Las Vegas Review-Journal

Education agency a hot GOP target

- Frank Bruni Frank Bruni is a columnist for The New York Times.

Acontest to determine the least popular arm of the federal government­wouldhavem­anystrong contenders. There’s the soft, cuddly Internal Revenue Service. Also the National Security Agency, America’s Peeping Tom. And let’s not forget the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, seen by many manufactur­ers as one big, mossy, bossy paean to regulation run amok.

But for politician­s, in particular Republican­s, another challenger comes into play: the Department of Education.

In a Republican presidenti­al debate during the 2012 campaign, it wasn’t just on the list of “three agencies of government” that Rick Perry famously promised to eliminate. It was one of the two he succeeded in naming before he stopped short, forgetting the third.

And it finds itself once again in Republican presidenti­al candidates’ cross hairs, all the more so because of Common Core standards, supported by Education Secretary Arne Duncan and cited by many excessivel­y alarmed conservati­ves as a federal takeover of curriculum.

With the notable exception of Jeb Bush, whose Common Core advocacy is possibly his greatest vulnerabil­ity in the primaries, nearly all the major Republican candidates have disparaged the standards, including Chris Christie, who once supported them.

And most of these politician­s have called for downsizing the Education Department. A few have followed Perry’s lead and said they want it dead and gone. That’s the position of Rand Paul, Mike Huckabee and Ted Cruz, and Marco Rubio has signaled a willingnes­s to consider eliminatin­g the department.

It could use more friends these days even among Democrats. Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., a former preschool teacher, has joined forces with Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., to sponsor legislatio­n that would leave the department and its secretary with much less influence over states.

There’d be no federal say, for example, in how (or if) public schoolteac­hers are evaluated. If the bill passes — and it has significan­t bipartisan support — the department will be a shadow of its former self.

Alexander supports that humbling even though he once ran the department, as the first President Bush’s secretary of education.

“I believe there’s a federal role in education,” he told me recently, saying the federal government affords an important bully pulpit for higher standards and more spending on students from poor families, to name two priorities. “But you don’t need a department. You need a president who cares about education and a Treasury Department that cuts the checks.”

Mitch Daniels, the former governor of Indiana, didn’t whollydisa­gree. I approached him because he worked in George W. Bush’s administra­tion, when the department’s power grew with No Child Left Behind, and he’s seen as a moderate Republican. He’s now the president of Purdue University.

“It’s not a ludicrous idea, honestly,” he said, referring to abolishing the department. He noted that until 1979, when it was establishe­d as a Cabinet-level agency, the country got along without it.

And now? “Let’s be gentle,” he said, “and say that we haven’t seen dramatic education improvemen­t since the federal government set up shop.”

But there’s much more at work than the failings of the Education Department, which contribute­s only about 10 percent of funding nationally for K-through-12 schooling and has only so much impact on what happens in classrooms.

And there are as many reasons to fret over the department’s disappeara­nce — or, more plausibly, its severe curtailing — as to root for it.

“When states are left on their own, lowincome kids, kids with disabiliti­es and minority kids always come last,” said Kati Haycock, the president of the Education Trust, an advocacy group in Washington. “Always. Federal resources help to counteract this tendency, but it’s more about federal leverage.”

There’s also plenty of evidence that when states are left to gauge the success of students, they may produce suspicious­ly upbeat results at odds with any nationwide measuremen­t.

“Without federal involvemen­t, states define their own standards of proficienc­y,” said Joel Klein, former chancellor for New York City public schools. “Some states will do good stuff, but there will also be laggards and a lot of happy talk.”

And as he and many other education advocates pointed out, that’s a national concern that deserves the attention of the federal government and of a discrete department sufficient­ly empowered to address it.

We’re a mobile country, and each state is educating them for the entire country’s future. Because American companies compete in a global marketplac­e, the skills and erudition of tomorrow’s workers are a national issue, not a state one. As it stands, even with the Education Department, the extent to which American schools are funded and controlled locally puts us out of step with most developed nations.

If the Education Department and its secretary vanished, how much would the bully pulpit Alexander mentioned shrink? What signal would Americans get about education as a national priority?

Daniels applauded Duncan as “a helpful voice” and “good conscience” for necessary reforms and standards. He wondered if such a voice would have existed without an Education Department.

I wonder if federal funding for education — about $140 billion annually, a meaningful amount — would stay the same. It goes against organizati­onal and human nature to appropriat­e money without the sorts of conditions and accountabi­lity that are the province of the Education Department.

“We absolutely have to give some power back to the states,” said Michael Petrilli, the president of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a think tank that supports school choice.

But Petrilli stopped well shy of calling for the Education Department’s erasure, in part because he asked, “Would you abolish funding as well?” The department administer­s about half of that $140 billion.

It has been around long enough that its eliminatio­n would be an extreme measure. Qualms with the way it functions are one thing; debates about its power and size are legitimate, even necessary. But what some of the Republican presidenti­al candidates are doing is the equivalent of looking at a person who’s having a bad hair day and recommendi­ng decapitati­on.

While more thoughtful conservati­ves like Alexander have sketched out how things might work without an Education Department, these firebrands are engaged in theater, not real debate. They’re after applause lines, not solutions.

That’s one of my chief gripes with the battlecryt­obanishthe­department.It’spolicyby sound bite. There’s too much of that already.

 ?? Ben Wiseman / The neW York Times ??
Ben Wiseman / The neW York Times

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