Times
are a changing in the school choice and public school privatization
debate and controversies. After years of expensive lobbying and
political campaign contributions by the corporate Cartel of education
reformers, schemes designed to use public dollars for private-sector
profit and personal benefit had become grudgingly tolerated in many
quarters of the educational and national community.
Publicly-funded,
private school vouchers, corporate charter schools, educational
savings accounts, corporate-run achievement/innovation school
districts, and other mechanisms used to dismantle public education
have been created in the majority of states throughout the nation.
However,
as the adverse fiscal, social, professional, and academic impacts of
these initiatives began to take their toll—leading to teacher
strikes in both conservative and liberal states—the attitudes
toward these so-called educational improvement initiatives have
become increasingly negative. In addition, the sloppy and illegal
implementation of these plans is resulting in the disavowals of a
growing number of participants in these efforts and their willingness
to snitch on their benefactors.
These
individuals are flipping state evidence on their co-conspirators as
they are becoming laser-focused on escaping bad publicity and/or
incarceration. Thus, the well-financed school choice machine is
slowly beginning to unravel.
As
discussed in an earlier column, former Milwaukee Public Schools (MPS)
board president, Michael Bonds, was indicted for bribery in April by
the federal government. His crime was taking kickbacks for his votes
on the MPS charter school contracts of a Philadelphia-based charter
school operator, Kenny Gamble, CEO of Universal Companies. Bonds
pleaded guilty to two counts, and last Monday, he was convicted of
bribery and faces a 10 year prison term and a $500,000 fine at his
September scheduled sentencing.
But
in an effort to reduce and/or eliminate any jail time and a fine,
Bonds like President Trump’s former National Security Advisor,
Michael Flynn, is cooperating with the federal prosecutors to save
himself. At 60 years of age and having never been imprisoned, he has
no interest in doing time this late in his life. Under the guidance
of Frankly Gimbel, Milwaukee’s foremost criminal defense
attorney, who has helped hundreds of white collar criminals avoid
going to jail, Bonds is singing like a pop star.
Inside
sources indicate that former MPS superintendent, Dr. Gregory
Thornton, who introduced Bonds to Gamble, is one of several persons
of interest to the feds since Thornton and Gamble have had a
long-term relationship in negotiating charter school contracts in
Milwaukee and the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania area.
But
even more interesting is the emergence of the names of local African
American clergy leaders, entrepreneurs, and hustlers who Bonds aided
in getting and keeping charter and partnership school contracts,
despite their abysmal performance, during his reign as MPS school
board president. In that capacity, he was able to bend the rules for
failing charter schools and prevent them from being closed down.
The
burning questions are: Who will Bonds rat out? Will he predicate
his ‘snitching’ on the size of any gifts, if any? Will
he implicate MPS central office staff who monitored charter schools?
Will he agree to testify against any others indicted in this charter
school fraud investigation?
Elsewhere
in the emerging school choice controversy, 2020 Democratic
presidential candidates are also on the hot seat (or will be) based
on their flirtations and outright advocacy of school choice as noted
in previous columns. The key issues for the Democratic constituency
in the upcoming election are: larger paychecks, support for public
education, health care, and honest government. Public school
teachers, through their on-the-ground work stoppages and legislative
activism, have placed K-12 education on the front political burner.
Their
struggles in this regard have encouraged print and broadcast media
journalists to dig into the political history of the candidates and
to interrogate them about their positions. Last Sunday on ABC
This Week, Sen. Cory Booker was confronted over his past (and
present?) support of school choice and his work with Education
Secretary Betsy DeVos when she headed the school choice oriented
American Federation for Children. Booker did not answer the
questions but said he wanted a good education for all children.
His
public school privatization involvements have already kept him low in
the polls. Booker will be unable to get away with this avoidance as
his campaign progresses. He has also minimized his association with
DeVos and has denied their previous close working association.
Booker quietly ‘snitched’ to his Democratic Senate
colleagues about her during her confirmation hearings to enhance his
public education bonafides.
The
other top candidates, Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren,
Kamala Harris (to a lesser degree), Pete Buttigieg, and former
Congressman Beto O’Rourke (who with his wife, Amy) has been a
big supporter of expanding charter schools in the El Paso, Texas
region. They will have to answer for their past sins against public
education. Nearly all of them have embraced charter schools during
their political careers that have caused a disinvestment in public
schools and have been the root cause of recent teacher walkouts.
Unless
lightning strikes (and it could), the Democratic presidential nominee
will emerge from one of the seven candidates named above. Their
rankings in the polls will ebb and flow during the next year, but it
is unlikely that any of the other fourteen candidates will rise above
this group. And public education will be a major determinant as to
which of them will prevail.
Finally,
as the ongoing corruption in the school choice movement continues to
be publicly exposed, 2020 Democratic candidates will be under further
pressure to separate themselves and their campaigns from the school
choice debacle.
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