Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Three-alarm warning for Dems

- MARK Z. BARABAK

San Francisco is quite familiar with earthquake­s, and what happened Tuesday—the ouster of three extreme lefties from the Board of Education—was not one of those.

Earthquake­s are sudden and unexpected. The result of Tuesday’s recall was neither.

The removal of board members Gabriela López, Faauuga Moliga and Alison Collins was destined the moment the city’s liberal establishm­ent, led by Mayor London Breed, joined the effort along with several discontent­ed millionair­es who threw in loads of cash.

What happened Tuesday was more a foreshock, a warning—as if Democrats needed any more of those—that November’s midterm elections could be very bad indeed, as parents unsettled by two years of pandemic-related upheaval vent their frustratio­ns at the polls.

In a place that prides itself on social justice and forward thinking, members of the school board outdid themselves by moving to strip the names of, among others, Presidents Washington and Lincoln and Sen. Dianne Feinstein from 44 public schools.

The intent was to remediate the country’s history of injustices: George Washington owned slaves, Abraham Lincoln oversaw the slaughter of Native Americans, and Feinstein, as mayor in 1984, replaced a Confederat­e flag that had been vandalized at City Hall with a new one. The result was outrage.

Perhaps most antagonizi­ng, the board moved to end merit-based admissions to Lowell High School, one of the city’s most sacred institutio­ns, where Asian American students are the majority. (The move catalyzed the city’s Asian American community, long an important force in San Francisco politics.)

All of which was too much for this famously tolerant city as students struggled with distance learning and public schools remained closed even as others in neighborin­g communitie­s reopened.

Inclusion, sensitivit­y and righting history’s wrongs are all well and good. But there was a strong sense that “we are not getting the basics right,” as Siva Raj, a father of two who helped launch the recall effort, put it.

The results are noteworthy precisely because the recall took place in liberal San Francisco. It’s not a case of pro-Trumpers seeking to ban books, or conservati­ves stirring up unfounded concerns over critical race theory being introduced into grade schools. Parents have emerged as one of the most potent forces in politics today, and woe to anyone seen as standing in the way of their kids’ education.

Public schools may be back to regular business by the fall. Inflation may be tamed, and store shelves and car showrooms may be brimming with the inventory they now lack.

But it’s a good bet that parents won’t be forgiving or forgetting what’s taken place over the last two plague years, and in that way San Francisco’s recall election may be the early rumblings of a much larger shakeup to come.

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