Cory Booker has launched his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination. The stories in the mainstream media focus on his charm, his charisma, his theme of “love” and bipartisanship.
But they all miss one point, which Eric Blanc stresses: Cory Booker hates public schools.
Sen. Cory Booker (NJ–D) announced his presidential campaign last week. There’s plenty about Booker’s record worth examining, from his extremely cozy relationship with pharmaceutical companies to his bizarre public defense of Wall Street. But nothing in Booker’s past is as damning as his record on schools.
For close to two decades, Cory Booker has been at the forefront of a nationwide push to dismantle public education.
According to Booker, the education system is the main cause of our society’s fundamental problems, rather than, say, inequality and unchecked corporate power. As he explained in a 2011 speech, “disparities in income in America are not because of some ‘greedy capitalist’ — no! It’s because of a failing education system.”
Public schools, Booker continued, are also responsible for mass incarceration and racial injustice. To combat such evils, Booker has openly praised Republican leader Betsy DeVos’s organization American Federation for Children for fighting to win the final battle of the civil rights’ movement.
Scapegoating underfunded public schools for deeply rooted racial and economic problems makes little sense. But it’s been a ticket to the top for Cory Booker. In fact, it was by hitching his star to the corporate-backed “education reform” movement that Booker first rose to prominence.
The son of wealthy parents who were among IBM’s first black executives, Booker’s big political break came in September 2000, when he was tapped to give a keynote speech to the archconservative Manhattan Institute. Calling the Newark school system “repugnant,” Booker claimed there was “great evidence” that large groups of children “cannot succeed in the public school system.”
Yet rather than improving this system by increasing school funding or building public “community schools,” Booker made a hard case for charter schools as well as school vouchers, i.e., state funding for parents to pay for private schools. To give this pitch a social justice veneer, he quoted Frederick Douglas — “power concedes nothing without force” — and steeped his arguments in the language of racial justice.
Booker’s eloquent advocacy of corporate antiracism quickly caught the eye of wealthy hedge-fund investors interested in pushing privatization. In Dale Russakoff’s The Prize, a detailed account of philanthropic efforts to reform Newark’s public schools, Booker notes that though he “became a pariah in Democratic circles for taking on the Party orthodoxy on education,” his 2002 mayoral bid was boosted by “all these Republican donors and donors from outside Newark, many of them motivated because we have an African-American urban Democrat telling the truth about education.”
One of Booker’s main financial backers, Whitney Tilson, was honest about the profit motivations for large hedge-fund investors like himself. Charter schools, he explained to the New York Times, are the ideal philanthropic opportunity for such business leaders because “[h]edge funds are always looking for ways to turn a small amount of capital into a large amount of capital.”
While the over $3 million in campaign contributions Booker received from his school reform sponsors was not quite enough to buy him the 2002 election, Booker’s 2006 mayoral bid was victorious. Due in large part to his zealous commitment to privatization, Newark has gone from having less than 10 percent of students in charters in 2008, to over 33 percent today; by 2022, 44 percent of the city’s students are set to be schooled in these publicly financed but privately run institutions.
If you blame public schools for all of the ills of our unjust society, Cory Booker is your guy.

Cory Booker is a Bloomberg Republican.
In addition to his stance on public schools, his bedding down with hedge funds (similar to Gina Raimondo) and, his dubious wealth courteous of the tech industry, Booker pronounced that Gov. Northam should resign. Polls show almost 60% of Black people in Virginia want Northam to remain as Governor.
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It’s really politically popular and safe for politicians to blame all the country’s problems on public schools.
It’s a measure of what an echo chamber ed reform is that they see this as “bold”
Read Bookers own account of Newark:
https://www.the74million.org/article/74-interview-sen-cory-booker-on-teacher-quality-celebrity-star-power-and-why-his-newark-school-reforms-were-actually-a-success/
Corey Booker gets together with a small group of wealthy people and takes 400 million dollars from them to fix schools. They open a bunch of charter schools and all of Newarks problems miraculously disappear.
“There’s two schools next to each other, 14th Avenue and 15th Avenue school. 14th Avenue had this incredible principal, that shows you the power of what one principal can do, created this culture of teachers. Both all-African-American schools. One incredibly low-performing, one beating the odds. Traditional district public school, because of the school culture in there. It just seemed so patently unfair.”
See that? It’s just a matter of an “incredible principal” to go from “incredibly low performing” to “beating the odds”
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Booker will likely be the favorite of the DNC, which is run by corporate Democrat, Tom Perez. Although some changes have been made since 2016 regarding super delegates, we must remember all the manipulations executed by the Democrats to ensure that Bernie did not get the nomination. It’s all explained in Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 11/9. I hope there are many teachers as delegates to the convention to keep an eye on the corporate Democrats. Teachers, parents of public school students and other union members have to show up in the primaries to knock Booker out early.
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The public education community has to show some broad-based political effectiveness in order to be taken seriously. Being credited with bringing Booker’s national aspirations down with a thud would fit the bill. We’ll know we’re getting somewhere if public education is listed on political party questionnaires. Take down Booker’s candidacy and take the the credit.
I tell everyone I can #BookerHatesPublicEducation
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That is exactly where we need to start. We need to get the word out to those that have not followed Booker closely and see him as a “rising star.”
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Booker’s friend, the hedge fund-loving Gina Raimondo, is chair of the Democratic Governors Association. One place to start is to tell DGA that she is unwanted in national Democratic leadership positions. Second, calls to the Black Congressional Caucus (202-225-7084) expressing support for Kamala Harris and lack of support for Cory may prevent their endorsement of a DINO. Thirdly, contact reporters who quote the Center for American Progress as a voice of Democrats and tell them CAP is funded by billionaires pushing privatization. (CAP backs Booker-no surprise)
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Raimondo’s DGA has a form for comment at its site.
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Hi Linda:
Please note that your suggestion NEEDS TO BE EFFECTIVE.
If Gina is a “BAD” leader, then the best way to spread your message is through Black community, Black neighbor, popular sitcom “black” audience, and BLACK young voters. I HOPE THAT YOU AGREE WITH the words by PUBLIC “CREDENTIAL” mouths’ method are very effective. Could you remember about Opera show in which she admitted her childhood being abused by her father’s OLD male friend? Also, the # me-too movement has NOW caused Pop to admit that Nuns being sexual abused by FAKE Priests and FAKE Bishops FOR COUPLE DECADES. Ouch! When is the turn from all other FAKE religious authority in the world, like: Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, Jewish, Protestant…besides Catholic?
I guess that it is time for people to think about humanity more that man-made SAINTHOOD.
IMHO, people of all races and of all classes are happy and pleasant to live surrounding by the true humanity. All Saints can ascend to Heaven and all evils can descend to Hell. We can UNITE all continents to live peacefully and happily alone on Earth as well as to FIGHT BACK to any weather problems, or to any savage animals including foxes and weasels, ha ha ha…Back2basic
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Ed reformers have an actual track record with PUBLIC schools. They’re very powerful. They run whole states and the absolutely dominate the federal government, to the exclusion of ANY other voices or opinions.
So let’s look at the track record. The claim is they’re “agnostic” when they’re in government- they don’t favor charter and private schools. If that’s true it should be reflected in the states and cities they run.
We should have example after example of ed reformers advocating for and supporting traditional public schools. Where is that? Why haven’t they done any of it?
I can list what they’ve accomplished in Ohio over 20 years. They promoted charters and vouchers and they put in a long list of demands to public schools, while cutting public school funding. Common Core is the most recent example. They haven’t supported Common Core in any practical way- they put it in, raised the passing rates on test scores and walked away. The minute those new tests were in we never heard another word from them- they were off to lobby for additional funding for charter schools and expanding vouchers and cheap ed tech junk.
You can’t PAY the ed reform legislators in Ohio to focus on public schools- I know because we are paying them and they spend session after session on charters and vouchers. If I were to land in this state from Mars and watch ed reformers at work in Columbus I would think every child in Ohio attends a charter or private school.
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We need to expunge the corporate influence on education by voting out complicit legislative partners, one at a time. Almost all the corporate leadership has happened through a top down appointment. There have been too few public votes on the issue of corporate “reform.”
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“Second Q to Booker is about charter schools. “I know there’s a lot of charter debates, but that’s 3 percent of our schools,” he says. Wants “great public education for all of our children.”
This is what ed reform Democrats are running on- they think they can say “great schools!” and “we’re agnostics!” and that’s ENOUGH.
It’s not enough. We can do better than this. This isn’t our first run around the block with ed reform. We’ve heard this before, from George W Bush, from Obama, from Trump. That worked out so great for public schools we’ve seen wave after wave of teachers strikes, because teachers are the ONLY people advocating for PUBLIC schools.
DECADES. Same tired slogans, same refusal to actually address the PUBLIC schools the vast majority of children attend in any helpful or practical or supportive way.
It’s a dodge and they’re hoping they can pull it off again.
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Booker is a far more polarizing figure than Bush or Obama. Plus, times have changed. Many more people know that the agnostic version of privatization is bull. We need to hold Booker accountable for his antipathy toward public schools. He needs to explain his relationship with Christie, DeVos, and the Waltons.
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Maybe Corey Booker could list the ways he differs from Betsy DeVos as to PUBLIC schools, because I can’t find a dimes worth of difference.
DeVos endorsed Rahm Emanuel’s editorial about schools. She’s right. The agenda is identical. They muddy this up with inspirational quotes and Ted Talk nonsense because they cannot draw any real distinction between their agenda and that of DeVos.
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Booker is at the bottom of the list of candidates regarding numbers of small donations. His campaign is not looking good at all. There are multiple candidates with hardly any name recognition at all who have developed longer and more up to date donor contact lists.
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It’s probably not coordinated because they don’t have to “coordinate”- they’re the same group of people, but Bookers talking point that he’s “pro teacher” is exactly the same as the press release we read that was issued by the Koch education organization.
The Kochs too are now “pro teacher”. The political team got together, looked at the lay of the land, and decided being perceived as anti-teacher wasn’t good politics.
They only did this after public school teachers went on strike and much to the shock and horror of ed reform, the public by and large supported them.
It’s amusing that they seem to believe the public can’t go back and look at their prior statements and positions. They they can re-invent themselves with the launch of each new campaign. It’s the height of cynicism. Every day is a new beginning in ed reform- just change the language and the slogans and forge ahead with the same old agenda.
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Let’s hope Randi and Lily are keeping track on the Democratic candidates’ track record on public schools, because WE (the lowly rank-and-file) are doing so.
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Unions, please withhold support for any candidate unwilling to openly support public education. Make the Democrats work for the endorsement.
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EXACTLY. The unions should NOT be endorsing a candidate until MUCH closer to the election, and until we get some pretty major deals to help true public education. None of this endorsing over a year before the election of last time.
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Hi Threatened Out West:
Please keep repeating Dr. Ravitch’s words of wisdom consistently, such as:
1) to maintain AMERICA DEMOCRACY
= Every child in the US is entitled to a free public education
2) to STOP THE LOOTING and the bleeding OF AMERICAN PUBLIC EDUCATION from PRIVATIZATION.
= those CORRUPTED corporate RUIN and DESTROY CITIZENS and COUNTRY regardless what country, what races, what education background, what cultures, what family roots and what party those corrupted corporate and authorities come from.
3) Politicians of all parties must unite in an agreement to STRONGLY protect PUBLIC EDUCATION AT K-12 SYSTEM with wrap around services.
Yes, we, hard working class, demand that:
1) Teachers, Grandparents, Parents and students in the voting age should also actively work to ensure that any Democrats running for president support public education. Education must be an issue in 2020
2) Don’t expect co-opted Democrats like Corey Booker, Andrew Cuomo, Jerry Brown, or Joe Manchin to be critical of non-profit charters (or, as the co-opted Democrats like to call them, “public charters”).
3) Parents MUST be able to exercise choice WITHIN the public school system — NOT OUTSIDE OF IT because we should be a firm believer that the public school system is one of the real pillars of our democracy and it is a path for opportunity.
I hope that all old and young American generations will strongly UNITE TO VOTE OUT all “PRIVATIZATION.” PRESIDENCY IN 2020.
Do not let “MANIPULATIVE” history repeats THE SAME S–T ON WORKING CLASS.
Are we smart enough to help our young generation to have a better life and BETTER PUBLIC EDUCATION than us??? Back2basic
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It;s fun to read about the miraculous conversion of ed reformers, because it’s so incredibly small and obvious.
They boldly divert from the ed reform gospel by belatedly admitting that there are strong public schools:
“That evolution in thinking prompted me to also question other elements of the reform gospel, including the movement’s unbending support for charter schools. No one disputes that some charter schools, like the Noble Network here in Chicago, are terrific. But what many reformers fail to acknowledge is that a lot of more traditional alternatives—places such as Poe Elementary, an award-winning neighborhood school on the South Side—are great as well. ”
Rahm Emanuel was literally the last person in Chicago to discover this, and to him it means that he has had some kind of grand stroke of genius. Bold! A single sentence in support of a single public school!
You mean there are ACTUAL strong public schools? Do tell, ed reformers. You’re the last people in the country to figure that out, but by all means lecture us about it.
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Cory Booker does not merit our support. He has been anti-public schools and anti-unions
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And, DINO Cory Booker wants Northam to resign like the Republicans who published the yearbook photo, while almost 60% of Black people in Virginia want him to stay in office.
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What a contrast: Rev Barber and Cory Booker.
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Booker is a shyster.
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Disappointing, so this pretty much ends my considering Kamala Harris for President.
Still, the matter begs the question: Why is behaviorism such a big part of how some so-called leaders labeled “black” think? Why wasn’t Obama’s Race to the Top Competition enough, already?
So, at this point, no Cory Booker, no Kamala Harris.
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Most important- Cory Booker’s nomination torpedoed.
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No to both indeed. Sigh.
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Hi LetThemLearn:
How about let us spread the presidency candidates? Candidates’ BACKGROUND IN LIFETIME WORKING, EXPERIENCE, and EDUCATION MUST BE exposed the candidates’ true color regardless of their skin color and their fake party roots.
(Like rapport and sucking to PRIVATIZATION; like DECEIVING working class with their EMPTY promise)
In short, please believe in the intelligence of the working class and of the American young VOTERS so that PUBLIC WILL STRONGLY UNITE TO VOTE OUT all privatized corporate puppets in the upcoming ELECTION 2020. Back2basic
Note: why the font is too small for old people to type and to read? Whhat is happening?
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