Baltimore Sun

Okla. gov. likens striking teachers to teenagers

- By Sean Murphy

OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin compared teachers striking for more classroom funding to “a teenage kid that wants a better car” as schools throughout the state plan to close for a fourth straight day Thursday in a protest over education funding that has spread to several Republican-led states.

Fallin and other Republican­s in the Oklahoma Legislatur­e last week broke with the party orthodoxy and endorsed hundreds of millions of dollars in tax increases to fund public schools and give teachers a raise of 15 to 18 percent. But now that’s forcing them to walk a fine line in the months before midterm elections between placating constituen­ts who are angry over education cuts and conservati­ve supporters who want a smaller government and low taxes.

They acted after Oklahoma teachers launched their protests, inspired by a nineday strike in West Virginia, where teachers won a 5 percent raise. The rebellion also has spread to Kentucky as teachers thronged the state Capitol Monday to protest cuts in pensions. And in Arizona, restive teachers demonstrat­ed again Wednesday, wearing red while walking around Phoenix-area high schools and demanding a 20 percent pay raise.

Oklahoma Republican­s have won little praise for approving major tax increases to fund the teachers raises and higher education funding, and Fallin appeared to reflect that frustratio­n.

“Teachers want more, but it’s kind of like having a teenage kid that wants a Fallin Edward Hudson leads music teachers from across Oklahoma in a Wednesday pep rally outside the state Capitol. better car,” Fallin said in an interview Tuesday with CBS News.

SomeRepubl­icansare expressing support for the teacher rebellion. Three weeks before a closely watched special election for an open congressio­nal seat in Arizona, Republican hopeful Debbie Lesko is running a TV ad that shows her reading a book to children as she vows to “fix our schools and give our teachers the raise they deserve.”

As he runs for a second term, Republican Gov. Doug Ducey in Arizona epitomizes the dilemma for GOP candidates in 2018. He refuses to raise taxes and finds himself on the defensive amid growing frustratio­n with education funding in a state where the budget was decimated during the recession and where he and other leaders have dramatical­ly expanded voucher programs. Teachers have been filling the Capitol to protest a Ducey plan to provide a 2 percent raise for teachers.

The protests also have emboldened teachers across the country to run for office. About two dozen educators or former educators are running for office this year in Kentucky, most of them as Democrats.

The Oklahoma Democratic Party set up a tent outside the Capitol and urged demonstrat­ors to register to vote.

“I think the people who will be held responsibl­e at the end of the day are the people in power,” said Party Chairwoman Anna Langthorn.

Democrats already have made some gains in Oklahoma, winning four seats from Republican­s in special elections in the past year, including two teachers elected to office after campaignin­g on improving school funding. But they are still deep in the minority in the Legislatur­e.

For Democrats, Kansas is an encouragin­g example. After Republican­s there approved massive income tax cuts beginning in 2012, budget shortfalls put a lid on education funding increases. A backlash against the GOP in 2016 led to the defeat of more than two dozen conservati­ve state lawmakers, and the Legislatur­e last year reversed many of the tax cuts.

Carri Hicks, a fourthgrad­e math and science teacher in the Oklahoma City suburb of Deer Creek, said she decided to run as a Democrat for a state Senate seat this year in part because of the declines in funding for public schools.

 ?? SCOTT HEINS/GETTY ??
SCOTT HEINS/GETTY
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States