In the race for governor of Virginia, Republicans have focused their campaign on hot-button issues like banning “critical race theory” from the schools, opposing mask mandates, and taking a stand against tiny numbers of transgender students. Republicans have also argued that parents should be able to determine what teachers are allowed to teach and to ban books that they don’t like. And of course, they support school choice. In short, the Republican candidate has decided to base his campaign on “culture war” issues, offering no proposals to improve the schools.
In contrast, the Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe has promised to raise teachers’ salaries, expand pre-K, and protect students from the virus. He has also taken a stand against parents dictating what should be taught, instead leaving those decisions to teachers. In these times, he has shown that principle and courage are possible when running for high political office, which is why he was endorsed by the Network for Public Education Action. We will learn on November 2 whether principle and courage can beat rank opportunism.
Lisa Lerer wrote in the New York Times about how unusual it is to have a statewide race centered on education. .
WINCHESTER, Va. — …From fights over evolution to desegregation to prayer, education battles have been a staple of the country’s divisive cultural issues for decades. But not quite like this.
After months of closed classrooms and lost learning time, Republicans in Virginia are making the schools the focus of their final push to capture the governor’s office, hoping to rally conservatives around both their frustrations over mask mandates and mandatory vaccinations and their fears of what their children are being taught.
Vocal groups of parents, some led by Republican activists, are organizing against school curriculums, opposing public-health measures and calling for recalls of school board members. And Mr. Youngkin, a former private equity executive, has capitalized, seizing on conservatives’ concerns about instruction on race and the rights of transgender children to argue that Democrats want to come between parents and their children’s education.
Mr. Youngkin’s attacks have forced Terry McAuliffe, the Democratic former governor trying to win back his old job, onto the defensive, and have thrust the ordinarily local issues surrounding schools into the middle of a rancorous nationwide shouting match.
The Virginia race offers an early electoral test of that conservative energy.
A victory by Mr. Youngkin would mark the first statewide win for Republicans in a dozen years and likely trigger a political panic within the Democratic Party about its prospects in next year’s midterm elections. Some Republican officials and strategists liken the surge of activism to the Tea Party, the anti-government movement that helped them win control of the House in 2010 and unleashed a revival of outrage politics that would define their party for the next decade.
“There’s just so much focus on the schools, and it’s visceral,” said John Whitbeck, a former chairman of the Republican Party of Virginia from Loudoun County, where acrimonious school board meetings have led to arrests, death threats and constant airtime on conservative media. “It’s not like, ‘Oh, I’m against the debt ceiling.’ This is like, ‘You’re destroying our children’s education.’ And, look, angry people vote.”
Polling in recent weeks has shown a tight race, with Democrats less enthusiastic than Republicans about voting. Mr. McAuliffe, who was barred from seeking re-election in 2017 by Virginia law, is faring worse in the fast-growing, voter-rich Northern Virginia suburbs than Gov. Ralph Northam, a Democrat, did when he won four years ago, according to some surveys.
Mr. Youngkin’s focus on schools may not resonate as strongly with the broader electorate.
Measures such as mask and vaccine mandates are cutting differently in the governor’s race in more liberal New Jersey and are overwhelmingly popular among Virginia’s independents and Democrats. Critical race theory — an advanced academic concept generally not introduced until college — is not part of classroom teaching in Virginia and many voters say they do not know enough about it to have an opinion.
And turning schools into a cultural war zone by railing against equity initiatives, books with sexual content and public health measures avoids tackling issues like budget cuts and the other thornier problems facing American education.
But in an off-year election, when both sides anticipate a sharp falloff in voting, victory may hinge on which candidate can best motivate their base. Mr. Youngkin and his strategists believe that in the fights roiling schools they have discovered the rare issue that can galvanize their voters, even in places that are shifting the state to the left.
Frustration with education is an issue that unites Republicans, energizing moderates eager to ensure their children remain in school as well as conservatives who see a liberal plot to indoctrinate their children with the belief that white people are inherently racist.
“The former governor is saying, ‘Hey I’ll decide how to teach your kids, not you’ — that’s really the issue driving this,” said John Fredericks, who led Donald Trump’s Virginia campaign last year. “Glenn Youngkin is the candidate that’s been able to straddle both sides of the party. And so far he’s given us just enough where we can enthusiastically vote for the guy.”
Republicans have centered much of their closing argument around a statement by Mr. McAuliffe in last month’s debate.
The comment came after Mr. Youngkin attacked Mr. McAuliffe over his 2017 veto of a bill permitting parents to opt out of allowing their children to study material deemed sexually explicit. The dispute was prompted by a mother who objected to her son, a high school senior, reading literary classics including Toni Morrison’s “Beloved.”
Mr. McAuliffe shot back that he did not believe “parents should be telling schools what they should teach.” In the weeks since, he’s stood by those remarks, saying that the state Board of Education and local school boards should determine what is taught in the classroom.
But Mr. Youngkin and Republicans, stripping the quotation from its context, have turned the footage into the core of their argument that Mr. McAuliffe would side with government over parents.
Video of the remark was featured in a flurry of digital ads and a statewide television commercial accusing Mr. McAuliffe of going “on the attack against parents.” Mr. Youngkin’s team began scheduling “Parents Matter” rallies in exurban counties, as they actively courted parent activist groups.
And Mr. Youngkin has also voiced support for Byron Tanner Cross, a physical education teacher in Loudoun County. Mr. Cross was suspended after announcing at a school board meeting that he would not address transgender students by their preferred pronouns because of his Christian faith.
At a campaign rally last week in Winchester, a small town in the Shenandoah Valley in one of the fast-growing exurb counties around Washington, Mr. Youngkin made little mention of Mr. Trump, vaccines or the coronavirus. Instead, he repeatedly invoked issues around schools as top priorities.
He drew some of the loudest applause from the overwhelmingly white audience when he promised to ban critical race theory on his first day in office and vowed that schools would never be closed again.
“This is what big government means for Terry McAuliffe. He not only wants to stand between you and your children. He wants to make government a tool to silence us,” Mr. Youngkin told the crowd of nearly 200 people at a farm stand. “This is no longer a campaign. This is a movement. It’s a movement led by parents.”
Mr. McAuliffe has dismissed the outrage surrounding critical race theory as “racist” and “a dog whistle.” He supports mask and vaccine mandates for students, teachers and school staff. (Mr. Youngkin says he encourages Virginians to get vaccinated against the coronavirus but does not support mandates.)
But there are signs that Democrats sense danger.
Mr. McAuliffe’s campaign has returned to highlighting his education proposals to undercut any argument that Mr. Youngkin could be stronger on the issue, promising to invest $2 billion in education, raise teacher pay, expand pre-K programs and invest in broadband access for students. On Friday, Mr. McAuliffe released an ad saying that Mr. Youngkin would cut billions of dollars in education funding and bring “Donald Trump and Betsy DeVos’s education policies to Virginia.”
The parent organizations in Virginia say they are nonpartisan and more focused on school board elections than national politics. But many are led by Republican activists, raise funds from Republican Party donors and are helped by conservative think tanks such as the Heritage Foundation, which has held briefings to discuss model legislation to block critical race theory. Last month, the Republican National Committee ran ads attacking “fascist mask mandates” and highlighting video clips of angry parents yelling at school board members.

“Mr. McAuliffe shot back that he did not believe “parents should be telling schools what they should teach.” In the weeks since, he’s stood by those remarks, saying that the state Board of Education and local school boards should determine what is taught in the classroom.”
I agree with him. The stated purpose of these anti-public school groups, that a small and extremely loud group of parents should direct what happens in public schools, is ridiculous.
They’re not the only people in the school, and “parents” are not the only people who have a stake in public schools.
Does this ludicrous political talking point apply across the board? Can schools require anything, or does every student just follow the curriculum and rules their parents deem acceptable?
Just because slogans are widely disseminated by political operatives does not make the slogan true. What he said is obviously true – “parents” can’t run public schools. Why? Because they’re just a small group of parents, for one thing, and for another, their children are only in the school for X number of years. Do we completely revamp schools at the direction of a small group of parents every 8 years? What about the next cohort of students and parents? Are they permitted to have curriculum on civil rights or must they retain the decisions this one group made?
Democrats don’t really have any coherent response to this because they haven’t defended public education in years. They swallowed the whole Right wing line on public schools and now they don’t even know what public schools ARE, or what purpose they serve, let alone how to defend them.
Public school students really, really need genuine advocates. They have been stuck with anti-public school advocates and the weak and useless “agnostics” for 20 years. They deserve better.
Who believes in public education? Can any of them defend it? Apparently not.
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McAuliffe has been a media target since he stated that parents shouldn’t tell schools what to teach. The media are trying to claim that McAuliffe is beholden to the teachers union.
McAuliffe seemed ill prepared for the backlash he faced. All candidates have to be ready to avoid directly addressing parents on this issue as the conservative media have once again put public schools on the defensive. Conservative parents are being told that public schools are filling young people’s heads with “liberal propaganda.” While the right has directly honed in on CRT and wearing masks, Democrats would be wise to prepare a response that will not spark a new round of anger and misinformation. https://www.johnsoncitypress.com/mcauliffe-says-virginia-parents-shouldn-t-tell-schools-what-to-teach-receives-pushback/article_ba28b99d-2563-5fd7-9e5c-2d538b7bd0d4.html
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Why so little pushback to this from the ed reform echo chamber? Creating chaos in public schools- helping or harming public school students?
Are they afraid to break ranks with the ed reformers pushing this, because they’re all funded/employed by the same wealthy people? I thought they were all about the students? Any attack on public schools furthers the ideological campaign to privatize schools so they’re quietly on board with this?
The silence from the echo chamber speaks volumes. They don’t care at all that this political campaign was launched inside public schools just as public schools were recovering from the pandemic. It provides absolutely no benefit to public school students, but I guess this was never about public school students.
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Ed reform echo chamber now backing “backpack vouchers”
https://fordhaminstitute.org/ohio/commentary/backpack-funding-bill-would-put-parents-control
It’ll be lockstep, like it always is. In five years every echo chamber member will be enthusiastically promoting a 100% voucher system and the complete eradication of public schools.
No dissenters, no debate, no real discussion. They’re hired for their adherence to the agenda. No one who values public schools survives the hiring process.
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I posted this at OEN https://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/Virginia-What-s-At-Stake-in-General_News-Education_Election-Reform-Activism_Election-Voting-Issues-News_Elections-And-Campaigns-211020-468.html
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Part of why the far right Republicans party is so successful is that the so-called liberal media frames the issue exactly the way the right wing want them to frame it.
Why hasn’t Youngkin been asked the following questions by anyone in the media over and over again:
If parents believe former President Trump, who had endorsed you, and want their kids to be taught that President Trump won the election, must public schools teach that?
If parents want their kids to be taught that homosexuality is a sin that should be punished, must public schools teach that?
If parents want their kids to be taught that slaves voluntarily came to the United States because they want to spend their lives serving white people, must public schools teach that?
The reason that the right wingers — from Youngkin to Trump – have always been able to get away with this is that the media accepts their framing instead of demanding that the Republican answer the obvious questions that would make it clear to the public why something that they are using to demonize a Democrat is actually something that parents would not like.
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Have you seen the movie Apocalypto, produced, co-written, and directed by Mel Gibson? The film makes the argument that indigenous Americans were bloodthirsty savages saved by Spanish people bringing Jesus to them. And this is also an argument that one finds among the extreme right-wingers with regard to slavery: yes, it wasn’t ideal, but the blacks who were brought to America thus had the opportunity to learn about Jesus and so be “saved,” which is what matters in the long (really long) run. Know and understand your enemy. There are millions of middle-aged and older Americans who actually think like this, alas. There’s little that can be done in the face of such bizarre cultism except to teach the children of people who think like this actual history and decent values.
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So, despite the fact that the teaching of Critical Race Theory in K-12 schools is a canard, it is a stand-in for a real war between two sets of beliefs and values. I say, give those on the opposite side of this war what they fear most: teach their children to loathe the racism and cultism that their parents embrace.
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Bob,
But most of the suburban white parents hear things like “parents should control the curriculum” and do not understand that what that means is that the right wing parents who have the backing of rich billionaires will start requiring public schools to teach that white Europeans who came to America “saved” indigenous people.
If we had real journalists covering politics instead of stenographers, Youngkin would be forced to answer some basic follow up questions like: “What do you say to a parent who wants their public school to teach that the Spanish people saved indigenous Americans by bringing Jesus to them? You said that their school should teach that to students if the parents want it — do you stand by your statement? And when parents want their children to be taught that slavery was good because white Europeans “saved” slaves by teaching them about Jesus, do you stand by your statement that public schools must teach that, too?”
And finally, the media should ask Mr. Youngkin whether public schools in the suburbs should teach that Trump won the 2020 election and that COVID is just a bad cold, because some parents want that to be taught in their kids’ public school?
Every media outlet should be covering this very important issue every single day — should parents who are anti-vaccine be able to demand schools teach that vaccines are bad? The Republican candidate says that those parents should decide what schools teach their kid, and if they want schools to teach that all vaccines are dangerous, then the schools must teach it.
Do parents really want this? The media should be writing stories in which they ask college educated parents “do you agree with Republican Youngkin that if anti-vax parents want to revise the science curriculum, they should be able to do so? ”
That would change the mind of many suburban voters who read what stenographer journalists write: “parents should control the curriculum” and think that sounds fine, because those stenographer journalists make no effort to enlighten them about what that really means.
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One can only imagine the chaos in schools if every parent had their demands granted. 30 students with parents, each with their own views.
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The indigenous Americans who ruled Tenochtitlan were pretty blood thirsty. They were known to sacrifice thousands of their conquered neighbors to appease their gods. Then along came their Spanish conquerors and were outdone. The Spanish were willing to sacrifice thousands to their god, mammon, all the while claiming another god to justify their behavior.
I guess Mel Gipson figures all is well that ends. But did it end?
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Yeah, that’s the shtick in the Gibson movie. The Aztecs did blood sacrifices, so the Spanish were the heroes.
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oh, that is so true and so painful: “Part of why the far right Republicans party is so successful is that the so-called liberal media frames the issue exactly the way the right wing want them to frame it.”
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It seems the problem with tribal echo chambers
is they reinforce each others view towards a
“critique” they’re good at, but shares a
strategy with the “other” echo chamber.
Salvation by demonization.
If everyone is demonized, what’s left?
Division is the demon of solidarity.
The PTB must love it, when you “play”
your part…
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interesting question: If everyone is demonized, what’s left?
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With the huge push for vouchers and the rapid adoption of vouchers in state after state we should see concrete evidence soon that ed reform actually improves education, right? We’ll see real measurable improvment as a result of all this political lobbying to publicly fund private schools?
Or will they move the goalposts again and insist it was never about “better” education- instead it was just about “choice” so the quality of the school doesn’t matter at all?
The United States is now one big ed reform experiment. I hope the echo chamber plan on evaluating their own work at some point. I would suggest an evaluation by a “neutral”- the true believers of ed reform are obviously and blatantly biased toward privatization. When do we get accountability for this “movement” and an honest assessment of their work that is conducted by someone outside the echo chamber?
After twenty years, doesn’t the public deserve a “report card” before we hire the same people with the same stale ideas promoting the same anti-public school agenda for ANOTHER 20 years?
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Lots of the people that reporters are calling “parents” are really Republican activists and Trump supporters who engage other Trump supporters to feign outrage over things they don’t like, like facts and democratic values and the truth.
These are people who lack integrity and character; they are mean and nasty and dangerous.
Trump is their boy, and Trump is a serial liar and racist and xenophobe and traitor.
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