Maurice Cunningham is a political scientist in Massachusetts who follows the trail of Dark Money. “Dark Money” refers to groups that conceal their donors and that use phony front groups that pretend to be grassroots families and parents.
In 2016, the Bay State held a referendum on whether to expand charter schools, and the Dark Money flowed through a NYC group called Families for Excellent Schools. FES was a front for hedge fund managers, mostly from out-of-State. The pro-charter forces vastly outspent the teachers’ unions but the proposal was overwhelmingly defeated. It lost in every part of the state, e crept for a few affluent communities that never expected to see a charter school in their neighborhood. Most towns, especially those that already had charters, knew that the arrival of a charter meant budget cuts for their public schools, and they voted no.
After the election, state campaign finance officials punished Families for Excellent Schools for its lack of transparency. It fined the group nearly $500,000 and banned from Massachusetts for five years. Shortly afterwards, FES closed its doors.
But, Cunningham reports, the Dark Money has returned.
First, it created a from group called Massachusetts Parents United, only three months after the 2016 election. This was supposed to be regular parents, right? But the money rolled in, more than any group of concerned parents could muster.
“Soon the plucky parents had a website, services of two political communications firms, several thousand members (so-claimed), and projected income of $1,500,000 and expenses of $800,000 for 2017. MPU operated under a sponsorship agreement with Education Reform Now, which bankrolls the millions that enables Democrats for Education Reform Massachusetts to fertilize state politics with dark money. MPU’s state director, who also served in that capacity for Banned-in-Boston Families for Excellent Schools, is on the Advisory Council of DFER Massachusetts.”
Does your local parents’ group have that kind of money? I didn’t think so.
“In the Empty Bottle I spelled out some of the contributions made by MPU’s funders to the 2016 charters campaign. Let’s update that first with contributions from WalMart heirs. Jim Walton gave $1,125,000 into the Campaign for Fair Access to Quality Schools. Alice Walton provided $710,000 to the Yes on 2 Ballot Committee and slipped another $750,000 of dark money into the coffers of the now Banned-in-Boston Families for Excellent Schools Advocacy. Thus the Waltons spent down the inheritance by $2,585,000 for Question 2.
“But the Walton Family Foundation, a tax deductible organ of the Walton family, had been putting upstream money into the Massachusetts charters effort for years. From 2010 through 2016, WFF gave over $12,000,000 to Education Reform Now (the Walton family sustaining the funder of a Democratic front is, uh, what?). WFF gave nearly $14,000,000 to the collapsed-in-corruption Families for Excellent Schools, almost half of that in the 2015 run up to the ballot question. Across those years WFF slid over $900,000 to the Pioneer Institute.
“Then there is the Longfield Family Foundation and its benefactor Chuck Longfield. In Empty Bottle I noted that Chuck Longfield had contributed $125,000 to two pro-charter ballot committees. When OCPF forced the disbanded-in-disgrace Families for Excellent Schools to disclose its donors, it revealed that Longfield had given another $600,000 in dark money. He also contributed to the weird Mekka Smith situation, which was also bound up in charters.
“The Barr Foundation is the charitable foundation of Amos Hostetter, who funneled $2,000,000 in 2016 dark dollars through the invested-in-iniquity Families for Excellent Schools Advocacy.
“The largest giver of dark money to formed-in-fraudulence Families for Excellent Schools Advocacy was its office mate engorged-in-effluvia Families for Excellent Schools Inc., which laundered $3,700,000 through FESA to Great Schools Massachusetts. On May 26, 2016 the Davis Foundation sent $100,000 to FESI and on November 2, 2016 another $10,000, and also invested $20,000 in Pioneer for “Project to Expand Educational Opportunity in MA.”
“Charters were killed off in 2016, you say? In Washington state charters failed at the ballot box in 1996, 2000, and 2004 before squeaking by on a fourth try in 2012, and that was with the help of the Gates family. Privatizers play the long game. Money never sleeps.”
What do they want? Why spend so many millions?
The Dark Money club wants privatization. They want to undermine public schools in the most successful state in the nation.

They want more than privatization. They want ALL the money. You have to spend money to make money and if you can buy small and sell large….well that’s the goal.
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This is the “bipartisan” panel at the Yale education conference:
Shavar Jeffries, President, Democrats for Education Reform
Thomas Toch, Director, FutureEd
Robert Pondiscio, Senior Fellow and Vice President for External Affairs, Thomas B. Fordham Institute
Derrell Bradford, Executive Vice President, 50CAN
Jal Mehta, Associate Professor, Harvard Graduate School of Education
Suzanne Tacheny Kubach, Executive Director, PIE Network
You have the liberal market-based ed reformers and then the conservative market-based ed reformers.
Does anyone know the difference between these two groups? I don’t.
One wants regulated privatized systems and the other wants unregulated privatized systems. They’re about an inch apart.
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This is appalling.
Who is running the Yale education conference?
They should be publicly shamed.
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Oh, now I know who Derrell Bradford is. He commented on Twitter that it was unseemly of teachers to strike.
Guess he’s clutching his pearls because teachers are modeling for the kids in their care:
Q. What do we do when our schools are under attack?
A. Stand up, fight back.
Can’t have that now.
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Derrell Bradford is on the Success Academy board (or at least was at one time).
This is the very same board that hears Eva Moskowitz saying that suspending 18% or 20% or even 23% of the very young children in some elementary schools with almost no white students is because of their natural violent natures that causes them to violently act out despite their blameless Eva Moskowitz-trained teachers and agrees wholeheartedly with this assessment of the violent nature of extraordinarily high numbers of the children who win their lotteries.
He recently worked with Success Academy co-founder and no doubt generously compensated leader of StudentsFirstNY Jenny Sedlis to stage a faux protest with staged signs created by the same few “artists” that the press dutifully reported on as if this was a grass roots affair where none of the participants cared enough about the issue to bother to make their own signs. Their message was something like “give the charters with tens of millions dollars more public resources and pay for it by taking resources away from the poorest kids.” Probably because as a Success Academy board member he knows how violent so many of those kids are, just like Eva Moskowitz insists they are.
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I POSTED the Cunningham piece at
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I posted the Cunningham piece at https://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/MassachusettsPoliticsProfs-in-General_News-Fraud_Massachusetts_Money_Privatization-Of-Schools-180406-48.html#comment695839 with this comment, that has embedded links back to Diane’s site.
LEARN HOW YOUR SCHOOLS ARE GOING DOWN!
Jelmer Evers, Dutch scholar and teacher, draws together the seemingly disparate strands that connect the rise of neo-fascist movements, attacks on democracy, growing inequality, and the oligarchs’ determination to privatize public schools.
Retired teacher of physics and math Tom Ultican gathered together a concise summary of the efforts to destroy and privatize public education.
Here is part 1 of Carol BURRIS’S gripping story of the attack on public education in Indiana.
Please watch this two-minute video of John Kuhn, Texas Superintendent, who tells the story of two adjacent school districts, one rich, one poor. He explains with eloquence and passion why schools should be equitably funded and how unjust it is to fund schools differently and expect to get the same results.
Stephen Dyer writesabout the profits extracted by ECOT’s sponsor. More money goes to the profiteer investor than to the teachers.
How do you spell S-C-A-M?Chicago: Public Schools Closed and Consolidated, While New Charters Open
Ed Doerr of Americans for Religious Liberty wrote this overview of vouchers. The most enlightening information in this paper appears on page 11, where he lists the 29 State referenda where the issue was spending public money for religious schools.
Follow my series on privatization.
https://www.opednews.com/Series/PRIVITIZATION-by-Susan-Lee-Schwartz-150925-546.html?f=PRIVITIZATION-by-Susan-Lee-Schwartz-150925-546.html
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Sarah Reckhow is going to be a visiting professor starting in August or September…Radcliffe-Harvard….keep her posted. In “follow the money”, she paid a lot of attention to this sort of money.
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Yesterday, the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education hosted an event titled “Leading the Nation” purporting to be a celebration the 25 years of education reform in Massachusetts.
http://www.doe.mass.edu/leadingthenation/
In addition to official members of the department of Education, here are a few of the organizations participating:
Massachusetts Business Alliance for Education
Massachusetts Charter Public Schools Association
Massachusetts Parents United
Stand for Children
TeachPlus
Eric Berg, Vice President of the Boston Teachers Union, explained the absence of MA’s teacher unions in a tweet:
Yep, as Dienne would point out, the public body charged with the care of our public schools, attended by 96% of Massachusetts students, has loaded the deck with charteristas, and privatizers. (Heading up TeachMinus these days is sell-out Paul Toner, who once upon a time headed up the Massachusetts Teachers Association. By contrast, MTA’s current president is Barbara Madeloni, who helped lead the charge against Question 2.)
The inclusion of Stand for Children and of MPU, the subject of Professor Cunningham’s post, makes evident the flagrant disdain the current administration has for our public schools. MA DESE has an official parent representative, but instead Keri Rodrigues Lorenzo, Executive Director of MPU is listed as the parent “voice”. Rodrigues Lorenzo in the end, did not attend, citing health reasons, but also after word of her role spread on Twitter.
https://mailchi.mp/doe.mass.edu/media-advisory-leading-the-nation-event-to-celebrate-massachusetts-schools?e=2cdeb773b0
Unquestionably, MA DESE has become a wholly owned subsidiary of the charter industry, with Paul Sagan, Chair of the board, having illegally contributed a total of $600,000 to the effort to remove the cap on charters. Governor Baker dismissed that as a “nothingburger”, despite a petiton to oust Sagan:
https://massedjustice.org/meja-news/paul-sagan-petition
Ironically, the 1993 changes to MA education policies to be “celebrated” came about due to a lawsuit initiated in 1978 on behalf of a Brockton, MA student, which claimed that the state had failed to meet the constitutionally required level of support for public education funding. What this celebration conveniently omits is that Brockton is once again girding up for a lawsuit because MA DESE continues to fail to provide adequate funding for schools.
Andrea Gabor ably explains in this March 19, 2018 post:
https://andreagabor.com/2018/03/19/back-to-the-future-in-the-bay-state-brocktons-new-school-funding-lawsuit-may-be-imminent/
One of the ballot questions for Massachusetts voters in November will be the Fair Share Amendment, also known as the millionaires’ tax, which will levy a surtax of 4% on the portion of individual earned income above $1 million annually. Those monies, expected to be $1.9 billion annually, can only be used for “quality public education, affordable public colleges and universities, and the repair and maintenance of roads, bridges, and public transportation.” Our Republican Governor Charlie Baker has not endorsed the proposal, needless to say. Probably too busy chatting with the Waltons.
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