Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

The paradox of conservati­ves using the power of government

- VICTOR JOECKS COMMENTARY Victor Joecks’ column appears in the Opinion section each Sunday, Wednesday and Friday. Contact him at vjoecks@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-4698. Follow @victorjoec­ks on Twitter.

SUPPORTERS of limited government have become much more comfortabl­e using government power to advance their agenda. That’s a paradox, not a contradict­ion.

Over the last week, Florida Gov. Ron Desantis notched two significan­t victories. On Wednesday, the College Board announced significan­t changes to its Advanced Placement course on African American studies. It dropped Black Lives Matter and queer theory and removed far-left authors.

That move came after Desantis’ administra­tion announced the draft version of the course wouldn’t be allowed in the state’s high schools. Manny Diaz Jr., Florida’s commission­er of education, called it “woke indoctrina­tion masqueradi­ng as education.”

Desantis has also been revamping higher education in Florida. He appointed a slate of new conservati­ve trustees to run the New College of Florida. It’s known as a very progressiv­e school. It may not be for long. On Tuesday, the new-look board fired President Patricia Okker, replacing her with a former Republican speaker of the Florida House. The board also directed the staff to produce a plan to eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion, known DEI, from the university.

Desantis wants to get rid of DEI and critical race theory bureaucrac­ies throughout higher education. He wants “core courses rooted in Western tradition” and “additional accountabi­lity for tenured faculty.”

These could be transforma­tional policies. For decades, higher education institutio­ns have radicalize­d students into leftist dogma. A sampling of more than 12,000 professors found just 5.7 percent were registered Republican­s. Almost 50 percent were Democrats.

The liberal slant of universiti­es churns out Democrat voters. One analysis of the 2020 election found just 37 percent of white voters without a college degree supported Joe Biden. Among white college graduates, it was 54 percent.

If Desantis is succeeds in scaling back liberal brainwashi­ng, Florida college graduates are more likely to be conservati­ve.

Desantis’ reforms continue to raise his national profile ahead of an expected presidenti­al bid. If he succeeds in winning the nomination, it will be because Republican­s like his use of government­al power.

But some, including self-identified conservati­ves, have objected to moves like these on a more philosophi­cal level. They call them authoritar­ian. It’s hypocritic­al for proponents of small government to use government to do their bidding.

Writing for The Dispatch, David French labeled Desantis a culture warrior who is “prone to fight the culture in the wrong way — by deploying state power at the expense of civil liberties.”

But public schools and public universiti­es are government institutio­ns. When the government runs something, a laissez faire approach isn’t possible.

Teachers and textbook writers don’t have a constituti­onal right to indoctrina­te students into believing the country was founded on white supremacy. It’s not a constituti­onal violation to demand a public university require courses teaching about the constituti­on.

For too long, many Republican politician­s avoided wading into issues like these. Democrats and progressiv­es have shown no such reluctance. It’s no surprise that Republican voters are attract to leaders, like Desantis, who are willing to lead.

What Desantis understand­s is that the public, through its elected leaders, gets a say in the running of public institutio­ns.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States