Harold Meyerson, the editor of The American Prospect, published a very important article in the Los Angeles Times about the toxic effect of the powerful charter lobby on the Democratic Party and on democracy itself.
He writes:
“At a time when Democrats and their party are, by virtually every index, moving left, a powerful center-right pressure group within the liberal universe has nonetheless sprung up. Funded by billionaires and arrayed against unions, it is increasingly contesting for power in city halls and statehouses where Democrats already govern….
“In California, political action committees funded by charter school backers have become among the largest donors to centrist Democratic state legislators who not only favor expanding charters at the expense of school districts, but also have blocked some of Gov. Jerry Brown’s more liberal initiatives.
In New York’s upcoming primary, such longtime charter supporters as Wal-Mart heiress Alice Walton have given hundreds of thousands of dollars to a PAC seeking to unseat several Democratic legislators who’ve defended the role and budget of traditional public schools.
In future decades, historians will have to grapple with how charter schools became the cause celebre of centrist billionaires – from Walton to Bloomberg to Broad – in an age of plutocracy. The historians shouldn’t dismiss the good intentions behind the billionaires’ impulse: the desire to provide students growing up in poverty with the best education possible. But neither should they dismiss their self-exculpation in singling out the deficiencies, both real and exaggerated, of public education as the central reason for the evisceration of the middle class….
“In their mix of good intentions and self-serving blindness, the billionaire education reformers have much in common with some of the upper-class progressives of a century ago, another time of great wealth and pervasive poverty. Some of those progressives, in the tradition of Jane Addams, genuinely sought to diminish the economy’s structural inequities, but others focused more on the presumed moral deficiencies and lack of discipline of the poor. Whatever the merits of charters, the very rich who see them as the great equalizer are no closer to the mark than their Gilded Age predecessors who preached temperance as the answer to squalor.”

What a brilliant, concise and accurate analysis. I will be forwarding this to Sherrod Brown and Marcia Fudge. I’m hoping Brown will take the time to read and reflect on it. Not so hopeful in the case of Fudge who has shown little interest or understanding of education issues despite being on the House committee with jurisdiction over education authorization legislation.
Loved the final sentence. I have a feeling I’ll be co-opting that one for quite some time.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Ironically, here’s a link sent out by the Ohio Democratic Party today. Wonder if Brown and Strickland are discussing the plot of Hitchcock’s movie Rear Window: https://ohiodems.org/back-school-tour-highlights-charter-tax-counties-across-ohio/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=ohiodems&utm_content=1+-+READ+MORE&utm_campaign=em082816-newsletter&source=em082816-newsletter
LikeLike
““At a time when Democrats and their party are, by virtually every index, moving left…”
Bwahahahaha! Sorry, can’t read any further. Seriously? Read LISTEN LIBERAL (or just open your eyes) for a good refutation of that point. Charters and “reform” are just symptoms of the larger disease – Democrats are abandoning the people in favor of the money. How that translates to “moving left” is beyond me, other than a few issues such as LGBTQ rights where they’ve been dragged left, kicking and screaming, usually for economic reasons.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Too many Democrats are on the corporate welfare gravy train. That is one reason they are shills for charters. Their platform has moved left, but we know this is not a binding position; it is designed to curry favor with Sanders’ supporters and get votes. Once they are in office, they will likely continue to bow and scrape before big money.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Trying to be an optimist, and feeling much gratitude for those who have hung tight to lead the Opt Out movement, I like to believe that there are big changes coming to educational policy whether it is offered by the Democrats or not. So many people are starting to see through the smoke, and those who “see” simply cannot be led backwards in an effort to make them LESS aware of what’s going on….
LikeLike
I stopped there too Dienne.
LikeLike
Time for another Prilosec
LikeLike
You did it again, Dienne!!
I highlighted and copied that phrase as I was reading it and was going to comment in the same fashion as you!
Concur 100%
LikeLike
Dienne,
Perhaps you should have read it. He might not have used the language that we would have used. I assure you mine more colorful than yours (in private), to describe both the Democrats and the Billionaires
“If Wal-Mart, the corporation from which Walton derives her wealth, hadn’t compelled its suppliers to make their products abroad to reduce the price of their goods, more public school students’ parents might have the kind of stable employment and adequate incomes that foster learning-friendly upbringings. Despite the fact that our traditional ladders of mobility – decent blue-collar and service sector jobs, unions, cross-class marriages – have largely collapsed, seemingly sentient billionaires insist that teachers and their unions are the main obstacles blocking young people’s escape from poverty.”…
I will add
If corporate America had not diverted an additional 42% of profits to share holders in the last 50 years, thus fabulously enriching CEOs and Wall Street speculators. There would have been more money on the table for investment in real economic growth. There would have been more money for the those now inconsequential stake holders know as employees. Less pressure to create an ever larger permanent underclass that used to be know as the middle class.
Of course that would have left the donor class with less to donate.
“Whether they mean to or not, by backing more conservative Democrats, they can also impede unrelated progressive initiatives for greater environmental protections and worker rights. And by making Democratic elected officials even more dependent on the mega-donations of the 1%, they make campaign finance reform all the harder to win.”
Perhaps you and I agree on the motives of the political and donor class and do not have his ambiguity to say it mildly, but he hit the key issues.
LikeLike
(known)
LikeLike
Much of the wealth created over the last twenty years comes from passive investments such as stocks and bonds. Rather than putting the money back into the economy by creating new goods and services, many million and billionaires have chosen to send the money overseas in tax havens. The rest of us try to survive in a slow economy with stagnant wages. That is one reason why “trickle down” is a myth. Now billionaires want to swallow up anything public to get tax write offs, credits and profit.
LikeLike
I gotta say, that’s where I stopped as well. In no way is the ‘Democratic Party’ moving to the left. In fact, it’s moving to the Right so fast that it has left me permanently behind, and I’m not at all interested in catching up.
LikeLike
“The historians shouldn’t dismiss the good intentions behind the billionaires’ impulse: the desire to provide students growing up in poverty with the best education possible.”
I think that actions speak louder than words. The billionaire impulse seems to be leaving poverty in place and acting on behalf of segregated schools, strict discipline, and gaining system-wide efficiencies by depersonalized instructional delivery. Combine that with extreme survellience of outcomes and decisions from artificial intelligence programs that strip down learning to finding or guessing the correct answers to questions asked by others.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Two for two!
Both Dienne and Laura beat me to the punch with what they have quoted.
As with Dienne, Laura I concur 100%.
LikeLike
Temperance and discipline are qualities to which every individual should aspire. But when the rich lobby of NAFTA and TPP bent pushes for them, temperance and discipline become prohibition and subservience. People have a right to believe in prohibition and subservience; they just shouldn’t go around calling themselves Democrats. Is there a ray of light shining in the halls of the building that houses the Los Angeles Times? Probably not, but I sure hope so.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Cross posted http://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/How-the-charter-school-lob-in-General_News-Democracy_Democratic-Sellout_Democrats_Donors-160828-513.html#comment615272
the original article from the LA Times, with this comment, (see embedded links at the address)
Why is this important? Because the privatization of education allows the plutocracy to rewrite history and DEMOCRACY depends on shared knowledge
Click to access hirsch.pdf
and they want to dumb the people down . Just this week came this article on creating an ignorant citizenry.
Your democracy is under siege. The Consitution’s preamble sets PROMOTING the COMMON GOOD as the goal.
Charter schools promote the goals of the oligarchs.
If you think that I am exaggerating these guys http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/inside-the-koch-brothers-toxic-empire-20140924 want to write social studies curricula : https://dianeravitch.net/2014/12/05/north-carolina-plans-to-adopt-koch-funded-social-studies-curriculum
I am watching as the state legislatures appoint businessmen to oversee the schools so they fail and then can be handed over to charters. The corruption within the charter school INDUSTRY is endemic https://dianeravitch.net/?s=Charter+corruption
And then there is this: In Atlanta, local NBC channel 11 station did an expose of the secretive far-right group called the American Legislative Exchange Council, ALEC. Under the aegis of ALEC, Georgia legislators met in a posh resort with corporate lawyers to decide their priorities for the next session.
Except for Bill Moyers on PBS, http://billmoyers.com/episode/united-states-of-alec/
this is a topic the mainstream media won’t touch. For a thorough and chilling review of ALEC’s plans to privatize education, see ALEC Exposed. ALEC loves charters and vouchers, hates unions, loves profits.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It’s sad to me because Democrats don’t even have their own version of ed reform.
They just adopted Milton Friedman’s whole agenda and announced that was now “progressive”. They don’t stand for anything at all other than technocratic tweaking of other peoples ideas.
Liberals in ed reform are like the middle managers of the ed reform “movement”- all the bold strokes and big ideas come from the Right.
LikeLike
“Bipartisan” doesn’t mean “good”. Invading Iraq was bipartisan. Deregulating the financial sector was bipartisan. Crap trade deals were bipartisan.
It’s just as likely the herd are all running in the wrong direction.
I would argue bipartisan is MORE LIKELY to be a disaster because there’s no real debate. Political opposition is a check on an echo chamber effect.
LikeLike
“Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect.” Mark Twain
LikeLike
LeftCoastTeacher: what you wrote.
😎
LikeLike
In the current political economy of education, “bi-partisan” translates more accurately as “ruling class consesus.”
LikeLike
Ed reformers like to say that public schools oppose privatization because they’re protecting market share.
Okay. If I accept that don’t I also have to accept the reverse? That ed reformers oppose public schools because they’re working to expand charter market share?
If not, why not? Are ed reformers just inherently better people? Market pressures only apply to the “bad people”? I mean, this thing falls apart under the most facile analysis.
It’s built on nonsense. Even if I swallow their arguments whole it doesn’t hang together. The whole thing hinges on “good people versus bad people”.
LikeLike
These people have blinders on. They can only define value in economic terms as it relates to their own wealth.
LikeLike
Gates, et al, virtually owned the U.S. Department of Education under the Obama administration. We’ll see what, if any, changes occur when Hillary is in the White House.
LikeLike
None,
The day after the election she and Obama have to be greeted by a unified progressive assault that makes Trump look like a kitten. If not Clinton will see her victory as an overwhelming mandate for more of the same. The same policy that has devastated working class Americans for over thirty years.Policy that has left us on the verge of electing a Demagogue. One who correctly is pointing out the devastation of these policies. That he is and would be part of the problem and not the solution is another issue. Obama will seek to provide cover to Clinton by pushing the TPP in the lame duck assuring that donations continue flowing to the Democratic party.
Probably increasing his value on the speaking circuit as well.
LikeLike
Harold Meyerson is telling the truth again!
LikeLike
better yet, Karen, in the LA Times!
LikeLike
The Democrats of urban school districts have to explain why Republicans who are so backwards on LBGTQ rights, women’s choice, military spending and–well, throw a dart on your domestic or international issue of choice–are tremendously (and progressively) enlightened when it comes to their understanding of education policy and pedagogy.
LikeLike
Then, there’s the 10-18% return on charter school debt, that Wall street rakes in.
LikeLike
Same thing is happening in Washington State and it is next to impossible to find out who the individual donors are. Stand for Children and Voters for Washington Children are putting $40,000 or more into individual campaigns as independent expenditures for D’s and R’s. The same groups are infusing thousands to try to unseat our Supreme Court Justice Barbara Madsen, who wrote the decision declaring charters unconstitutional due to governance issues. Fortunately she won in the primary by a large margin.
LikeLike