Houston Chronicle Sunday

Principled conservati­ves must oust Patrick

- By Justin Louis Pitcock Justin Louis Pitcock is Texas state chair of the principled conservati­ve organizati­on, Principles First, is an officer in the USMC reserves and a business owner in Texas. Twitter: @jlouispitc­ock

There’s nothing like Friday Night Lights in Texas. Where else can you see communitie­s fill up stadiums to the tens of thousands to cheer on and encourage our youths? Anyone who has played on those fields knows how thundering stadiums of cheering fans can give you the extra motivation to succeed. Colleges from around the country recognize this system as a premier producer of athletes and they descend on our towns to recruit year after year.

Our public schools should work the same way. Robust public schools motivate students and provide them with the tools they need to succeed so employers will seek to hire them. Public education available to all is the bedrock of the American dream. The formula is fairly simple: support for public education is investment in the future of our country.

It was a common tenet in the business-oriented Republican Party not long ago. George

H.W. Bush’s insistence on being the “Education President” compelled his next three predecesso­rs to make significan­t strides to bolster public education against often fierce opposition. Republican­s used to lead on this issue.

Today, Texas GOP leaders like Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick aim to defund public education and subsidize private schools with public money. Parents using their own money to send their kids to private school is great and is the free market at work, but we all know what happens when the government subsidizes something — the public good worsens, and the private good gets too expensive for the people government was trying to help in the first place. The

prime example exists now at the university level. Look no further than the effects of government-funded loans and scholarshi­ps to private Ivy League schools. In other words, as government pours in money, elite schools jack up their tuition even more.

So why do leaders like Patrick fight so hard for a policy that hurts so many? Unfortunat­ely, the billionair­e-funded campaign against public education has its roots in the same place Patrick finds his campaign funds.

Fortunatel­y, there are principled Republican­s in this state putting their constituen­ts and the good of our communitie­s first. State Rep. Travis Clardy, R-Nacogdoche­s, put his foot down to say “we are duty bound to follow through and continue to fund public education in Texas.” In the panhandle, Amarillo Republican

state Rep. Four Price’s platform includes strongly supporting public schools “so that all Texas children can live up to their fullest educationa­l potential.” Even the Republican-controlled Texas House overwhelmi­ngly voted to ban state taxpayerfu­nded vouchers, a move that passed 115-29. We applaud these principled Republican­s for standing against big donors.

Legislator­s like Clardy and Price see another important paradigm in this fight: defunding public schools has devasting impacts on the rural communitie­s they represent. Most rural communitie­s do not have a single private school and they rely on public schools to educate their children and prepare them for the workforce. Taxpayer-funded voucher plans take money from rural communitie­s and direct them to urban centers. The state share of public education under

Patrick has continuall­y decreased, while the total tax burden on cities has increased. So, when state voucher money leaves the public system to private schools in cities, rural communitie­s without private schools are asked to make up the difference. Rural Republican­s standing up against Wilks and Dunn billionair­e dollars are inspiring and well worth supporting — but they are not enough.

That is why principled conservati­ves should vote for Mike Collier, the former Republican oil and gas executive, for lieutenant governor against public education adversary Patrick. Collier champions issues that matter to Texans, like fixing the grid and reining in property taxes which have skyrockete­d on Patrick’s watch. While property taxes are technicall­y set at the local level, the state sets the conditions that can shift greater and greater burdens on counties and cities with unfunded mandates. Prominent Republican­s like state Sen. Kel Seliger of Amarillo, Tarrant County Judge Glen Whitley and former Lt. Gov. Bill Ratliff voiced their support for Collier against the incumbent Patrick because he usurps power from local leaders and blames them later.

Collier is the Democrat in the race, but he thinks like Republican­s should. He started out as an oil and gas landman and wants Texas to lead on energy. He is not aligned with Democrats and Beto O’Rourke on the Green New Deal.

Republican­s like Clardy and Price who are taking principled stands are not enough to save public education against the Patrick billionair­e machine on their own. The office of lieutenant governor is the most powerful office in Texas, and it belongs in the hands of someone who cares about children in this state more than campaign donors. It also belongs in the hands of someone with private sector experience. Collier has the right experience. The radio host and career politician Patrick does not.

The question for Texans is simple: do we show up and yell for our communitie­s’ kids to succeed or do we stop sending our kids and going to the games? I say we show up to vote with clear eyes and full hearts, as the Permian Panthers of Friday Night Lights would say, and support public education. By voting our principles, we can’t lose.

 ?? Elizabeth Conley/Staff file photo ?? The author says state GOP leaders like Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick aim to defund public education and subsidize private schools with tax money in a move that chooses campaign funds over children.
Elizabeth Conley/Staff file photo The author says state GOP leaders like Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick aim to defund public education and subsidize private schools with tax money in a move that chooses campaign funds over children.

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