Daily Press

NC House passes anti-critical race theory measure

- By Hannah Schoenbaum

RALEIGH, N.C. — North Carolina’s Republican-controlled House passed a previously vetoed proposal Wednesday to restrict how teachers can discuss certain racial topics that some lawmakers have equated to “critical race theory.”

The House voted 68-49 along party lines for legislatio­n banning public school teachers from compelling students to believe they should feel guilty or responsibl­e for past actions committed by people of the same race or sex.

United in their opposition, House Democrats challenged Republican claims that the bill would reduce discrimina­tion and argued that a comprehens­ive history education should make students uncomforta­ble.

Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper successful­ly blocked a similar proposal in 2021 and urged legislator­s in his State of the State address, “Don’t make teachers re-write history.” But Republican­s, who are one seat short in the House of a veto-proof supermajor­ity,

will likely need some Democratic support for the measure to become law.

North Carolina is among 10 states currently considerin­g such proposals, according to Education Week. Eighteen others have already limited how teachers can discuss racism and sexism in the classroom.

Gaston County Republican Rep. John Torbett said the proposal, which now heads to the Senate, will prohibit schools from endorsing controvers­ial concepts, including that one race or sex is inherently superior.

“This great education state must have an educationa­l system that unites and teaches our children, not divides and indoctrina­tes them,” said Torbett, the bill’s sponsor.

Several Democrats, including Reps. Rosa Gill of Wake County and Laura Budd of Mecklenbur­g County, raised concerns that the language is vague and does not outline clear boundaries for teachers. Budd said this “massive failure” places unnecessar­y pressure on teachers who may feel like they need to stifle productive classroom discussion­s to keep their jobs.

“The bill, on its face, is the obvious attempt to micromanag­e from the General Assembly into the classrooms,” she said during floor debate. “It’s overreach and will have a chilling effect on teachers and educators in curtailing what they think they’re allowed to teach.”

Republican lawmakers in committee applauded the measure for “banning ” critical race theory, a complex academic and legal framework that centers on the idea that racism is embedded in the nation’s systems and institutio­ns that perpetuate inequality.

The bill does not explicitly mention the framework, but it prohibits teaching that the government is “inherently racist” or was created to oppress people of another race or sex. Its language mirrors a model proposal from Citizens for Renewing America, a conservati­ve social welfare group founded by a former Trump administra­tion official to rid the nation’s schools of critical race theory.

North Carolina schools would also be required under the bill to notify the state’s Department of Public Instructio­n and publish informatio­n online at least a month before they plan to host a diversity trainer or a guest speaker who has previously advocated for the beliefs restricted by the legislatio­n.

Cary mother and activist Michelle O’Keefe was among several parents who testified against the bill. O’Keefe said she doesn’t want her young child sheltered from learning about racism and other atrocities in history, as long as those lessons are age-appropriat­e.

“The best way to keep history from repeating itself,” she said, “is to know the history.”

 ?? HANNAH SCHOENBAUM/AP ?? North Carolina Rep. Rosa Gill, D-Wake County, speaks Wednesday against a bill that would limit how racial topics are discussed in schools.
HANNAH SCHOENBAUM/AP North Carolina Rep. Rosa Gill, D-Wake County, speaks Wednesday against a bill that would limit how racial topics are discussed in schools.

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