In this latest episode of the “Have You Heard” podcast, Jennifer Berkshire and education historian Jack Schneider interview Michigan professor Rebecca Jacobsen about the role of big money in school board elections. Jacobsen has studied this relatively new phenomenon and identified 96 super-rich individuals who have decided that buying local school boards is fun. Others would call it the corruption of democracy.
Here is an excerpt:
For Big Money Donors, School Boards Are the New ‘Must Buy’ Accessory
“Billionaires now buying local influence to push controversial school “reforms.”
“The recent school board election in Los Angeles drew close to $17 million in donations, much of it in the form of untraceable “dark money” from a familiar cast of enormously wealthy donors. In the latest episode of the Have You Heard podcast, co-hosts Jennifer Berkshire and Jack Schneider talk to researcher Rebecca Jacobsen about what—and who—is behind this trend, and how the influence of huge donors threatens to drown out the voices of people who actually live in these communities. You can hear the entire episode here.
“Have You Heard: You’ve been looking into the influence of wealthy donors in school board elections in cities including Los Angeles, Denver, Indianapolis and New Orleans. What most surprised you about what you found?
“Jacobsen: I think I’m just constantly astounded at just how much is being spent. You opened with the recent LA election, and the LA Times reported that $144 was spent for every vote cast on the reform side, and then on the union side it was $81 for every vote received by the teacher union backed candidate. And I just think about how much money that is, you know I would have never dreamt that there would be a 15 million dollar school board election. And so I think that’s probably one of the things that I find most surprising.
“Have You Heard: Tell us a little about the donors who are suddenly so interested in school board elections.
“Jacobsen: In our research we’ve looked at all the different campaign contributions that were given, and exactly who was donating and how much. And we came up with a set of about 96 big national donors, and these are folks that some of us are familiar with, especially when we’re in the education reform world. They’ve often been very influential from a philanthropic perspective. Many of them have created their own education organizations or their education reform groups. These are folks like Reed Hastings of Netflix, who has been really active in sort of reforming education. Laurene Powell Jobs, who is the wife of the late Steve Jobs, who has created her own education reform initiative, Sheryl Sandberg, many of these people are involved in sort of the tech world, and so we see not only connections for regionally, these folks all sort of work and live in the same circles. But then we also see connections that they’re involved in the same charter boards or the same education reform organizations and boards. They often share affiliations beyond just the fact that they’re now donating to the same organizations. And what’s especially striking is that these connections just exploded over a relatively short period of time.
“Have You Heard: I’m guessing some people will hear this and think, ‘well we need some kind of influence to counter the power of the teachers union.’ But one of the surprising findings from your research is that unions are not as involved in these local elections as one might expect.
“Jacobsen: It has long been assumed that the teacher’s union was the most influential interest group in local elections, partially because they’re relatively small cost, they’re not held at a regular time, which enables these interest groups then to, for very little money and very little mobilization, have a particularly out sized influence. And that certainly has been the case, there’s no denying that, however I think that that just sort of universal assumption as truth needs to be challenged by what we’re seeing today. Because at least in the cities that we’ve looked at, union money has been significantly dwarfed by these large outside donors. And increasingly, not just direct donations, but we’re seeing dark money donations.
“So more and more political action committees are being set up, or independent expenditure committees is what they’re sometimes called in the school board world, where there can be sort of unlimited funds and you don’t actually even know where they’re coming from. Now unions have those as well, but there’s just an explosion of these different types of groups and it’s really hard to keep track of where the money’s even coming from.
“Have You Heard: You mention a couple of specific reasons why having wealthy donors try to influence school board races. Start with the part where it turns out that billionaires have different policy priorities than most of us.
“Jacobsen: Unfortunately it’s not so easy to just call up these very wealthy donors and poll them about their opinions on various policy issues. As one academic stated, their gatekeepers have gatekeepers. So this is a population that is very hard to study, and those that have gotten to it have found that they often have distinctly different views than those of us that are sort of more in the mainstream middle class America. And so the same is true in education. I think that right now we’re seeing a huge push for vouchers, a very particular type of education reform, and this is not something that I think we’re seeing overwhelming support from local communities. And I think that this is again where we see a mismatch between those that are very wealthy and those that are actually attending the public schools and using them on a regular basis.
“Have You Heard: The school board race in Los Angeles got a lot of attention, but as you found, the priorities of local voters often got short shrift versus the agenda of the donors you describe: which basically boiled down to charter schools, charter schools and more charter schools.
“Jacobsen: In LA we heard from a few candidates that were very concerned with adult education because of the large immigrant population in LA USD. And the role that adult education plays in supporting student learning. Not just adult learning, but then in turn student learning, and how they could not get that item on the agenda because they simply didn’t have the money to compete. There was no conversation to be had around that issue because they just didn’t have the ability to publicize it in the same way that those that were getting the large outside donations were able to do. We had one candidate who gave the example of getting a picture from a friend of theirs on a cell phone that showed seven mailers that had been received in one day alone, and this candidate was saying I can barely raise enough money to send out one mailer, let alone seven mailers in one day. So we are concerned that this outside money has the potential to really drown out particular voices and particular issues that might be really important to the local community, but aren’t necessarily seen or recognized by this larger national agenda.”

The problem is not that they bought these elections . The problem is that the system has been rigged to allow them to accumulate the type of wealth that enables them to do so .
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YES, indeed, Joel. We have a rigged system where the rich get richer off the rest of us. I have wondered by dark money is allowed to creep into other states’ elections.
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Well, yes and no. It’s kind of a cycle. They had to buy the elections to create the system in the first place. Now that they’ve bought the elections, the politicians who owe them continue to create and strengthen the system that gives them the wealth to continue to buy the elections. Round and round she goes….
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Hechinger’s Report (Gates-funded) posted in the NYT, the familiar construct that America’s foremost destroyer of democracy crafted. Crises are so dire (the culprit-pensions) that Gates’ “business models will be implemented”, in this case, for non-legacy admissions universities. The specific program is called the Frontier Set. Hechinger’s ignores direct cause and effect. (1) Concentrated wealth strangled American economic growth. (2) The Koch’s political apparatus starved education of public funds. And, (3) Gates exploited the situation to generate profits off of the backs of middle class and poor students.
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Let’s face it, it’s we, 300 million common folks, who let rich people accessorize any way they want.
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If the billionaires had their own little country some where (on Mars or an assteroid — which would be particularly apt) they could do whatever they pleased and leave the rest of humanity alone.
I say we help them out and get NASA to provide the rocketship.
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“A Capital Idea”
A capital idea
To let the wealthy play
As long as they’re not near
To earth in any way
On Mars or asteroids
The Broads and Gates could scheme
About disasteroids
And other crazy theme
And leave us all behind
And leave us all alone
A gift to human kind
If billionaires were gone
So let us make it so
A rocketship to space
With billionaires in tow
To anyother place
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I think the Rocketship charter chain would probably do well on Mars.
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It’s funny that ed reformers don’t seem to care that school board elections are one of the few ways ordinary people can get into politics.
If there are no cheap entry-level races we’ll have government chosen by billionaires, top to bottom. Not only is that bad for democracy, it’s bad for “innovation”.
It will be the exact same policy all the way from the President to local offices. It already is. Ed reform is such an echo chamber now I look for certain WORDS and WHOLE PHRASES – they always appear.
The dominance of TFA is a good example. A huge percentage of ed reformers come out of that ONE organization. Is that really “diversity” as far as thought or opinion?
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“It’s funny that ed reformers don’t seem to care that school board elections are one of the few ways ordinary people can get into politics.”
Au contraire, they care very deeply, in fact. That’s why they spend great fortunes buying school board elections or, better yet, advocating for mayoral/state control of school boards.
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Bloomberg is God. He said so himself. He will be admitted to heaven without any other deity’s review.
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If Bloomberg is going to Heaven, I hope to Hell I am not.
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And from listening to the late night televangelists, you’d swear that someone got the signs mixed up.
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The billionaires certainly understand that they get a very big return on their relatively meagre investment by buying candidates for school board.
As Gates has noted, schools are a market for products — and a several hundred billion (if not trillion) dollar one at that.
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Murdoch pegged it at $1 tril.
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Chiara “It’s funny that ed reformers don’t seem to care that school board elections are one of the few ways ordinary people can get into politics.”
Caring never drives the world of pragmatic people, though it’s the greatest driving force of life according Darwin.
With mankind, selfishness, experience, and imitation, probably add, as Mr. Bain has shewn, to the power of sympathy; for we are led by the hope of receiving good in return to perform acts of sympathetic kindness to others; and sympathy is much strengthened by habit. In however complex a manner this feeling may have originated, as it is one of high importance to all those animals which aid and defend one another, it will have been increased through natural selection; for those communities, which included the greatest number of the most sympathetic members, would flourish best, and rear the greatest number of offspring.
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Ed reform has two major tenets: “choice” (top priority- charters and vouchers) and “accountability” (for public schools so less important, means “testing”)
What if someone else has another idea? How will we know if ed reform billionaires dominate school boards? We HAVE to accept their basic premise with a little tweaking? That’s the extent of the debate that is permitted?
That’s not broad at all. It’s narrow.
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I was listening to Ivanka Trump opine on the mediocrity of the US workforce- the “skills gap”- and I regret to inform you there is not a dime’s worth of difference between Ivanka Trump and Arne Duncan on workforce training for the lower classes.
It isn’t the “innovation” of ed reform that scares me- it’s the UNRELENTING sameness.
These people are interchangeable. They all say the same thing, down to words and phrases.
Look at how they all ran blindly after “personalized learning”. They are selling this to every school system in the country. They have NO idea whether it’s a good investment for public schools or even whether it “works” under their own narrow definition of “works”.
Some prestigious and wealthy people are in favor of it so that’s good enough for ed reform!
Public schools could sink billions of dollars and millions of work hours into this – the downside risk is HUGE. They don’t care. The herd is pushing it so they all clamber aboard.
This isn’t “innovation”. It’s group-think.
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I use Facebook to keep in touch with family and friends from my old school district. Recently, I have noticed that there are a lot more advertisements, some of which look like regular posts. I got on the list for The 74 because I often post on education. This is school “reform” propaganda. I know Campbell Brown is the chief shill for this group. I have been answering these posts by challenging their lies. If anyone else sees the 74 on Facebook, I urge others to take a moment to post a counter view to their narrative. When billionaires like Zukerberg and Gates can control the message, it is easy for them to try to brainwash the uninformed. It is just as potentially harmful as buying school board elections.
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Cross posted at
https://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/19-Buying-Influence-Big-in-Best_Web_OpEds-Community_Corruption_Democracy_Education-170613-840.html#comment662881
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All of this was accelerated under Obama. It will take many years, if ever, to undo the damage to public education. The NEA & the UFT/AFT were also complicit in my opinion. Weingarten was working with Eli Broad on school reform as I understand it. How much money did Eskelson (NEA) and Weingarten (UFT/AFT) accept from Bill Gates? I believe it was 25 & 15 million respectively.
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Unless it’s changed recently, Weingarten appears to be in the camp of the Center for American Progress. CAP receives funding from the Walton’s and Gates.
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Truly sickening.
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Another irony from Michigan: attorney Jan Geht, who represented convicted tax cheat (and former charter school management head) Steven Ingersoll, was elected to Traverse City’s public school board. Three openings on the board, and three people ran.
Do the math.
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My sympathies to you for living in DeVos’ colony.
Why didn’t a person from a civic organization representing the 99% or a person from a union, any union, etc. run against Jan?
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From a billionaire’s perspective, a $200,000 contribution is chump change.
Get your calculator out a you’ll see that 200,000/1,000,000,000 is .0002, or .02%. If you make exactly $1,000,000,000, .02% of your income is $200,000. If you get 95 of your friends who make exactly a billion dollars to contribute .02% of their income you’ve got $19,200,000 to donate to a political campaign… and if you’re making exactly a billion dollars you aren’t on the Forbes list of the 400 richest Americans….
On the other hand, if you are making $50,000 per year, .02% of your income is $10.00. If you get 95 of your friends to contribute .02% of their income you’ve got $960 to donate to a campaign. But if you’re making $50,000 per year you might need that $10.00 to help pay down your debt on a student loan…
And here’s the thing that’s most annoying: if you’re making a billion dollars a year you’re probably spending a lot of that money to make certain you aren’t paying your fair share of income and property taxes… and you just might be spending some of your money to persuade the $50,000 wage earners that taxes are an unfair burden on them…and you are like the Koch Brothers you just might be spending some of your money to persuade $50,000 wage earners that taxes are an unfair burden on them, that government is evil, and that private businesses can operate public enterprises more effectively than democratically elected boards.
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