Sen.
Cory Booker is in a bit of a quandary as he pursues the 2020
Democratic presidential nomination. Although heralded as an early
favorite and a rising star among more than a dozen hopefuls, his
campaign is yet to catch fire. Current polls rank Booker in the mid
to low single digits as the field of candidates continues to expand.
Previously a media darling, his presumed base of support among
teachers, progressives, and African Americans, has not revealed
itself and is currently dwindling.
Teachers
and progressives are quickly becoming aware of Booker’s past,
rabid support of school choice—vouchers, corporate charter
schools, and other forms of public school privatization—in the
aftermath of the recent strikes in West Virginia, California (2), and
Colorado. In addition, there are strike threats in numerous other
states as conservative state legislators, funded by corporate
education reformers who also fund Booker, are attempting to privatize
K-12 public education and to strip teachers of their health care and
pension benefits.
His
longstanding advocacy and alliances with the Cartel of corporate
education reform advocates is now coming to light as Democrats are
being forced by their voters to take a stand in support of public
education. The midterms made a strong statement that no 2020
presidential candidate could survive the nomination gauntlet unless
s/he first disavowed support for privatization remedies for the
challenges in K-12 public education.
Teachers
and their national, state, and local union affiliates have become
unyielding on these issues unlike the tap on the hand that the
National Education Association gave Hillary Clinton when she praised
charter schools at a campaign stop in Iowa in 2016. No serious 2020
Democratic candidate will make such a statement even though many have
previously voted for charter school legislation. Thus Booker is in a
political conundrum. He has been in bed throughout his political
career with and has taken hundreds of millions of dollars in campaign
contributions from school choice advocates. Therefore, he is finding
it difficult to extricate himself from the school choice morass.
While
Mayor of Newark from 2006 to 2013, Booker crawled into bed with
Republican Gov. Chris Christie and conducted an effective school
choice road show. In 2010, the two of them, with an assist from
media magnate Oprah Winfrey, were able to scam $100 million from the
billionaire Facebook mogul, Mark Zuckerberg, to allegedly reform the
Newark Public Schools (NPS). After years of patronage payouts and
payments to political cronies, NPS has little to show for this
investment. (However, Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla, did learn
how not to be hustled again. They now maintain firm, personal
oversight over their educational investments in low-wealth school
districts.)
After
this debacle, Booker moved on to the U.S. Senate in 2013 where he
continued to be a quieter gladiator for school choice. He did not
encounter any exposure until 2016 when he was forced to vote against
the confirmation of Betsy DeVos during her vetting process to become
Secretary of the U.S. Department of Education. But he cast his no
vote only after he was assured that DeVos had acquired the necessary
votes to be approved by the U.S. Senate. Booker was able to continue
flying under the radar from the larger public.
But
now, the “chickens are coming home to roost.”
With the political colonoscopy that all presidential candidates
receive, his record is being more carefully examined. Booker has
been careful to advance his bona fides for teachers and public
education, telling BuzzFeed that "Our
teachers are ridiculously underpaid in America," …. I'm
going to run the boldest pro–public school [campaign] there
is." But these statements do not
square with his previous promotion of school choice and attacks on
teachers.
Booker
also has to answer to progressives and African Americans for his
positions. Appearing on the Breakfast
Club, a popular black radio show with the
host Charlamagne the God, Booker was asked to give specifics about
his agenda for African Americans. He responded with trickle–down
approaches for addressing the social and economic problems in the
black community and was challenged about having more specific
strategies for LGBTQ groups. Although Obama was given a pass on
these issues in 2008, the black community will not accept such a
response this time around as the novelty of a serious black
presidential contender has passed.
But
perhaps Booker’s biggest barrier to the 2020 Democratic
presidential nomination is his fellow Sen. Kamala Harris, an African
and Indian American female, who has a strong and passionate base
among black women. She is a graduate of historically black Howard
University, and a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha, a premier African
American sorority with chapters in the 50 states for nearly four
decades. Harris has a built-in base which she is aggressively
cultivating. The sorority will be a major factor in turning out the
vote in South Carolina, where blacks make up the majority of
Democratic primary voters, and to a lesser extent in Iowa, two of the
first three primary contests.
It
is difficult to see how Booker overcomes Harris in the black
community when so many of black professional women are teachers and
public school administrators and have been savaged by his school
choice policies. And their white counterparts are also being turned
off by his past record of assaults on public education.
Furthermore,
Booker has other formidable opponents in Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand,
Amy Klobuchar, and Elizabeth Warren. Presently Harris and Warren are
ahead of him in presidential polls and Klobuchar is close behind. It
is early and things could change for Booker, but he has a real uphill
battle with teachers and in black and progressive communities as his
campaign unfolds. He will have to answer for his betrayal of black
educators, black children, the larger black community, teachers,
unions, and progressives as he pursues the White House. We will keep
you up to date.
|