President
Donald Trump has orchestrated a 100 day attack on public education.
Of the numerous promises that he made during his presidential
campaign, he is closest to achieving those he made to privatize
public education. His appointment of Betsy DeVos as his education
secretary was one of his first steps in that direction. A bona fide
member of the billionaire corporate education Cartel, she has been a
long-term advocate of vouchers, regular and corporate charter
schools, and making public dollars available for corporate
experiments in public education. In addition, Trump has made his
billionaire cronies integral parts of his presidential cabinet.
Furthermore,
as soon as he upset Hillary Clinton in the presidential election,
Trump began to pit members of the African American community against
each other. After Congressman John Lewis stated that he would not
attend Trump’s inauguration, Trump quickly summoned Martin
Luther King III to Trump Tower under the pretense that he was open to
reassessing his views on voting rights. Martin III was na�ve
enough to accept this invitation despite Trump’s nomination of
Sen. Jefferson Beauregard Sessions, for Attorney General, who has
dedicated his life to obstructing African American rights to register
and vote. As expected, nothing came of the meeting except Trump’s
ability to ‘clap back’ at Congressman Lewis.
Trump
then selected the rapper Kanye West (who had been recently released
from a hospital psych ward) to represent the views of the national
black community. His Cartel colleagues had already contributed more
than $100 million to a series of national African American civil
rights and social justice organizations -- the National Urban League
(NUL), the NAACP, and Historically Black Colleges and Universities
(HBCUs) to solicit their help in promoting school choice. In his
desire to embarrass former President Obama, Trump invited HBCU
presidents (with whom Obama had never met with as a group) to the
White House during the first two weeks of his administration with a
promise to charge his cabinet secretaries with making HBCU subsidies
a priority in their budgets, increase HBCU funding from the executive
branch, and to move the HBCU initiative to the White House from the
Department of Education where he would have direct control.
During
the two minute ceremony, when the HBCU presidents were gathered
around his desk, Trump signed an executive order moving the HBCU
initiative to the White House, while Kellyanne Conway, his assistant,
sat on the Oval Office couch with her knees tucked under her playing
on her phone, disregarding the dog and pony show altogether. But
most disconcerting was Secretary DeVos’s instantaneous press
release asserting that HBCUs were the original school choice
institutions (which she had to retract). When Trump submitted his
budget a few weeks later, HBCU funding upgrades were omitted
altogether. He had used the HBCU presidents for photo op purposes.
DeVos
has been the perfect general of Trump’s school choice army.
She is ignorant, in general, and lacks any knowledge or interest in
K-12 public education. And she is willing to attack anyone who
opposes her rabid school choice views and to leave no stone unturned
in advancing voucher and charter schools. In the face of stern
opposition from teachers and other public education stakeholders,
DeVos charges ahead like a bull in a china shop. Trump is so
impressed with her single-mindedness and tenacity that he is
continuing to arrange for her to visit voucher, charter, and public
schools throughout the nation despite the intense pushback.
Shortly
after her confirmation, DeVos ventured out in Washington, D.C. where
she was warmly received by the pro-school choice chancellor of
schools while community residents and parents protested her presence;
she then flew to Miami, Florida, where she visited voucher and
charter schools and Florida International University (FIU). At the
invitation of Randi Weingarten, President of the American Federation
of Teachers (AFT), Secretary DeVos dropped in on a public school in
Van Wert, Ohio before she was confirmed. Weingarten guilelessly
believed that this drive by stopover would soften DeVos’s more
than three decades of opposition to public education.
Trump
has also reached out to Gov. Chris Christie and his Democratic
sidekick, George Norcross, in New Jersey to schedule a DeVos visit to
the Camden and/or Trenton Public Schools—the state’s
primary districts being prepared for corporate takeover (Christie is
trying to repair his relationship with the President since being
passed over for a cabinet appointment). North Carolina which has
substantially expanded its voucher and charter system is on the
calendar as well.
Trump’s
Wall Street education reform allies have been central to his war on
public education. They were major contributors to his presidential
campaign and are heavy investors in charter schools, charter
management companies, education testing and publishing corporations,
etc., where they have been realizing regular profits and hope to hit
the jackpot with Trump’s privatization agenda for public
education. Include in this cabal are Anthony Scaramucci (CEO,
Skybridge Capital), who has been a frequent Trump defender on
national TV; Steve Einhorn (CEO, Capital Midwest Fund); Lloyd
Blankfein (CEO, Goldman Sachs); Leon Cooperman (CEO, Omega Partners);
and Dan Loeb (CEO, Third Point) among many others. These
billionaires and multi-millionaires are preparing to ‘pig out’
at the Trump education trough.
Finally,
newly minted Justice Neil Gorsuch can be counted on to rule for the
private sector in forthcoming SCOTUS cases. Trump also has twenty
openings on the U.S. Appeals Courts. These appointments will be
central to challenging and overturning longstanding decisions that
support public- and private-sector unions. He is hoping to rein in
the 4th and
9th Circuits
where anti-voting rights cases have been overturned, Obamacare has
been upheld, and the Muslim ban has been stopped in its tracks,
respectively.
Teachers
in particular will be targets of right-to-work (RTW) legislation as
it is moving through state legislatures at a breakneck pace, with
Iowa and Kentucky joining this group since Trump’s election.
The aforementioned judicial selections will likely determine the
future of public education along with possibly one, and maybe two,
more SCOTUS appointments during Trump’s term.
This
mauling of public education and the overall public sector could
change the trajectory of our nation, leading us into a 21st
century-type post-Reconstruction.
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