Sentinel & Enterprise

A policy divide on the right

Conservati­ve, Republican ideologies match less and less often

- By Lynn Schmidt St. Louis Post-Dispatch

English mathematic­ian, logician and philosophe­r John Venn introduced the Venn diagram in the 1880s. A Venn diagram uses overlappin­g circles to illustrate the logical relationsh­ips between two or more sets of items. Often, Venn diagrams serve to highlight how the items are similar and different. They can also help us visualize things in new ways and afford us the opportunit­y to make fresh observatio­ns.

There was a time when you could create a Venn diagram with conservati­sm, which is an ideology, in one distinct area and Republican practices and policies, which are partisan, in another. There would have been plenty of overlap in the middle. In recent years, the middle overlap section appears to be shrinking. An example of this is the idea of local control in education. Just a few short years ago, local control would have been in the middle of the diagram; now it sits off on the conservati­ve side, with very few Republican­s even acknowledg­ing it.

Conservati­ves have long held the belief in local control, especially when it comes to education. In education, local control refers to the concept that the education of children in a public school district should be made by those closest to the site of education. The management of public schools is usually left to elected or appointed representa­tives serving on governing bodies, such as school boards, who are located in the communitie­s served by their schools.

Believing in local control in education means giving those governing bodies, local leaders or institutio­ns the room to make independen­t decisions about the governance and operation of their public schools. The idea is that a local superinten­dent or governing body is deeply invest

ed in the welfare and success of the children, the educators, and the communitie­s entrusted to them. Republican­s used to feel so strongly about local control with regards to education, they included it in the 2016 Republican National Committee Platform: The RNC “recognizes the wisdom of local control of our schools.” and “We support a constituti­onal amendment to protect that right from interferen­ce by states, the federal government, or internatio­nal bodies such as the United Nations.” Things have surely changed since 2016. School districts have been implementi­ng mask mandates for the children and staff in their districts to promote the health and safety of all. Republican politician­s, including Missouri’s own Attorney General Eric Schmitt, have attempted to punish school districts that are mandating masks. Schmitt filed a lawsuit on Aug. 24 that seeks to stop school districts from enforcing mask mandates.

Back in June, Missouri Gov. Mike Parson enacted a new law placing limits on local public health orders.

Schmitt’s lawsuit claims that districts imposing the mandates must abide by the new law. The state of Missouri is suing the 50 school districts that have initiated masking rules in schools. Included in the 50 school districts is St. Louis Public Schools and every school district in St. Louis County.

In Florida, Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis directed the state’s health and education department­s to issue rules preventing the implementa­tion of school mask mandates in an effort to “protect parents’ freedom to choose whether their children wear masks.” One of Florida’s county circuit judges has since ruled that DeSantis’ order is unconstitu­tional and cannot be enforced, allowing Florida school districts to legally require their students and staff to wear masks.

Parents and communitie­s should be asking themselves: Who do I trust more, my local school superinten­dent or school board, who are looking out for the safety and well-being of all the children in their care, or the politician­s who are looking toward their primary races in 2022?

For me, that’s a no-brainer. The problem with the Venn diagram is that it does not represent the change of the Republican base voter. It is obvious that conservati­ve Republican­s are willing to ignore the principles that they said they embraced in order to appease their new voters.

What will the Venn diagram look like in years to come? Only time, and math, will tell.

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