With the help of the teachers’ unions, the people of Ohio elected three new members of the state board of education who support public schools. This is great news because the politicians in the State House and the Legislature have been frantically diverting public funds to charter schools and vouchers, as well as endorsing extremist policies on race and gender. The state constitution explicitly authorizes a system of public schools and forbids public funding of religious schools. Ohio’s charter schools are among the lowest-performing in the nation and are lower performing than the state’s public schools. Half of those authorized by the state have closed.
Anti-culture war candidates win three seats on Ohio State Board of Education, with big boost from teachers’ unions
By Laura Hancock, cleveland.com
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Voters elected three candidates to the Ohio State Board of Education on Tuesday who oppose fights over LGBTQ students in bathrooms and attempts to control how American racism is discussed in social studies classes. The Ohio Federation of Teachers and the Ohio Education Association contributed tens of thousands of dollars to help the campaigns of former state senator Teresa Fedor of Toledo, Tom Jackson of Solon and Katie Hofmann of Cincinnati, who each won their races against more conservative candidates. Candidates the unions did not support, including one who ran unopposed, won races in two districts.
The unions were involved in recruiting the three candidates. Fedor and Hofmann are each former teachers and members of OFT. Jackson, a businessman, is a volunteer coach at Solon High School and serves on the Solon City Schools Strategic Planning Team. Their members volunteered to knock on doors and spread the word about the candidates.
They also gave their candidates a big fundraising boost. In addition to writing checks for each candidate’s campaign — OEA gave $13,700 to each candidate’s campaign and the OFT gave $12,000 to Fedor and Jackson and $13,700 to Hofmann — the unions spent at least $100,000 to get them elected through an independent super PAC called Educators for Ohio. The PAC is normally controlled by OEA, but OFT this year was also involved in it, said Melissa Cropper, president of the OFT.
The super PAC spent money only on the three state school board candidates, said Scott DiMauro, president of the OEA. “The three individuals who won those contested races are all strong advocates of public education, they have strong records on that,” DiMauro said. “I would anticipate they would work closely with other members of the state board who have been pushing back on some of those (culture wars) attacks. How everything is going to play out still remains to be seen, because you still have an extremist faction that is pushing some of those resolutions. Some of those members are still there.”
Fedor defeated Sarah McGervey, a Catholic school teacher who talked about parental rights against perceived liberal bias in education and keeping LGBTQ protections out of Title IX. Jackson defeated incumbent Tim Miller and Cierra Lynch Shehorn, who was ran further to the right of Miller. Hofmann defeated conservative incumbent Jenny Kilgore.
Hoffman, Jackson and Fedor vastly outraised their opponents. Kilgore individually raised $5,800 in 2022. Hofmann raised nearly $44,000. Jackson raised $53,000 this year, compared to Miller’s $7,600 and Lynch Shehorn’s $4,800.
Fedor’s and McGervey’s campaign finance reports are more complicated. McGervey ran for the Ohio House in August. After she lost that race she ran for the state board. Her total fundraising haul was $15,000. Fedor was a sitting senator in 2021, the beginning of the two-year funding cycle, and she raised $95,000 during the two-year period.
Other candidates who won but were not supported by the unions include incumbent member John P. Hagan, a conservative on the board, who beat a challenge from Robert R. Fulton. Neither candidate in that race received the unions’ endorsement. Ohio State Board of Education President Charlotte McGuire won reelection unopposed. Ohio Value Voters, a conservative Christian organization, backed the conservative slate of candidates, including Hagan.
As Ohio students fell academically behind from remote learning during the pandemic and Ohio has been without a permanent state superintendent for more than a year, conservatives on the state school board pressed to take on several controversial issues over the last year.
Last year, conservatives on the board successfully overturned an anti-racism resolution that the board had previously passed in the wake of George Floyd’s death. Two members of the state board who voted to overturn the anti-racism measure were defeated Tuesday night: Miller, of Akron, and Kilgore, of Hamilton County. A third supporter of the resolution, Kirsten Hill – who organized a bus from Lorain County to attend the “Stop the Steal” rally on Jan. 6 but said she never entered the U.S. Capitol – opted not to seek reelection.
More recently, conservatives on the board have been pushing a resolution that would urge local school districts to defy Title IX protections for LGBTQ students that are being proposed by President Joe Biden’s administration, potentially putting federal money for free and reduced lunch and special education in jeopardy. The resolution remains under consideration. Board members have spent 10 hours taking public testimony and discussing it since September.
Most of the state school board campaigning and fundraising took place in just the past two months, Cropper said.
“Remember, this election cycle, no one knew what the lines were going to be,” she said. Every 10 years, the boundaries for the Ohio State Board of Education shift when Ohio Senate boundaries are redrawn. Gov. Mike DeWine changed state school board boundaries Jan. 31, a move panned by critics as gerrymandering. DeWine didn’t change the school board map, even as state mapmakers shifted the Senate’s boundaries found to violate the Ohio Constitution, and on July 14, Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose notified county boards of election to use the Jan. 31 changes DeWine made. Candidates for the state school board, which are nonpartisan, had to file to run for the seats Aug. 10, which left just a few months to campaign.
“It really was a crunch in trying to get quality candidates to run,” Cropper said. “We had incumbents we know that were not pro-public education, who were in my opinion, pushing these culture war issues at the state board level. And it was just critical to us that we could get them out of there. So we definitely were looking for people who understand public education, who have been engaged in conversations about equity, social-emotional learning, the whole child approach, all the things that are really important to us.”
The whole child approach refers to the state board’s 2019-2024 strategic plan that says the state is concerned with the “whole child,” not just academics but stressors children experience at home that can influence learning. In 2019, the Ohio Department of Education unveiled social-emotional learning standards that aim to help children become successful in their interactions with others, to establish positive relationships, manage their emotions, and make healthy, drug-free choices in life.
“My estimation is that people rejected extremists and the extreme issues that they’re bringing to the table and children are caught in the middle,” Fedor said Wednesday. “I believe this is an overall rejection of using our children as political fodder.” Fedor had the most name recognition among the state school board candidates. In addition to her legislative career, she was on the Democratic gubernatorial ticket this spring with former Cincinnati Mayor John Cranley. Fedor said that as she campaigned, she talked about reducing the number of standardized tests kids have to take. She talked about her own time in the classroom, when she worked an additional part-time job at the Toledo Zoo to make money for classroom materials.
She said she learned that people were horrified that Hill led Ohioans to the Jan. 6 rally. “There was a flood of different ideas and thoughts about what’s going on,” she said. “And they did not support the extremists who are bringing the extreme issues forward. The culture wars in the classrooms have to end so we can get to the business of educating our children with quality public education.”
Billionaires have been pouring millions of dollars into state and local school board races for at least the last dozen years. These elections are often flooded with money from out-of-state billionaires who support expansion of charter schools and invalid ways of evaluating teachers.
It’s great to see the unions step up and support state school board members who care about public schools and teachers and care about issues that matter, rather than divisive conflicts that don’t help anyone. The amount of money spent by the unions was small compared to what the billionaires spend, but it made a difference.

Excellent news indeed!!! For the longest while, it’s been nothing but a steady stream of bad news, as well as public school money, out of Ohio it seemed. But this is great.
As final tallies are counted, I’d like to know your answer to the following question, D: do you think it’s fair to conclude that, despite Democratic and Republican victories as well as Freedom Caucus re-elections, Moderate America won the midterm elections this past Tuesday?
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Yossarian: did Moderate America win yesterday? Yes and no. Some but not all of the worst lunatics were defeated: Paul LePage in Maine; Don Bolduc in NH; Doug Mastriano in PA. And the craziest of all—Boebert—is hanging on by her fingernails in a red red district. Dems swept the legislature in MI.
But too many of the crazies were re-elected.
And most worrisome is that many of the victories of sane people were perilously close. Why did almost half the electorate in GA vote for a completely unqualified Walker? Why is Kari Lake almost tied with Katie Hobbs? Lake is a sanity test. She has zero qualifications for office and is a Trump-style denier of reality. I’m exhilarated that so many good people defied expectations, but depressed that about 40-49% of the voters want to be represented by phonies and crazies.
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Tim Ryan’s loss in Ohio was dreadful.
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Indeed, I concur. I heard that coming in and out of the faculty room yesterday (that Moderate America won) but I had my doubts about it given the ongoing tabulations and, yes, the amount of people voting for these people. It begs the bigger question: for Pete’s sake, what the hell is going on out there that’s drawing so many millions to these type of candidates, let alone their type of politics?
(I’m still in disbelief that Warnock/Walker is going to a runoff).
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I heard someone explain the Georgia choice on TV:
Between a brain-damaged football player who put a gun to his wife’s head, has multiple children by different women, opposes abortion but paid foe two, and lives in Texas.
Vs.
A Baptist minister
Tough choice?
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To channel Jeff Foxworthy’s schtick: If it’s a tough choice, you might be a redneck!
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Do you mean that Ohio’s charters are among the lowest performing in the nation?
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“Ohio’s public schools are among the lowest-performing in the nation and are lower performing than the state’s public schools.”
I had the same question.
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I know I’m turning into a Gloomy Gus, but this is actually the issue that has gotten me down the most. This news is minor compared to the reality of what is happening and has happened in Ohio. Every politician who enabled the charter/voucher/privatization grift in this state has been promoted and reelected. Andrew Brenner still controls the legislative strings, he looks to be around a long time, and republican control of the Ohio Assembly is not likely to change in my lifetime.
Add to that the collusion of many suburban and affluent district boards (which are overwhelmingly Republican although they do not advertise party) and administrators who are playing a cynical game of selling out urban districts and think they will coexist and thrive with charters, and it don’t look good. Indeed, I think this election sealed the fate of public education in Ohio. It is just a matter of time, 5, 10, 15, 20 years. But the path forward is really obvious, and I don’t see any others right now. No one in Ohio cares about education. They occasionally talk but don’t do a positive thing ever. Only the few who read this blog and get excited about minor victories like this. They do not matter when real power ignores them.
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To underscore the point, Frank LaRose, an heir to a beverage distributorship whose parents bought him a political career, is a grad of the public school system I live in. Something they never forget to tout as he enables their demise. With friends like these…
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Whine-Head Anonymous Single Step Program
Leave the Gloomy Gus Vineyard
that has an unlimited supply of
Whine..
Patrons are prisoners of their
own device…
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This doesnt sound correct: “Ohio’s public schools are among the lowest-performing in the nation and are lower performing than the state’s public schools. Half of those authorized by the state have closed.”
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“As Ohio students fell academically behind from remote learning during the pandemic. . . .”
Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha!!
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Women should understand that public education is their protection from 2nd class citizenship in the U.S. The attacks and wins against public schools and, for privatization are primarily driven by the conservative religious who are against women’s rights. It’s true in Ohio, Indiana and other central states.
The campaign is not limited to central states. In Maine (largely not a religious population), a current U.S. congressional race which will likely be determined in a run off, has an ardent anti-abortion religionist man, Poliquin, hoping to defeat a Democrat.
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Here’s some good news delivered well:
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