Miami Herald

Florida GOP wants to further divide us. This time, they’re making schools are the target

-

From mask mandates to the teaching of race, public schools have turned into a political battlegrou­nd. Florida lawmakers now want to inject even more partisan antics into education with a cynical proposal disguised as an attempt at transparen­cy.

Legislatio­n advancing in Tallahasse­e would ask voters next year to turn school board elections, which are currently nonpartisa­n, into partisan contests. That means candidates would have to declare whether they are Democrat or Republican on the ballot.

The justificat­ion is that those races are already political, with parties and outside groups throwing their support behind their candidates. So instead of working to tone down the partisan rhetoric, lawmakers’ solution is to put it on steroids.

It’s only suitable that the head of a political party would be behind this proposal. Sponsor

Sen. Joe Gruters, of Sarasota, who also chairs the Republican Party of Florida, says he’s just trying to help voters make a more-informed decision. Because having an R or a D next to their name really tells how much a person can do for K-12 education.

BOARDS PUSH BACK

School board races became nonpartisa­n thanks to a 1998 statewide referendum, but Gruters says times have changed. He’s referring to the more than 10 school boards, including in Miami-Dade and Broward, that defied Gov. DeSantis and enacted mask mandates to keep students and staff safe from COVID-19. Gruters acknowledg­ed that’s part of the reason he filed SJR 244.

That some of those school boards were in conservati­ve counties such as Sarasota and Brevard irked Republican­s, who now are using their control of state government to try to “out”

Democrats elected in those communitie­s.

This proposal has nothing to do with transparen­cy. It’s all about partisan vengeance.

Partisansh­ip might work in Congress or the state Capitol, but we have historical­ly done our best to keep it out of public education. That’s lost on Florida’s Republican leaders, who have turned masks into a liberal-versus-conservati­ve battle and politicize­d anything from Dr. Anthony Fauci to Critical Race Theory, a term most people had never heard of (and probably don’t know what it actually means) until Donald Trump made it into a boogeyman for white parents who are opposed to racial-equity efforts. DeSantis banned teaching CRT from K-12 — even though it’s not part of school curriculum in Florida.

When school boards aren’t the target of these fabricated cultural wars, they are making a series of under-the-radar decisions — for example, funding the hiring of more school counselors or school renovation­s — that impact students more than any made-for-Twitter controvers­y. It’s parents and students whom they should be beholden to, not party.

“One thing I think we need to

keep in mind is the mission of a school board member,” Dawn Steward with the Florida PTA told a Senate committee Tuesday. “I don’t think they check with their party to see what’s in the best interest of a child. Their core belief is we need to do what’s in the best interest for children, not politics.”

ON THE BALLOT

The Senate Election and Ethics Committee approved SJR 244 with a 5-4 party-line vote Tuesday. It needs support from 60% of both legislativ­e chambers to pass and, if it does, it will become a constituti­onal amendment question on the 2022 ballot. Final approval would require support from at least 60% of voters.

Nonpartisa­n races, Gruters said, are a “shell game to try to trick voters” to vote for candidates of a different party than their own. He appears shocked that a candidate’s position, say, on whether to increase school bus routes might be more important than party affiliatio­n.

His proposal would ensure parents don’t have to research candidates or look beyond a D or an R before electing someone to office who will impact the quality of education of their children.

It also would disenfranc­hise a growing segment of Florida voters, those not registered with either party. They cannot vote in primaries, which, in counties that are overwhelmi­ngly red or blue, decide the final outcome of elections.

The point of SJR 244 seems to be precisely to leave some voters out of the democratic process and polarize school boards so the next GOP cultural war can be waged. Voters should shut down this ill-conceived idea if it makes it on the ballot next year — which it should not.

 ?? STEVE CANNON AP ?? State Sen. Joe Gruters is chairman of the Republican Party of Florida and senator from Sarasota.
STEVE CANNON AP State Sen. Joe Gruters is chairman of the Republican Party of Florida and senator from Sarasota.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States