I Spit Out My Coffee When I Read Cory Booker’s Op-Ed: Nine Theories That Explain His Change of Heart.

Nov 25, 2019 12:00:00 AM

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I gasped as I opened the op-ed section of the New York Times and read Senator Cory Booker’s column repudiating his regressive stance on public charter schools. Until he entered the Democratic presidential nominating contest, Booker was one of the nation’s most eloquent supporters for school choice, with his hometown of Newark the proofpoint for the impact of a high-quality charter sector on a struggling school system. But when he entered the primary he hopped on the Sanders/Warren anti-choice wagon, dissolving into a vegan mush of (un)progressive platitudes. Something’s changed. Booker writes,

It is largely up to Democrats—especially those of us in this presidential primary race—to have a better discussion about practical K-12 solutions to ensure that every child in our country can go to a great public school. That discussion needs to include high-achieving public charter schools when local communities call for them.

Many public charter schools have proved to be an effective, targeted tool to give children with few other options a chance to succeed.

My reaction to this (laudable) about-face swung from “finally Booker is owning the remarkable upswing in student achievement in Newark, largely due to the impact of its best-in-the-nation sector of charter schools (like I told him to!)” to “why the hell did he wait until now to call out the other candidates on their union-pandering opposition,” to “boy, was he poorly advised” when, responding to a question about charter schools at a presidential candidate forum sponsored by AFSCME, he said, “we’re seeing an assault on education that is outrageous and unacceptable.” 

So what’s the real deal? [pullquote]What persuaded Booker to own his educational legacy in Newark?[/pullquote] A legacy that has transformed one of the worst school districts to the #1 city in America for “beat the odds” high-poverty, high-performance schools by the Center on Reinventing Public Education?

Here are nine guesses. 

  • He doesn’t have a snowball’s chance in hell of winning the nomination. He’ll be so far off-camera during the upcoming debates that he might as well stay home. So maybe he’s reconsidering his decision to align himself with front-runners Sanders/Warren (Biden’s far less strident) who disavow schools that the majority of Black and Brown families support.
  • When he commutes back to Newark, the increasing numbers of pro-choice residents (last April the winners of the School Board race were charter-supporters, one even endorsed by former charter-hater Mayor Ras Baraka) get in his face. Newarkers are not shy: They speak truth to power. Maybe he listened.
  • Maybe he’s also started listening to analysts like Jon Valant of the Brookings Institute who said back in August that Booker is “kind of caught between a rock and a hard place” when boxed in by “the mantle of progressive Democrats,” but by distancing himself from charter schools he’s “essentially distancing himself from his record in Newark.”
  • Maybe he’s noted the new Go Fund Me campaign led by a powerful coalition of Black and Latino parents and education advocates from around the country, who are raising money for a trip to meet with Elizabeth Warren to share how her recently unveiled anti-charter education plan gets it all wrong for children of color.
  • Maybe he’s aware of the backlash against New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy who, with the cooperation of Education Commissioner Lamont Repollet, has instituted a charter school moratorium despite the 35,000 children on charter waitlists. 
  • Maybe he realizes that, despite his best efforts to erase a legacy he should highlight, teachers unions are never going to support him. Example: Diane Ravitch’s Network for Public Education (an echo chamber for NEA and AFT) gives him an “F” for his stance on charter schools. (Warren gets an “A+,” despite her previous support for school choice, Sanders gets an “A,” and Biden gets a “B-” because he’s associated with that radical privatizer Barack Obama.)
  • Speaking of President Obama, last week my hero struck back at the “woke” culture, this “idea of purity and you’re never comprised.”  The world is “messy; there are ambiguities … People who you are fighting may love their kids and share certain things with you … That’s not activism. That’s not bringing about change.” So maybe Obama’s wisdom ignited Booker’s epiphany that Democrats damage both their brand and their chances of ousting Trump from the White House by aping his “us v. them” rhetoric. (Yes, meyn kinder, I’ve already seen Hannah’s “Okay Boomer” tee-shirt.)
  • Maybe he’s watched Warren reverse her previous support for charters and public school accountability and realized that, as the Washington Post says, such a platform “is a plan for serving adult interests and not student needs.” Maybe he’s watched Sanders, as Amy Wilkins says, “tell black parents, who overwhelming support charters, that they can’t send their kids to charters anymore.” Maybe the role of Faust doesn’t suit him as well as it does other Democratic hopefuls. 
  • Maybe he’s actually listening to parents of color who, according to a 2019 poll by the Benenson Strategy Group, “are the strongest supporters of charter schools, because charter schools are finally making free, high-quality education available in neighborhoods that were shamefully neglected by the education establishment.” Hey, maybe he had a campaign operative at this past summer’s NJ Parent Summit who heard Nicole Harris tell me, “parents need options. It is our right as parents to choose the strongest schools in our community for each of our children.” And Troy Still tell me, “when I was growing up I lost so many friends to the gangs and the streets. Our kids have got a chance now.” And Tafshier Cosby tell me, “Teachers are there to teach, right? It’s up to parents to make sure our children are having the  best possible educational experience.” Or Ruthven Haneef Auguste tell me (of his daughter with disabilities at KIPP), “I know that if she were in a different school she would get into trouble less but she’d also learn less because the bar is so low.” Or Shayvonne Anderson (a Newark school board member) who told me, “This isn’t about adults and their politics. It’s about our children.”

Here’s the thing: When Sanders/Warren get up there and talk dirt about charter schools in order to endear themselves to union lobbyists, they are distinctly un-woke. They are painting over the messiness and ambiguities of public education to satisfy adults. They are turning their backs on a growing segment of the Democratic party that supports school choice.  They are, as Chris Stewart says, genuflecting “to the public relations departments of America’s national teachers unions.”

They are proposing policies that will damage the futures of children who live in cities like Newark and Los Angeles and Chicago and Boston and Philadelphia. 

This doesn’t seem very “progressive” to me, nor Democratic. In fact, it seems akin to the Trumpian “build that wall” canard that provokes applause from the unwoke.

We should be better than that.

Booker writes,

The Democratic Party is at its best when we lead with the conviction, above all else, to help people. We fall short of that when we race to embrace poll-tested positions that may help us avoid being yelled at on the internet by an unrepresentative few but don’t reflect the impossible choices many low-income families face.

We’re not at our best right now, union endorsements aside. [pullquote]It’s too late for Booker, but I’d like to imagine that if he had stuck to his authentic education platform from the start he’d be closer to the center of the stage.[/pullquote] Perhaps the winner will have the smarts to be the true progressive who does more than pay lip service to our most disenfranchised Americans (maybe with Booker as VP?).

If not, there’s always 2024.

A version of this post originally appeared on NJ Left Behind.

Laura Waters

Laura Waters is the founder and managing editor of New Jersey Education Report, formerly a senior writer/editor with brightbeam. Laura writes about New Jersey and New York education policy and politics. As the daughter of New York City educators and parent of a son with special needs, she writes frequently about the need to listen to families and ensure access to good public school options for all. She is based in New Jersey, where she and her husband have raised four children. She recently finished serving 12 years on her local school board in Lawrence, New Jersey, where she was president for nine of those years. Early in her career, she taught writing to low-income students of color at SUNY Binghamton through an Educational Opportunity Program.

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