I’ve investigated the strategy from a critical perspective in Dissent magazine. But the Philanthropy article is as much a paean to mogul philanthropists who are helping to privatize public education in the United States as a lesson in strategy. This makes sense: the magazine is the house organ of the conservative Philanthropy Roundtable, an organization based on these beliefs: “philanthropic freedom is essential to a free society; a vibrant private sector generates the wealth that makes philanthropy possible; and voluntary private action offers solutions for many of society’s most pressing challenges.”
The profiles of the philanthro-ed-reformers provide upbeat success stories. The first is about John Kirtley who left Wall Street in 1989 to cofound a venture-capital firm in Florida. In his spare time, he launched a campaign to give dollar-for-dollar tax credits to corporations that fund scholarships for low-income families to send their children to private schools, including religious schools. The tax credits channel money away from public coffers to private schools, which is a step in the direction of privatization. Kirtley and his allies won enough legislators to their side to get a statewide program passed in 2001. Over the next three election cycles, they spent $4.5 million through their 527 organization to elect additional legislators who would expand the program and set up a trigger mechanism to raise its funding cap automatically. In 2010 the bill they supported passed the Florida Legislature.
After Kirtley’s profile come the stories of better-known philanthro-ed-reformers. There is John Walton, one of the heirs to the Wal-Mart fortune. He “served as a Green Beret in Vietnam. He saw vicious combat—but the fight of his life turned out to be education reform.” There is former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg who implements the ed-reform strategy by spending his personal funds lavishly on candidates and issue campaigns around the country ($330,000 in the 2012 Louisiana school board elections alone). Then there is John Arnold, one of Enron’s “most aggressive—and successful—natural gas traders.” After Enron imploded in 2001, he started a hedge fund specializing in natural gas and retired in 2012 “at 38 years of age and with an estimated net worth of $3.5 billion.” He and his wife Laura now devote themselves to philanthropy, much of it directed to K-12 reform. They aim to make their favorite policies permanent—“embedded in the system, and we can move on to other things,” says John.
There is also a lengthy retelling of uber-reformer Michelle Rhee’s story although she doesn’t qualify as a philanthropist—she spends other people’s money. Her goal is an outlay of $200 million a year on ed-reform politics, but no one knows exactly who funds her work. She runs the money through her organization Students First, a 501(c)(4) that allows her to keep the donors anonymous.
Nowhere in the article is there mention of the parents, students, and educators nationwide who oppose the philanthropists’ agenda. The author describes “some 5,600 people” who marched in Tallahassee in 2010 to support the private-school scholarship legislation. But there’s nothing about the 220 mostly African American community leaders and activists from some 20 cities across the country who traveled to Washington, D.C. last January to confront Education Secretary Arne Duncan. They condemned reform polices they consider discriminatory, especially closing neighborhood schools or turning them over to private contractors. Duncan has made the policy involvement of philanthropists a hallmark of his administration. The protesters filed several Title VI civil right complaints on the grounds that shutting down large numbers of public schools adversely and disproportionately affects minority children. Although most decisions to close schools are made locally, the federal Education Department promotes the policy through its Race to the Top and School Improvement Grant programs (see here).
Philanthro-ed-reformers have been chanting the mantra “Education is the civil rights issue of our era” for years, and they’ve appointed themselves leaders of the reform movement. The largest stakeholders in public education—students, educators, and parents—have no role to play except as recipients of donor-designed reforms. When they question the charitable largesse, they become part of the opposition that the philanthropists shall overcome. They shall overcome, not we. Solidarity doesn’t figure in.
Joanne Barkan’s articles on philanthropy, private foundations, public education reform, and other topics can be found at http://www.dissentmagazine.org/author/joannebarkan.

So when do we hit critical mass on this issue of pseudo-reform? Something has got to change, and fast.
LikeLike
Malanthropy (N): the strategic deployment of tax-subsidized, “non-profit” capital to enhance one’s ideological and financial interests, often through the usurpation of democratic procedures.
LikeLike
Synonym: villainthropy.
LikeLike
And their twisted words said with disingenuous smiles fool the people, as they pat us on our heads and send us back to our beds, without even a cup of water, while they steal all we hold dear.
LikeLike
What, no Gates???
Such a conspicuous absence.
Sent from my iPhone
>
LikeLike
deutsch29: distorting by omission rather than commission?
Yes, Bill Gates is the elephant in the room that somehow went unmentioned.
But let’s stick to hard data: there is a 98% “satisfactory” [thank you, Bill Gates!] chance of certainty that in ten years [thank you again, Bill Gates!] we will know if the “elephant that didn’t bark in the night” was left out on purpose.
😎
P.S. $tudent $ucce$$ anyone?
LikeLike
It all circles back to the almighty dollar. Would anyone listen to Bill Gates, or the Waltons, etc., — or even welcome them to the table — if they suddenly found themselves broke? I’d love to see them attempt to push their agenda and ideas and accomplish their goals without spending money; then we’d see who really was “worth” listening to — and we’d see who was willing to listen to them. It’s a perversion of democracy and equality when he (or she) with the most money (or toys) gets heard the most or the loudest. We need to find a way to level the playing field. Either that, or we need to raise a generation that will not allow themselves to be bought or swayed by money. Money is not a measure of the viability of an idea any more than it can buy good taste or manners.
LikeLike
I like the way you think, Deborah. Even without money, it takes a long time before we realize that someone else may have a valid POV. It’s easy to get invested in what fits with our own world view. When you have people fawning over you in hopes of getting some money, it probably easy to think you have been “chosen.”
LikeLike
School boards, elected and appointed, are enablers in this privatization scheme— if not co-conspirators (as some of the shenanigans in urban districts indicate). Bottom line: As long as voters buy the “business-can-do-it-better” notion we will continue to see profiteers taking over public functions, and not just schools… when that happens students, parents, taxpayers and employees will suffer while shareholders and investors make money.
LikeLike
Ziphilia Horton is turning over in her grave to the tune of “We Shall Overcome.” We very much need the spirit of Highlander Folk School in our movement. We need movement songs and a songbook.
Paul Horton AFT Local 2063
LikeLike
“The long article—written by then editor-in-chief Christopher Levenick—profiles five of the wealthiest backers of free-market K-12 education reform (charter schools, vouchers, test-based teacher accountability, closing large numbers of public schools, and the like).”
What’s remarkable about the article (besides the fawning, worshipful tone of the writer) is that none of the ed reformers ever mention the effect of their reforms on existing public schools. Not a word. It’s ALL charters and vouchers.
Hiring an ed reformer to run your public school system is nuts. You’re basically hiring someone who has absolutely no interest in the schools that 90% of kids attend, and that will include YOUR kid. It’s as if those schools don’t exist.
LikeLike
Corporate Feudalism hates the very idea of autonomous (non-serf) professions. It will down any intellectual force from education to history to science that does not preach its party line.
LikeLike
If you can’t be right, just buy right.
LikeLike
Looks to me like our focus should be on the laws that allow this outrage to happen within a democracy; Barkan tells us how it’s done:
“To implement the strategy, major philanthro-ed-reformers should set up 501(c)3, 501(c)4, and 527 tax-exempt organizations. Together these organizations allow a donor to pour unlimited amounts of money into “educating” anyone and everyone on the issues, lobbying lawmakers, and funding political campaigns.”
LikeLike
A very revealing article on how the rich philanthropists think and how they plan to achieve their goals.
LikeLike