Republican campaigns increasingly aim to shape school curriculums
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| New York
Former President Donald Trump has called for parents to elect and fire school principals. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has banned instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity in kindergarten through third grade. And Nikki Haley, the former United Nations ambassador who is expected to announce her White House candidacy this coming week, is among the Republicans taking aim at critical race theory.
In the opening stages of the 2024 GOP presidential race, the 鈥減arents鈥 rights鈥 movement and lessons for schoolchildren are emerging as flashpoints.
The focus on issues related to racism, sexuality, and education is a way for potential White House hopefuls to distinguish themselves in a crowded field, suggesting new and deeper ways for government to shape what happens in local classrooms.
But the effort has prompted criticism from LGBTQ advocacy groups, teachers鈥 unions, some parents and student activists, and those worried about efforts to avoid lessons about systemic racism. Democrats have cast the efforts as race-baiting and improperly injecting politics into schools.
鈥淲hat we鈥檙e seeing now, at least in this period, is much more focus on so-called culture war issues,鈥 said Jeffrey Henig, a professor of political science and education at Columbia University鈥檚 Teachers鈥 College.
Nowhere is the drive more visible than in Florida, where Mr. DeSantis has made an aggressive push against what he calls 鈥渨oke鈥 policies.
He gained national attention last year for signing the Parental Rights in Education聽bill into law, barring instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity for young elementary schoolers, as well as material deemed not age-appropriate, which critics have argued is vague and could stifle classroom discussions. He also signed the 鈥淪top WOKE鈥 act in 2022, a law that restricted teaching that members of one race are inherently racist or should feel guilty about past actions by other people of the same race, among other things.
Mr. DeSantis has also extended his political influence to local school board races, endorsing candidates last year in what had been nonpartisan contests and flipping at least three boards from a liberal majority to a conservative majority.
More recently, he blocked high schools from teaching a new Advanced Placement course on African American studies, contending it was a violation of state law and historically inaccurate. Beyond K-12 schools, he appointed six conservative trustees to the board of a small liberal arts college and he has announced plans to restrict state colleges from having programs on diversity, equity, inclusion, and critical race theory.
Critical race theory, a way of thinking about America鈥檚 history through the lens of racism, has been a top target. The theory, which Mr. DeSantis has called 鈥減ernicious,鈥 was developed by scholars in the 1970s and 1980s in response to what they viewed as a lack of racial progress following the civil rights legislation of the 1960s. It centers on the idea that racism is systemic in the nation鈥檚 institutions, which function to maintain the dominance of white people in society.
As Mr. DeSantis emerges as the most formidable potential challenger to Mr. Trump, who has staked out his own positions on the same issues and recently released a nearly five-minute video outlining what his campaign called a 鈥淧lan to Save American Education and Give Power Back to Parents.鈥
Declaring that 鈥減ublic schools have been taken over by the radical left maniacs,鈥 and warning about 鈥減ink-haired communists teaching our kids,鈥 Mr. Trump pledged, if elected president again, that he would cut federal money for any school or program promoting 鈥渃ritical race theory, gender ideology or other inappropriate racial, sexual or political content on to our children.鈥
Mr. Trump said he planned to create a national credentialing organization that would certify teachers 鈥渨ho embrace patriotic values, support our way of life and understand that their job is not to indoctrinate children鈥 and would set up favorable treatment for states and school districts that adopt reforms such as allowing parents to directly elect school principals.
鈥淚f any principal is not getting the job done, the parents should have the right and be able to vote or to fire them and to select someone else that will do the job properly,鈥 Mr. Trump said at a campaign appearance in South Carolina.
Former Vice President Mike Pence, who is considering a presidential campaign, is using a group he formed to rally conservatives against transgender-affirming policies in schools. The group鈥檚 plans to run ads, hold rallies, and canvass in the early voting state Iowa comes as a federal appeals court is set to consider a case involving an Iowa school district鈥檚 policy to support transgender students.
In the United States, public education is run by states and largely paid for by state and local taxpayers. The federal government does not, for instance, certify teachers or regulate how schools hire staff. And Washington also doesn鈥檛 control curriculum standards like those Mr. DeSantis has backed in Florida. But Congress or the Department of Education can incentivize certain education practices by tying them to federal money.
So it鈥檚 not unheard of for presidential candidates to talk about education.
George H.W. Bush declared he wanted to be known as the 鈥渆ducation president鈥 and started a push for national standards and goals. His son, George W. Bush, centered his message in the 2000 campaign in part on education reform and during the first year of his administration, signed into law the No Child Left Behind Act, which ignited a national debate over the proper use of standardized testing in schools.
The more recent divisive shift to social issues in schools is an outgrowth of Glenn Youngkin鈥檚 successful bid in 2021 to become the first Republican in more than a decade to be elected as Virginia鈥檚 governor. Mr. Youngkin, himself a potential presidential candidate in 2024, campaigned on parental rights. He appealed to parents frustrated over school closures during the pandemic and said he would ban the teaching of critical race theory in public schools.
Once in office, his administration began the process of rewriting the state鈥檚 model policies for the treatment of transgender students, issuing guidance for school divisions that would roll back some accommodations and tighten parental notification requirements.
Kristin Davison, a strategist for Mr. Youngkin鈥檚 gubernatorial campaign, said Mr. Youngkin focused on education after the pandemic thrust parents into the classroom, leading to frustrations with remote learning to the curriculum itself.
鈥淰oters want their leaders to understand the issues that they鈥檙e talking about at their kitchen table,鈥 she said. 鈥淩ight now, families are sitting at their kitchen table looking at report cards, looking at homework assignments, frustrated at curriculum.鈥
The debate over education still carried weight during last year鈥檚 elections, potentially giving Republican presidential candidates a reason to stay focused on the issue. Half of voters in 2022 said their local K-8 schools were teaching too much about gender identity issues, according to AP VoteCast, a national survey of the electorate. Only about one-quarter said schools teach too little on the subject.
About 4 in 10 voters said too little is taught about racism in the U.S., while about one-third said schools were teaching too much on related issues. Roughly one-quarter of voters said the focus on each is 鈥渁bout right.鈥
There was broad agreement among Republicans 鈥 about 8 in 10 of whom said gender identity is taught too much in schools. A smaller majority, 56%, said that about racism.
Among Democrats, about two-thirds said there鈥檚 too little taught about racism. But there was less consensus around teaching gender identity. About 4 in 10 said too little is taught, about 2 in 10 said too much is taught, and about 4 in 10 said schools handle it about right.
Celinda Lake, a Democratic pollster and strategist who worked on President Joe Biden鈥檚 2020 campaign, said the GOP messages about protecting children seem to be aimed at trying to win over suburban women, who have drifted away from Mr. Trump and the GOP, particularly after the Supreme Court ended constitutional protections for abortion last year.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 getting extra energy because of its appeal or its presumed appeal to women voters,鈥 she said.
This story was reported by The Associated Press.