Before the election of 2020, Joe Biden made some exciting promises to educators. He said publicly at a televised event in Pittsburgh that he would get rid of the onerous federal testing mandate. And he pledged to stop funding charter schools. The U.S. Department of Education hands out $440 million every year to create new charter schools or to expand existing charter schools. The Network for Public Education has published studies that document the wastefulness of the federal Charter Schools Program’s’ extravant funding but it survives nonetheless, because of Democratic choice fans like Speaker Hakeem Jeffries, Senator Michael Bennett, and Senator Corey Booker.
President Biden did not keep his promises. He didn’t even try.
He could have chosen a leader for the U.S. Department of Education who would fight to fulfill his promises. He didn’t.
Cardona did not take aim at the onerous federal testing program that is a remnant of George W. Bush’s failed No Child Left Behind law. NCLB was enacted in 2002. Twenty-two years ago. Does anyone believe that “no child was left behind”? Did the billions of dollars spent on annual testing of every single student in grades 3-8 has lift achievement to new heights and close achievement gaps? No. Dr
Instead, he chose Miguel Cardona, the State Commissioner of Connecticut, an amiable man who never says or does anything controversial. He did not repeat any of Biden’s promises.
Did Secretary Cardona propose any revision of the law? True, it went from NCLB to the equally ludicrous “Every Student Succeeds Act” in 2015. But has every student succeeded just because the law got a new name? No. What did Secretary Cardona propose? Nothing.
During Secretary Cardona’s tenure, there was an explosion in manufactured hostility towards public schools and their teachers, led by rightwing groups like “Moms for Liberty.” And these groups loudly demanded censorship of books in school libraries. Under the guise of “parental rights,” small numbers of very aggressive people made absurd claims about public schools: that teachers were “grooming” children to be gay or transgender; that school nurses were performing surgery in their offices to change boys into girls; that schools kept litter boxes for students who identified as cats; that public schools were “indoctrinating” students into radical views about race, gender, and American history. Teachers were fired for daring to teach “banned books” or accurate history about racism.
All of this was crazy stuff, spun out of whole cloth. Just plain nuts.
While our public schools were reeling from the barrage of lies about them, who were their defenders? The unions, for sure. PEN International. The American Library Association. Publishers. But where was the U.S. Department of Education? I honestly don’t know. It was a time when a strong and forceful voice was needed to stand up to the censors and bullies. I didn’t hear it. Did anyone else?
President Biden pledged to support public schools and to end federal favoritism for privately-managed charter schools. That didn’t happen. Rather than challenging the powerful charter school lobby, Secretary Cardona accepted its invitation to be the keynote speaker at the annual meeting of the National Association of Public Charter Schools in 2021.
The federal Charter Schools Program gets $440 million every year to open new charter schools or to fund the expansion of charter chains. The Biden administration didn’t try to kill the appropriation, but it did enact regulations for CSP, a striking achievement. But it then ignored its own regulations, funding segregated charter schools that the regulations forbade.
Probably the worst example of a charter school that received a large federal grant despite its failure to comply with the Department’s regulations was the Cincinnati Classical Academy.
Last year, the U.S. Department of Education gave $2 million to the Cincinnati Classical Academy, a charter school created by Hillsdale College, the far-right institution closely aligned with former (and future) President Trump. The school claimed in its application that it intended to provide quality education for needy minority students, but in fact the school serves an overwhelmingly white, affluent population.
The Network for Public Education was all over this $2 million grant because it was such a flagrant violation of the Department’s own regulations.
Carol Burris, the executive director of NPE, wrote a letter that was cosigned by more than a dozen local education and civil rights groups in Cincinnati. The letter was sent a year ago, with hopes that the Departnent would recall the grant because of false and misleading information in its grant application.
The Department did nothing. No action was taken.
Please read the letter:
December 4, 2023
The Honorable Miguel Cardona Secretary
U.S. Department of Education 400 Maryland Avenue, SW Washington, D.C. 20202
Dear Secretary Cardona:
We write to express our deep concern regarding the two Charter School Programs awards given to Cincinnati Classical Academy (CCA), a Hillsdale member charter school. CCA received a $100,000 planning grant from Ohio’s State Entities grant in 2021-2022, and in 2023, a Developer grant directly from your Department in the amount of $1,991,846. This letter provides evidence that the application submitted to your Department contained false and misleading information on which the award was based.
Further, after reading the three application reviewers’ notes, it is apparent that no attempt was made to fact check the application. Instead, the reviewers ignored what should have been obvious redflags, as we explain below.
A detailed summary of the false and misleading information presented in the application is also provided. We ask you to investigate the awardee Cincinnati Classical Academy’s application and claims and terminate the grant based on that review.
Evidence of the Intent to Mislead the Department Regarding the Purpose of the Grant
Throughout the application, the charter school repeats that it is worthy of the grant because CCA exists to provide a high-quality alternative for disadvantaged students in Cincinnati’s public schools. The first two objectives, as stated in the application, are as follows: (1) help to close the achievement gap for economically disadvantaged students in southwestern Ohio; (2) continue to provide a proven and tuition- free charter school option to underserved children and families in an area where limited options for quality schools exist.
To make its case, the application cites demographic information for the city of Cincinnati, which, according to the application, is 41.37% African American/Black, 53.3% white, and has a high poverty rate. Helping students escape poverty and serving underserved students continue as themes throughout the application, justifying the grant.
However, as the table below shows, the school is not serving the underserved students of the area but rather a population that is dramatically whiter and wealthier than not only the city of Cincinnati but the entire County of Hamilton.
The table below provides the 2022-2023 school year demographic distribution of students in the Cincinnati School District public schools, all Hamilton County Schools, all charter schools in Hamilton County, and the applicant—Cincinnati Classical Academy. School enrollment was 452. The demographics of CCA do not reflect either Cincinnati School District public schools or the schools of Hamilton County, which the charter school purports to serve.

Yet, it never provided a demographic breakdown of its students for its first or second year; it only gave a demographic breakdown of the population of Cincinnati. Nor did it acknowledge the under-enrollment of disadvantaged students or put forth a plan to address it. None of its goals and objectives address the lack of diversity and under-enrollment of underserved students. Even more concerning is that the three reviewers never noted the absence of demographic information and instead parroted the application’s assertion that the school was in a high-needs area.
The applicant certainly knew the disproportionate enrollment of wealthier white students in the charter school when it submitted its application in July of 2023. According to the application, 98.2% of the 2022- 23 students were returning in 2023-2024; therefore, the applicant also knew that the school’s demographics would remain stable. It was merely adding a grade level to accommodate its present sixth- grade class.
In summary, although the applicant stated its mission to be closing the achievement gap and serving disadvantaged students, the applicant knew that its student body made the serious fulfillmentof that mission impossible. We also believe this disproportionality in enrollment is by design, as explained below.
Location of Cincinnati Classical Academy
The applicant states the following regarding the location of the charter school: “The location within a diverse neighborhood with access to direct route highways to all areas of the city has allowed CCA to provide a high-quality tuition-free classical education model to adiverse student population, including student’s [sic] representative of urban intergenerational poverty and those experiencing social and economic deprivation during childhood and adolescence.”
Although the school’s mailing address gives the impression that the school is located in Cincinnati, the school is located in Reading, Ohio, a city that is an inner suburb of the Cincinnati metropolitan area.
1 Data can be found here:https://reportcard.education.ohio.gov/district/detail/043752
2 Data obtained from the 2022-23 databasehttps://education.ohio.gov/Topics/Data/Frequently-Requested-Data/Enrollment-Data
3 Data obtained from the 2022-23 database charter school tabhttps://education.ohio.gov/Topics/Data/Frequently-Requested-Data/Enrollment-Data
4 Data can be found here:https://reportcard.education.ohio.gov/school/detail/019530The number of ELL students was obtained from the Ohio Education Department database which can be found here: https://education.ohio.gov/Topics/Data/Frequently- Requested-Data/Enrollment-Data.
According to the latest census, 84.8% of Reading residents are white,7.7% are Black, and 10.6% live in poverty5. The village of Evendale that abuts the school property is also predominantly white and has a poverty rate of 2.8%,6 significantly below the Cincinnati rate of 24.7%7, which is nearly twice the national rate.
The location of the school was a deliberate choice. According to theschool’s website, the charter school had sought to locate the school in the former Catholic school facility since 2020.
From the website:
The new school has had interest in the property since 2020, but at that time Ohio law allowed public community schools [charter schools] to locate only in“challenged” school districts. That did not include Reading. In a surprise turn of events, Ohio H.B. 110 removed this restriction starting July 1, 2021.
“We were elated. We contacted the parish immediately to explore their interest,” Hartings said. “We were so fortunate to find a community that shares our values and goals, and that embraced the kind of school we are offering. The campus means a lot to the community, which has several generations of memories there.”8
According to the submitted application, the charter school gives preference to resident children of the Reading Community School District, as required by Ohio State law. Therefore, the placement of the charter school in a “non-challenged “school district would likely result in a student population that was whiter and wealthier than the population described in the application.
Forward Face of the Cincinnati Classical Charter Academy
The forward face of a charter school is its website. From a school’s website, parents glean its philosophy and culture. What is featured on CCA’s website provides insight into the families the school wishes to attract. The applicant claims it seeks a “diverse student population,including student’s [sic] representative of urban intergenerational poverty and those experiencing social and economic deprivation during childhood and adolescence.”
The CCA website, however, describes the school as providing “a tuition-free, classical liberal arts education” in “partnership with Hillsdale College,” a private Christian college, with no forward mention that the school is a charter school. The featured slide deck zooms in on the Christian cross on the school building. Although there is information on the school’s catered lunch program, it does not mention any provision for free or reduced-price lunches. Nowhere on the website does the school provide information in Spanish or other languages or indicate that it is inviting either socio-economically or racially diverse students.
In pictures of classrooms and hallways, the student body shows few students of color and no faculty of color. An image of the gymnasium shows a crucifix displayed on the wall, which we have been advised violates the law and the terms of the grant. A review of the school’svirtual tour features white students and a white faculty and administration.
Inaccuracies in the Application
Throughout the application, the applicant touts the first-year achievement results on state tests provided on page 759 of the application in Appendix G15. The applicant claims, “These results were achieved with
5 https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/readingcityohio/PST045222
6 https://censusreporter.org/profiles/06000US3906125802-evendale-village-hamilton-county-oh/
The Department reviewers never questioned why the school never included demographic information. Instead, reviewers parroted back what the applicant said as if it were fact. A simple visit to the school website would have revealed the school for what it is. The lack of fact-checking by reviewers solicited from the charter community has been an ongoing concern.
7 https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/cincinnaticityohio
8 https://www.cincyclassical.org/cincinnati-classical-academy-will-locate-in-reading/
a diverse student population that evidences the appeal of the Hillsdale K-12 classical education model to families from diverse cultural and socioeconomic backgrounds,” a claim which is clearly an over- exaggeration.
The school’s proficiency rates on page 759 do not match those listedon the state website.9 For example, the Ohio Education Department lists CCA’s 6th grade proficiency for the 2022-23 year as 76.9% and mathematics as 43.4%. These same rates are included in the school’s annual report.
Yet, the application lists the rates of the same grade level as 92% and70%, respectively. Inflated rates are given in the application for every grade level in the school.
To further make its case, it compares the school’s ratings to those of what it refers to as underperforming public schools in an underserved target area. It begins with the performance of the Cincinnati Public Schools and continues with schools in a five-mile radius. None of the schools listed in that five-mile radius are part of the Cincinnati Public School system. It should also be noted that the names of the schools it lists for the Reading School District are incorrect, and there are three, not four, schools in that district.
Conclusion
To be blunt, CCA is designed to attract an elite student body whose families seek a private school experience paid for by taxpayers. Its videos, website, and literature, which include showcasing the cross on the top of the building and a crucifix in the gymnasium, are designed to attract white Christian middle- class families from the diverse districts in the area.
The application does not report or explain its lack of diversity. Instead, it masquerades as an equity initiative. The application does not present a plan to become more diverse but instead funding to expand a grade level each year.
While it is true the charter school’s proficiency rates exceed the state, that is hardly surprising given that nearly half of all Ohio publicschool students are economically disadvantaged compared to less than17% of CCA.
Therefore, we ask that the grant to CCA be terminated and, based on the false and misleading information that the school provided, that allmoney be returned to the Department and no further money bedisbursed.
Respectfully submitted,
The Network for Public Education
With:
Greg Landsman, Ohio Congressional District 1
Catherine Ingram, Ohio Senator District 9
Child Wellness Fund, Inc.
Cleveland Heights Teachers Union
Erase the Space
Public Education Partners- Ohio
Cincinnati Federationof Teachers
Cincinnati Mennonite Fellowship
Bold New Democracy
Dani Isaacsohn, Ohio State Representative District 24
Cecil Thomas, Ohio Representative District 25
Sedrick Denson, OhioState Representative District 26
Rachel Baker, Ohio State Representative District 27
JessicaMiranda, Ohio State RepresentativeDistrict 28
Ohio PTA
Ohio Education Association
Ohio Federation of Teachers
Cincinnati NAACP
Heights Coalition for Public Education
Honesty for Ohio Education
Northeast Democratic Club
Northeast Ohio Friends of Public Education
Ohio Coalition for Equity and Adequacy of School Funding
Renaissance Services
Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ) Cincinnati
TransOhio
Underworld Black Arts Festival

I raised a question in another thread a few days ago. I asked why Democrats could not make the school issue its own. Commentary from LisM suggested that Democrats were as bad as Republicans on the issue, and this certainly supports that idea.
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Democrats should be shouting education, health care and affordable housing from the roof tops, yet crickets. No earthly idea how to be an opposition party.
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Because their (biggest) donors are no different than republican donors in that they do not want flourishing public schools. Donors for both parties at the very least continue to see public schools as a relatively untapped resource ripe for exploitation. At most, they see it as an obstacle to be removed in order to redirect subsidies into their own pockets.
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Everyone on this blog was touting Biden because they thought he would do something (kill the testing madness and data collection) for public education because, well…… Dr. Jill the public school teacher. I had no delusions! Biden was NEVER going to tank a “highly educated”, high salary, multi Billion dollar industry and risk messing with those rosy (but often fake) job numbers supporting the “great economy” coming out of Covid. Team red wants vouchers, team blue supports charters and both support the stupid testing and “industry” that “supports” DoE. I hope that the DoEd goes to the wayside and we get HEW again!…that would certainly kill the hydra instead of lopping off its ugly heads.
OH…..and let me scream into the wind about that wonderful FAFSA fiasco that the DoEd rolled out! The incompetence of it was gobsmacking!….ask me how I know!
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Once a money stream gets tapped into by the “non-profit complex”—from charter schools to “homeless services”—the #1 priority for recipients is to increase that stream and expand. The #2 priority is to make sure the stream never decreases.
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I liked Biden for many reasons, even if he didn’t stop the testing and charter boondoggles.
He emphasized job creation, building American industry, bringing back high-tech industry, helping millions of students pay off their college debt, putting money into stopping climate change, supporting Ukraine when its existence was threatened by the Russian invasion, strengthening NATO against Russian invasion, literally building a strong economy for the future.
He made excellent appointments, not a bad one among them, in contrast to Trump, who appointed horrible people for HHS, the FBI, Defense, and Intelligence.
How do you feel, Lisa, about the prospect of RFK Jr in charge of the nation’s health system?
A drunk in charge of Defense?
A Putin-Assad stooge in charge of the nation’s 18 intelligence agencies?
A hothead who had publicly declared that he wants to close the FBI put in charge of the FBI?
Biden’s economic policies were successful.
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Ms Ravitch……you need to emerge from your deep blue bubble and start living in the real world. Team blue lost and they lost it ALL…..due to being out of touch with what people want from their government and how they want their tax $$$$ spent. We must ALL live with the consequences of this election. Will team blue start giving “the people (voters)” what they want/need and ask for OR will team blue continue down the path of denial and self sabotage?
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Lisa,
I don’t speak for the Democratic Party. I speak for myself, my convictions. Team Red will screw the people who voted for them. Team Red will give another big tax cut to the 1% and corporations. Team Red will deport the people who plant and pick the crops. Team Red will impose tariffs that will raise prices on cars, groceries, hardware, etc.
The voters will get angry and vote Democrats into power in two years.
My convictions were shaped over many years. They do not change because 49.8% of voters elected a lying ignorant felon.
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Keep speaking up Diane. We need your voice!
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I’ll supply you with a very cogent article in The Atlantic. I know that it is behind a paywall, but you’ve mentioned that you have a subscription. Maybe this will help you understand HOW a lot of people feel and WHY. If you can’t access the article, Bill Maher certainly explains it pretty well while being rather snarky (his video clips are on youtube)!
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2024/12/political-parties-populist-policies/680951/
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As one who has been a student in public schools and an educator of 38 years, I cannot honestly say that I have ever been impressed by the efforts of the U.S. Department of Education, It’s parade of ineffective secretaries, nor the lack of urgency toward public schooling exhibited by Presidents. Recalling the pompous bloviating of people like William Bennett still makes me fume. Yes, George H.W. Bush did work with governors to address concerns about our schools, but the man he chose to lead that effort as Secretary of Education, Lamar Alexander, was not exactly inspirational on that front. His son, Bush 43 made the schools objectively worse and succeeding presidents simply participated in reducing federal funding (From 12% of all school funding in 2010 to around 7^% today). I believe that the public schools are the most important democratic institution we have, yet that perspective has never been demonstrated by administrations that are willing to give military contractors and banks blank checks. Although Trump’s wish to end the Department of Education would be the final death knell for Federal support of our schools, it has been a bipartisan effort to allow funding for schools to wither on the vine. Meanwhile, privatization has been the ruse that has fueled the “choice” grift that simply subsidizes private equity and billionaires at the expense of teacher and student resources. I can only hope America sees there error of its ways, but considering the people we continue to put in leadership, I’m not hopeful that this will happen anytime soon. Yeah, Cardona has been a disappointment and the legacy of his predecessors provided the model for his failures.
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Very few of our presidents have been educated in public schools. Obama, for instance attended Punahou School in Hawai’i. Biden attended Catholic schools. They don’t get it.
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Ronald Reagan went to public schools.
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Harris and Walz would have been the first pair of public school grads since Carter /Mondale. Clinton was a product of public scho9ols but Gore attended private while his dad was in the Senate.
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This is an excellent analysis of Democrats’ ambivalence toward public education. Both Obama and Biden failed to support public education. Biden made a lot of empty promises he failed to keep. As long as we have elections that hinge on candidates outspending the opposing candidate, Democrats will continue to offer token support to public education.
This election demonstrates that Democrats cannot outspend Republicans that are supported by multiple billionaires. The only way for Democrats to win is to adopt a platform of economic populism, not just as a hook to attract votes, but as a non-negotiable value they will fight for including unwavering support for public education. Democrats’ endless waffling and token promises have turned off working people. It is the only way the party can recapture the trust of voters is by being honest with them and inspiring them to vote for real change. Democrats need to stand and deliver.
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Part of the problem is that the political class doesn’t consider public education near as important as weapons, oil, and private equity. The 60% dropped in Federal spending for public education since 2010 has been a bipartisan effort after all. Citizens United is far worse than the predicted tragedy. Democrats, especially the old guard, have decided that PACs are now a requirement for power. They are addicted to billionaires as well. Too many in the party have forgotten that part of Obama’s success in 2008 came through small donor donations. Meanwhile, today while all of us are being bombarded for contributions we also watch the same politicians bend over to PACs that give them the “real money.” AIPAC prevented any meaningful discussion on Gaza and the Democratic timidity on this front contributed to Harris’ loss. The Democratic establishment so dominated by the coasts are comfortable hobnobbing with the oligarchy so why would they trouble to actually serve the rest of us? Most of them send their kids or grand kids to elite independent schools anyway. I mean, how dare we expect Nancy Pelosi stop making her millions in the stock market.
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I hate to be a nag…actually, scratch that: I am happy to nag, urge, entreat, wheedle, pester and hound on behalf on the Network for Public Education. This post is yet another example of why this organization deserves financial support.
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Mark, I love the endorsement of NPE!!
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Thanks Diane. I suppose I should mention, in the interest of establishing my own credibility, that I support the NPE to the greatest extent that my lavish salary from the NYCDOE permits.
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If I recall correctly, I believe President Biden’s brother Frank had a charter school chain in Florida. That might explain things.
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He ran a for profit charter chain
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Well, I’m not sure much more could have been expected. Biden promised to appoint a Secy of Ed with a public school background, and he did– but someone whose teaching experience bridged the transition to NCLB, and who went into administration (as an elemsch principal) at the tender age of 28. Cardona was a supporter of testing/ data collection, and the accountability systems of the RTTT era.
To be fair, Cardona’s emphasis was almost entirely on higher ed, not public K12, no doubt because that was Biden’s focus. Given his background we should perhaps consider ourselves lucky.
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Cardona did no harm. He was ineffectual.
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Why was his focus on higher ed? He had no experience there.
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I mean to say that getting all the tranches of student loan forgiveness through as fast as possible/ responding to pushback, drafting new SAVE loan program/ regs process/ starting implementation/ dealing with pushback, revising Title IX/ dealing with pushback, guidance responding to the SCOTUS decision on college admissions, the struggle to overhaul FAFSA as fast as Congress wanted/ cleaning up the mess that resulted — these ed issues dominated Dept of Ed activity for the whole presidential term.
It is a damn shame, too, as during the exact same time period public K12 was being assailed with all kinds of harmful activity in a couple dozen state legislatures. All of that needed bully pulpit attention at a minimum. The only times I can remember K12 issues being addressed were in guidance on getting schools reopened, and a bit of pushback against DeSantis one time.
Education has been getting it from both barrels for four years.
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Yes, a disappointment. But better than McMahon will be.
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TOW, you are right but that’s a low bar.
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Biden didn’t keep his promises? No surprise. It’s about profit. It’s always about profit. Democrats talk a big game but are ineffectual in the end because they stand to profit as well.
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The letter from NPE’s exec director Carol Burris is a GEM. Every time I have read one of her pieces, I say “YESSS!” It’s a shame we no longer hear Valerie Strauss/ Answer Sheet at WaPo. Much of Burris’s past work was highlighted and cited in full there. Strauss’s voice is sorely missing. Meanwhile we hear too much there from Laura Meckler, formerly of WSJ.
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We do miss Valerie Strauss. The Wash Post offered buyouts to senior writers and she was one.
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