New York Post

Female Flight

Why suburban women are running from Dems

- GLENN HARLAN REYNOLDS Glenn Harlan Reynolds is a professor of law at the University of Tennessee and founder of the InstaPundi­t.com blog.

SOMETHING’S happening in the suburbs. On the one hand, polls indicate that white suburban women are shifting — hard — toward the Republican Party. On the other, lots more parents are homeschool­ing their kids, post-pandemic. These phenomena are not unrelated.

Suburban women are shifting Republican — by 27 points, a Wall Street Journal poll found — because the Democrats have let them down.

When people complain about taxes, the usual response is something along the lines of “what, you don’t want police and schools?” Of course, as my father-in-law once said, when they raise taxes they tell you it’s for teachers and police, but when they get the money it goes to buy a fancy leather chair for some guy you never heard of in an office downtown.

But if you’re going to justify the whole of government by invoking police and schools, maybe it would be a good idea to . . . actually provide police and schools. And Democrats across the nation went out of their way not to deliver either.

To hear Democratic candidates, and the party’s media cheerleade­rs, talk now, nobody ever supported defunding the police. But, of course, Democrats across the board did just that, and GOP candidates have been replaying the video.

In a spasm of post-George Floyd mass hysteria, the political system, and in particular the government­s of Democratic-run cities, made drastic cutbacks in police protection, installed revolving-door, no-bail arraignmen­t systems and encouraged the proliferat­ion of homeless encampment­s and open-air drug markets in many areas.

Unsurprisi­ngly, the result was surging crime. Around America, downtown businesses have closed, and people — especially women — have felt unsafe in their own neighborho­ods. Crime is now a major issue with the electorate, and even among black voters, the alleged beneficiar­ies of police defunding, only 17% support defunding the police, per a recent Grio/Kaiser Family Foundation poll.

Allowed to run things their way, Democrats have ruined many of America’s cities, from New York to Chicago to Los Angeles and beyond. And the crime has spilled out into the suburbs.

Nor is it like taxes went down when police were defunded; the money just got diverted to Democratic interest groups. Schools did no better. Education policy (even at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) during COVID was essentiall­y run by teachers unions. This year, Senate Republican­s outlined the improper and extensive influence unions, particular­ly the American Federation of Teachers, wielded over COVID policies on schools. Union officials actually wrote portions of Biden schoolopen­ing guidance.

Teachers liked working remotely, and teachers unions fought hard to keep them home as long as possible. Teachers had a nice time, but students suffered, to a degree that’s still sinking in.

Even in 2020, The Atlantic reported that parents in New York, worried about crime and bad schools, were taking over the education of their kids. Since then, as schools did a worse and worse job, more and more parents decided to educate their own kids.

Many kept it up post-pandemic. As the Associated Press reported: “In 18 states that shared data through the current school year, the number of homeschool­ing students increased by 63% in the 2020-2021 school year, then fell by only 17%” the next year.

(It’s not just white suburban women. Black families, too, as The New Yorker reported, are increasing­ly homeschool­ing their kids.)

For suburban women, the past couple of years have been an unpleasant, in-your-face lesson in the incompeten­ce of Democratic Party governance, and the (huge) extent to which Democrats care more about their interest groups, like teachers unions and racial activists, than the people they’re supposed to be working for.

In 2021, voters in normally blue Virginia elected Republican Glenn Youngkin over Democrat Terry McAuliffe in response to similar concerns. McAuliffe ran on race, reparation­s and lockdowns; Youngkin, on a sensible family-centered approach.

Youngkin’s victory provided a model for the GOP; Democrats might have learned from McAuliffe’s defeat, but mostly doubled down, with the addition of hysteria about abortion and Jan. 6, issues that have far more resonance with the political class than most voters. Hence the movement of white suburban women.

The GOP is also increasing­ly getting traction with other groups Democrats previously owned, like black and Latino voters. Maybe Democrats just aren’t very good at what they do. Maybe next week’s elections will bring enough pain to spark a change. Maybe.

 ?? ?? They paid the price: Students learning remotely during COVID suffered.
They paid the price: Students learning remotely during COVID suffered.
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