Valerie Strauss of the Washington Post recently summarized the efforts by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis to destroy public schools in his state.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) has been fighting with the Walt Disney Co. for weeks now since it angered him by criticizing a law he championed that limits discussions of gender issues in public school classrooms. But his attacks on public school districts began just as soon as he took office in 2019.
DeSantis had been governor barely a month when he offered a new definition of public education that eliminated the traditional division between public and private schools. To DeSantis and his allies, “public education” includes any school — including religious ones — that receives public funding through voucher and similar programs. “Look, if it’s public dollars, it’s public education,” he said in February 2019. “In Florida, public education is going to have a meaning that is directed by the parents, where the parents are the drivers because they know what’s best for their kids.”
That was the start of what has evolved into the most aggressive anti-public education battle waged by any governor in the country. In the past year — and especially in recent months — as he has worked to amass more than $100 million for his 2022 reelection campaign, and possibly for a 2024 Republican presidential run, he has quickened the pace of his attacks.
He has, among other things: limited what teachers can say in classrooms about race, gender and other topics and appointed anti-public education figures to his administration, including a QAnon supporter, and, as education commissioner, an employee of a charter school management organization. He has also legally empowered parents to sue school districts as part of his “parental rights” initiative and micromanaged and limited the power of local school districts.
In what his critics say is a revealing move about their educational intentions, DeSantis and Florida legislators routinely exempt charter and private/religious schools from many of the restrictions and actions they take against public school districts. For example, the law that restricts classroom discussions on gender and sex education — known as the Parental Rights in Education law — applies to a state statute dealing with school board powers, according to the Tampa Bay Times. The Florida Department of Education did not respond to a query about this.
DeSantis and his like-minded compatriots make no secret about wanting to privatize public education — arguably the country’s most important civic institution. Their “school choice” movement means expanding alternatives to public school district. They include charter schools — which are publicly funded but privately managed — as well as voucher and similar programs that use taxpayer money to pay for tuition and other costs at private and religious schools. These schools can legally discriminate against LGBTQ and other students and adults.
To these activists, public schools are not the mainstay of America’s democratic system of government that tries to instill civic values to students from different racial, ethnic and religious backgrounds. Rather, as the libertarian Cato Institute says on its website: “Government schooling often forces citizens into political combat. Different families have different priorities on topics ranging from academics and the arts to questions of morality and religion. No single school can possibly reflect the wide range of mutually exclusive views on these fundamental subjects.”
Critics say this mind-set rejects the notion that America is a melting pot that flourishes by the coming together of people from different places, backgrounds, races and religions. They also say that school “choice” efforts to use public funding for private and privately run education take vital resources away from the public districts that enroll the vast majority of the country’s schoolchildren.
They point out that the public has no way to hold private and many charter schools accountable, because their operations are not transparent. There is irony, they say, in the fact that the people pushing the “parental rights” movement seeking transparency in public school districts don’t demand it of nonpublic schools that they want funded with public funds.
Last year, DeSantis visited a Catholic school in Hialeah to sign a bill that greatly expanded voucher programs while reducing public oversight. Originally intended for students from low-income families, DeSantis’s administration now also allows vouchers to go to a family of four earning nearly $100,000.
He has also played a leading role in the right-wing movement to restrict what teachers can and can’t say in the classroom about subjects including race, racism, gender and sex education. On April 22, he signed into law the “Stop WOKE Act,” which limits how race-related topics can be discussed in public school classrooms and workplace training, while essentially accusing public school teachers of trying to indoctrinate students.
About three weeks earlier, on March 28, he signed what critics dubbed the “don’t say gay” bill that limits teachers from discussing sexual orientation or gender identity. While numerous similar bills have been considered in legislatures in years past, it was DeSantis who pushed through the first one to become law.
On April 15, his administration announced that it had rejected publisher-submitted math textbooks books for including passages his administration doesn’t like, including those it says are about critical race theory and social-emotional learning.
DeSantis’s appointments to his administration reveal his attitude about public education. On April 21, he nominated state Sen. Manny Diaz (R) — who works at an affiliate of Academica, a for-profit Miami-based charter school management firm — as the state’s new education commissioner. Diaz will almost certainly be approved by the Florida Board of Education.
Diaz — who is chief operating officer of Doral College, a private college owned by Academica — has been instrumental in the legislature in expanding charter school growth. Florida, where charter schools have virtually no oversight, has seen a raft of financial scandals related to the industry.
Ten days before appointing Diaz, DeSantis’s administration appointed Esther Byrd, an office manager at her husband’s law firm, to the Board of Education. Byrd has on social media expressed sympathy with QAnon beliefs and offered a defense of those “peacefully protesting” the confirmation of the 2020 presidential election on Jan. 6, 2021, when the U.S. Capitol was overrun by a pro-Trump mob. She has alluded to “coming civil wars.” According to the Florida Times-Union, she and her husband, state Rep. Cord Byrd (R), flew a QAnon flag on their boat.
DeSantis also appointed to the Board of Education radiologist Grazie Pozo Christie, a senior fellow for the Catholic Association who wrote an article a few years ago saying the best thing parents can do for their children is to take them out of public schools.
Last October, while discussing “parental rights” in education and touting mask-optional policies at a news conference, DeSantis invited Quisha King, a leader of the right-wing Moms for Liberty group, to join him. King has called for “a mass exodus from the public school system.”
During the pandemic, DeSantis became a leader among governors of the anti-mask movement when he issued a ban on mask mandates in public schools — and then proceeded to penalize districts that required masks in compliance with federal government recommendations. His administration withheld the salaries of some superintendents and school board members that defied him — prompting the Biden administration to promise to make up for the deficit. He has also backed a plan to withhold a total of $200 million in different funding from districts that angered him.
His wrath at local school boards that don’t do his bidding has blown apart the Republican Party’s traditional stance that local education is the business of local issues. In March, one of the bills he signed into law included a provision that limits local school board terms to 12 years — without asking local voters if that’s what they wanted.
He also established a charter school commissioner office inside the Florida Department of Education, which has the power to approve or reject applications for charter schools without local school district input. Even the National Association of Charter School Authorizers thought it was a bad idea, writing on its website:
“Once a school is approved, the Commission would have no other authorizing responsibilities and the local district would be required to do all other authorizing duties. This goes against national best practice. … This is a bad idea since research shows that an authorizer’s commitment and capacity are essential to strong charter schools.
Last June, the DeSantis administration intervened in a local decision by the Hillsborough County School Board, which met to discuss a dozen proposals to open charter schools or extend the operating agreements on others. After it voted to close four existing charters, it received a letter from the Florida Department of Education saying that unless it kept those schools open, it would lose millions of dollars in state funding.
Finally, whatever the governor’s reason, Florida was the last state to tell the U.S. Education Department how it intended to use $2.3 billion in federal American Rescue Plan funds, which had been approved by Congress to help public schools recover from the pandemic. The deadline for states to apply for the money was in June 2021. Months later, on Oct. 4, Ian Rosenblum, then deputy assistant secretary for policy and programs in the U.S. Education Department, sent a letter to the DeSantis administration noting that Florida’s delay in applying for the funding was creating “unnecessary uncertainty” for school districts that needed the cash. Florida filed it a few days later.
DeSantis’s star power in the school “choice” movement is such that one of its longtime leading figures, former education secretary Betsy DeVos — who has called public education a “dead end” — solicited DeSantis’s help to promote a petition in her home state of Michigan to establish a voucherlike program. She and her family have donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to DeSantis.
DeSantis is just one of many paid ass-ass-ins …
We need to be clear about the Interests that keep putting out the contracts …
and we need so much more open journalism about those who keep putting out the contracts…
Interesting his attack on public education, as was he not himself a product of public school which gave him the education to attend Harvard and the Naval Academy?? “In 1991, he was on the ‘Dunedin High School’s ‘Little League’ baseball and softball teams. He graduated high school in 1997.”
It is amazing that DeSantis does not connect the dots between his education and his accomplishments. He has become an authoritarian ideologue that tries to impose his version of “freedom” on others. Freedom is not about limiting the speech of educators or banning books. I hope voters can understand that DeSantis is clear threat to democracy. Public schools are a cornerstone of democracy along with public libraries. They provide all citizens with access and opportunity.
DeSantis and like-minded GOP believe everyone should have freedom to agree with them.
DeSantis is an ingrate.
His public high school gave him great opportunities.
He wants Florida’s kids to attend schools of lower quality than the one he attended.
No, not all parents know what’s best for their children and yes, too many don’t care what their children do with their lives and neglect them.
All we have to do is look at how Donald Trump turned out, and that traitorous turd is only one example.
“What percentage of children have abusive parents?
“neglect, and 44.4 percent suffered physical abuse. Since children may have suffered from more than one type of maltreatment, the total percentage of the reported types of maltreatment exceeds 100 percent. girls (2.98 boys per 100,000 boys in the population compared with 2.20 girls per 100,000 girls in the population).”
Click to access canstats.pdf
But, if DeSantes thinks parents abusing their children is an example of knowing what’s best for their kids, imagine was his childhood must have been like.
Was Ron DeSantes abused by his parents as a child and is that why he is a lying, manipulating fascist freak?
Many girlfriends, wives, boyfriends husbands in a relationship or married to a narcist like Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis feel guilty and think the way they are abused and treated is their fault.
The Methods Narcissists Use to Traumatize Their Victims
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/addiction-and-recovery/202104/the-methods-narcissists-use-traumatize-their-victims
“Narcissists have this way of manipulating your emotions by playing the victim and holding little “pity parties” for themselves. They play the martyr. They make you responsible for their emotional well-being. Often, that means giving you guilt trips that are not only unfounded but also extremely unfair. However, since narcissists have no empathy (and often no sense of remorse), and since they seem to believe their own lies, they can seem very sincere – and you might find yourself believing that you’re to blame for whatever it is they’re trying to blame you for.”
https://queenbeeing.com/how-to-manage-guilt-related-to-your-toxic-relationship-with-a-narcissist/
Extremely concerned here that one of the major political parties in the United States has utter contempt for democracy. Prior to the 2020 election, it became clear that Trump was going to lose. So, Trump and his close advisers hatched a plan. Bannon talked about this quite plainly on his podcast. Don’t worry about the polls. We’re going to fix this. Here’s how. Plan 1: Get the Supreme Court, which is now overwhelmingly Republican, to declare the vote rigged and invalid for various reasons (improper voting machines, improper mail-in ballots), and have the Court throw this election to the state legislatures, which are overwhelmingly Republican. Plan 2: Raise objections to the certification of the electoral results from key states, and have Mike Pence, who will preside over the certification, refuse to certify the votes of the electors from those states. Then, seat alternative sets of Trump electors and submit those as the states’ certified votes.
So, on January 6th, these people had brought together a mob in front of the Capitol to pressure Congress not to certify the election results. Trump had pressured Pence to refuse to certify these. And here’s the thing: AN ENORMOUS NUMBER OF REPUBLICAN SENATORS AND CONGRESSPEOPLE WENT RIGHT ALONG WITH THIS TREASON, THIS ATTEMPT TO OVERTHROW A DEMOCRATIC ELECTION. As the crowd outside started to storm the Capitol building, Republican Senators and Congresspeople were inside standing up to speak against certification of the vote from various states, including, notably, vociferously, Ted Cruz and Josh Hawley. Even after the storming of the Capitol, many of those who returned to vote voting against the certification of the vote from various states, but as they night drew on, and the enormity of what had just happened started sinking in, this movement not to certify lost steam, and Congress did what it was supposed to do–a ceremonial acceptance of the actual votes of the actual electors based on the actual votes cast in the states.
So, there was WIDESPREAD COLLUSION in this treason among the President, his advisors (including his legal counsellors), AND many sitting Republican Senators and Congresspeople.
And after this TREASON, those people are still in office. So much for democracy in America.
Those Senators and Representatives, still in office, despite trying to overthrow the elected government of the United States before it was even seated. There is only one word for trying to overthrow the government: treason.
Great summary of Jan 6. Why isn’t there a massive comparison to the Chicago 7 conspiracy trial about crossing state lines to incite riots? It’s an obvious, slam-dunk case.
YUP. But here’s the thing: When there is collusion among people this powerful, it’s very difficult for democratic institutions to do their work to bring the perpetrators to justice. We live in a country in which our president, his staff, AND many elected representatives colluded in treason, in undoing that which is at the very foundation of democracy–the vote. These people have no principles. All that they recognize is power.
Imagine if any of the various attempts to throw out people’s votes had been successful. The bedrock principle of democratic governance in the U.S., that people’s votes matter, would have been tossed like so much medical waste. By one of the two major political parties–by a party that has become so extremist that it’s just fine with that.
cx: Even after the storming of the Capitol, many of the Republicans who returned to finish the certification still voted against the certification of the vote from various states
I don’t understand the relevance of your comment to the subject of THIS blog post.
You’re right, Dr. Ho. The comment was irrelevant to the post. My apologies.
I’m curious about the term, “parental rights”? What about parents who actually want racial & gender issues, as well as real history-the good & the bad-taught & discussed in school? What about THEIR rights? How do “parents” micro-manage what is taught in school?
Our American Public School system certainly needs some tweaking & modernization, but we need to continually remind the masses out there that our country became the great country we became, BECAUSE of our great, local, accessible to all, PUBLIC SCHOOL SYSTEMS.
That silent majority of parents is ignored by the media. They don’t exist. They aren’t silent, but their voices are completely ignored.
What exists for even the so-called liberal media are the far fewer number of white parents — many of whom have never used public schools — who are presented as being victimized by Democratic politicians and their evil policies like SEL and CRT which have supposedly done great harm to their children. The Democrats are victimizing their children, and finally the Republicans are listening to them and stopping the victimization of their children.
Biden won the election by many millions of votes. But the media is still obsessed with portraying white Republican voters who already have HUGELY disproportionate power in government as the victims who the wonderful Republicans are listening to.
what about THEIR rights: they need to stand together right now and loudly claim those rights
You are spot on.
Most parents think their public schools and teachers are doing a good job.
A very small group of extremists are egging on Republicans to attack their public schools for spurious reasons.
““Look, if it’s public dollars, it’s public education,””
So if I buy anything from the money I am supposed pay for tax, it’s OK, since I am spending public money. This is how we should speak from now on: “I just bought a public yacht for myself”; “I just paid for a public wedding in Hawaii for my daughter, and she got a public jet from me as a wedding present. “
LOL. Well said, Professor Wierdl!
Congressman Banks (R-Ind.) doesn’t command a state but his views are as noxious as DeSantis’.
Axios posted today, “Dems Punch Back Against GOP’s ‘culture war’ attacks.” Readers can infer that the article’s writer thinks the prior political strategy- silence- is inexplicable.
The new ad buys of the AFT and other organizations, to counter the liberty-rejecting, reprehensible GOP attacks, are listed in the article.
Banks is quoted in the article, “Americans overwhelming reject the insanity (of) …critical race theory and taxpayer-funded abortion…” Banks describes the Dems’ position as an “anti- American cultural agenda.” He’s wrong. He doesn’t know the views of Americans outside of his cloistered conservative religious brethren. He readily and falsely claims anti-Catholic bias when Americans reject theocracy.
D.C. Democratic Congresswoman Norton was outraged by Banks in 2019. She posted at her site, “Norton Blasts Banks for Introduction of D.C. Bill Meddling in Public Education in Another Member’s District.” Banks loves Catholic schools, vouchers and charter schools. He attacks abortion rights. His critics describe him as transphobic. He is evangelical Christian.
There is almost no discussion of the new regulations on what may be taught in public schools in ed reform other than the possible POLITICAL ramifications.
It is just amazing how little interest the ” ed reform movement” has in public schools. DeSantis could shutter every public school in the state and the only commentary in ed reform circles would be “is this GOOD or BAD for charters and vouchers? What’s the polling?”
Everything is analyzed through the prism of what’s good for the broader privatization project- what he’s actually doing to public schools is at best an afterthought.
Capitalism is dedicated to eliminating the very idea of the public sector and all its social institutions from the public consciousness — the GOP, the neo-pseudo-lib Dems, and all their minions are just so many viral pawns to that purpose.
My 7 year old second grader came home with several books chosen for her about diversity. However one of the books titled – and Tango makes three – is a book about homosexuality and talks about two men sleeping together.
My question is why do educators feel like we need to present this information to 7 year olds? Has this country gone off the deep end!
Tango is about two male penguins who love each other. The zookeeper gives them a penguin egg that was abandoned, and they take turns sitting on it and they love the baby.
Do you think that children are turned gay by reading books about gay penguins?
Do you think that Christians and Jews turn violent because of all the violence in the Bible?
Now don’t be coy, Diane — I think we all see the insidious metaphor involved in this work that we should be charitable and considerate of people who are not like us, even more so toward the proverbial Good Samaritans who want nothing more than to adopt and love an otherwise unwanted egg &mdashl what could be more unchristian that that?
Aha! You are on to something, Jon
Does “Second Grade Reading Material” know the difference between a penguin and a man?