EduShyster interviews political scientist Maurice Cunningham about the supporters of Question 2, a referendum in November that would expand the number of privately managed charter schools in the state.
http://edushyster.com/family-affair/
It is a fascinating interview, and I urge you to read it. It shows the Big Money behind the charter movement. It shows that it has no grassroots support. It shows the length to which the charter movement will go to confuse voters and trick them into believing that privatization of public schools is a progressive cause, rather than a plutocrats’ hobby.
Here is a portion of the interview:
Maurice Cunningham: …This is a Republican effort, it’s a big money effort, and it’s a conservative effort. That’s where they tend to go.
EduShyster: There’s a well-funded effort underway to paint the campaign to lift the charter cap in Massachusetts as a progressive cause. But what you’ve found in your research is that this is basically a Republican production from top to bottom.
Cunningham: That’s right. There are a handful of wealthy families that are funding this. They largely give to Republicans and they represent the financial industry, basically. They’re out of Bain, they’re out of Baupost, they’re out of High Fields Capital Management. Billionaire Seth Klarman, for example, has been described as the largest GOP donor in New England, and he gives a lot of money to free market, anti-government groups… They know how to make something look like a grassroots campaign that really isn’t.
EduShyster: By *make something look like a grassroots campaign that really isn’t,* what you really mean is that this is an entirely community-driven, grassroots campaign, correct?
Cunningham: No. There is no grassroots support behind this campaign whatsoever. What do we look for to measure grassroots support? We look for a campaign’s ability to find people who will essentially volunteer, who feel strongly about an issue and are willing to do the work that a campaign needs done. Two examples: signature collecting and canvassing door to door. Great Schools Massachusetts isn’t able to do either one of those things. When they had to get signatures in 2015, they wound up paying $305,000 to a signature gathering firm. And that’s because they don’t have people who are strong believers who will go out on the street and volunteer and be passionate and do the things that people do when they really care about an issue. Or look at Democrats for Education Reform. When they backed Dan Rizzo in the special Senate election earlier this year, they had to pay for canvassers because they don’t have people who feel strongly enough about the positions they take. The idea that these are community groups is completely manufactured.
EduShyster: Readers of this blog will recognize the name Families for Excellent Schools, a New York group that set up shop in the Bay State in 2014, and which counted our Republican Secretary of Education James Peyser as its *uncle* until about 15 minutes ago. But *families* in this case literally refers to six families.
Cunningham: The same small group of families that gave to the ballot committee, which is now Great Schools Massachusetts, gives to a private foundation called Strategic Grant Partners year after year. Strategic Grant Partners is at the center of this whole thing, and it’s where you really see the longer term view taking shape. Joanna Jacobson, who founded it, understands strategic vision and marketing. She comes from a corporate background; she has a Harvard MBA and was the president of Keds. Jim Peyser is a central figure when you look at who was involved, both as a board member of Families for Excellent Schools and in his former capacity as a managing partner of New Schools Venture Fund. They’ve been at this for several years now—much longer than most people are aware of.
*Secretive cabal* and democracy don’t go together—they just don’t. And if you say *let’s sacrifice democracy so we can have better schools,* that imperils us going forward.
EduShyster: Is it really so bad if a secretive cabal hatches a strategic plan and marshals millions of dollars from untraceable sources if it means more Great Schools™?
Cunningham: I think it’s terrible for democracy. *Secretive cabal* and democracy don’t go together—they just don’t. And if you say *let’s sacrifice democracy so we can have better schools,* that imperils us going forward. Supreme Court justice Louis Brandeis once said that we have to make a choice. *We may have democracy, or we may have wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can’t have both.* To me this campaign is about democracy vs. unlimited wealth.

Since Bain is mentioned in the interview, it should be pointed out that former Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick, a Democrat, has an executive position at Bain, showing that those funding the hostile takeover of public education make sure to butter both sides of their bread…
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Democrat Schmemocrat. Same as the “Democrats” running school reform in Denver.
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Thank you.
So-called education reform is bi-partisan, based on a clear Overclass consensus about the purpose, governance and labor relations of education. They want complete control over those three domains, and they are lying, cheating and stealing to get it, via the Republican and Democratic Parties.
That the policies are being developed and implemented by people with little or no public school experience – apparently a job requirement in reform circles – combined with condescension-bordering-on-contempt towards for the actual stakeholders in the system, doesn’t matter at all.
These people are colonizers and mercenaries, with no ties to the communities they helicopter into and create havoc in. They’ll provide a for-profit McEducation just as readily in Botswana as in The Bronx, making sure the fine print always gives them their skim first.
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Ed reformers would probably make more progress if they occasionally mentioned “improving public schools” which is what they all run on.
I know it’s an echo chamber and public schools are unfashionable, but if you are elected to “improve public schools” that doesn’t mean “open charter schools” and denigrate or ignore existing public schools.
All those pricey political professionals and marketing people and not a one talks about improving public schools. Remarkable.
You’re not delivering what you ran on. People eventually notice their schools are completely omitted except for scolding lectures on test scores and unfunded, gimmicky mandates.
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It. Is right in your face
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The problem with the argument “that this is basically a Republican production from top to bottom” is that it is demonstrably false, as can quickly be recognized though brief research at the Massachusetts Office of Political and Campaign Finance.
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Stephen,
Charter schools are a high priority for ALEC, the most rightwing advocacy group in the country plus every rightwing think tank. Name a GOP governor that opposes charters. I can’t think of one. Sure, there are a few Dem governors who traded their support in exchange for campaign funding from hedge fund managers (Cuomo and Malloy come to mind), and Duncan was a wholly owned bot of the Gates Foundation. The rightwing Walton Foundation boasts that it funded 1/4 of all charters; Waltons hate unions, so that makes sense. If you follow the money, the overwhelming majority of it comes from the rightwing, which never liked public schools and hate unions.
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Democrat Cory Booker is a prime example of a charter school advocate. Isn’t Eva Moskowitz a Democrat? I will Google that. Former public school administrator Democrat Ras Baraka now supports charter schools.
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Great Schools Colorado. ,
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Charters and Vouchers are supported by the elites of both republicans and democrats. I don’t see much of difference between the two parties anymore. If they are talking, they are lying.
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