Bracey Harris writes in The Hechinger Report that teacher activism is making the governors’ races in red states competitive.
This is great news.
Paula Howard teaches in a Republican stronghold in north Mississippi, along the Tennessee border. She usually votes Republican and is closely following the campaign of Jerry Darnell, a Republican educator running to represent Howard’s home district in the state Legislature.
But — while energized about the possibility of sending a conservative colleague to the state Capital — for governor she’s backing the Democrat, Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood. She likes his calls to dramatically increase funding for education, including raising teacher pay, directing an additional $300 million to school districts, and expanding the state’s public pre-K program.
And, like other teachers around the state, she hasn’t forgiven the GOP’s gubernatorial candidate, Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves, for opposing a 2015 school funding initiative that would have increased money for education.
“It’s not about a ticket,” Howard said. “It’s about what they can do for our children…”
Spending on education is a wedge issue in the other two governor’s races this year, in Louisiana and Kentucky. A teacher sickout roiled the Bluegrass State in February, and the two candidates there have clashed on issues like teacher pensions and charter schools. Mason-Dixon pollster Brad Coker said part of the playbook for Democratic candidates is to stay focused on local and state issues.
Republican candidates have made low taxes their highest priority. But voters seem to recognize that low taxes hurt schools and children.
If Southerners started voting for the best interests of their communities and their state, not for the wily promises of the 1%, it would be a new day for the South.

There is a strong sense of tribalism among Republicans in the South. These are the people that wear the “I’d Rather a Russian than a Democrat” shirts, and they never got over the Civil Rights era. This week I finally saw a crack in their unity. I live in a large military community. Trump’s abandonment of the Kurds is a bridge too far for some members of the military. They fought with the Kurds in Iraq respect them. Some evangelicals are reconsidering their support for #45 as some of the Kurds are Christian as well.
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and a very blind tribalism: it is shocking to see certain states voting over and over ONLY to keep the mess they have, with no willingness to even look at what the other side has to offer
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One of my seven siblings is a Trumpster.
She is very upset that Trump is letting the Turks kill the Kurds.
Why?
The Turks are Muslims, the Kurds are Christian.
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The usual, old richest 0.1% day for Rhode Island with Gina Raimondo as its hedge fund loving governor.
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