Miami Herald

The $3 million for civics program is a mystery. Its tie to DeSantis’ Christian agenda isn’t

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There’s a mystery surroundin­g the state bud- get’s allocation of $3 million to a new civics program at the University of Florida. The university didn’t ask for the funding. The Repub- lican lawmaker who requested the money told the Miami Herald he did so on behalf of an organizati­on he doesn’t “know really much about.”

But it strains credulity that no one really knows why and how the money ended up in the state budget — especially when it involves civics education, a focal point of Gov. Ron DeSantis’ push to force a conservati­ve Christian point of view about the nation’s founding in public education.

That UF is opening a new academic center focused on civics courses itself isn’t the problem. The Hamilton Center for Classic and Civics Education’s mission will be to educate university students in the “principles, ideals and institutio­ns of the American political order,” and the “foundation­s of respon- sible leadership and informed citizenshi­p.” Understand­ing our nation’s history — all of it — and values is crucial for a healthy democracy.

DISTURBING SECRECY

It’s the secrecy behind this initiative that should bother taxpayers. Very little is known about the Council on Public University Reform, which requested the funding. But what was reported in a Herald story

this week raises the question of whether this is yet another way for Florida Republican­s to funnel tax dollars to conservati­ve Christian groups.

The Council has existed for less than a year since its incorporat­ion in Delaware. It has no website, virtually no informatio­n about it online and no working phone, the Herald reported. Yet it’s influentia­l enough to get $3 million into Florida’s state budget and survive DeSantis’ veto pen (DeSan- tis vetoed less money for things like contracept­ives for lowincome

women). How did the Council enlist lobbying powerhouse Ballard Partners and a former DeSantis chief of staff to represent its interests at the state Capitol?

What a head-scratcher — or is it?

INFLUENTIA­L COLLEGE

It turns out that the man representi­ng the Council on Public University Reform, Josh- ua Holdenried, has a long history of working with religious and conservati­ve groups. He’s currently pursuing a master’s degree at a private religious school in Michigan called Hillsdale College.

The small school has an outsized influence in conservati­ve circles and reshaping public education through a network of charter schools. It was one of the organizati­ons Florida partnered with to train high school teachers on a new civics curriculum, which rattled some educators for whitewashi­ng slavery and proclaimin­g that the Founding Fathers didn’t want a separation between church and state. Hillsdale also has ties to Florida’s rejection of dozens of math textbooks because they included references deemed to be critical race theory and other “prohibited topics” (two book reviewers were affiliated with the college).

No matter how taxpayers ended up footing those $3 million, there’s no mystery of what the bigger picture is: a concerted effort to use public education for ideologica­l wars.

Correction: The July 14 editorial, “Mayor’s smart opening tax-cut bid,” misidentif­ied the Miami-Dade County property appraiser. He is Pedro Garcia.

 ?? Miami ?? The University of Florida received $3 million in state funds for a civics program.
Miami The University of Florida received $3 million in state funds for a civics program.

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