The Arizona Republic

Comrade Sanders targets charter schools

- Rich Lowry Columnist Contact columnist Rich Lowry at comments.lowry@nationalre­view.com.

Few things offend Bernie Sanders as much as people escaping from command-and-control government systems, even minority students whose parents are desperate to get their kids a decent education.

The socialist wants to turn George Wallace on his head and not block black children from attending traditiona­l public schools, but block them from exiting those schools for something better.

The New York Times recently wrote a devastatin­g report on the then-Burlington, Vermont, mayor’s love affair with the Sandinista­s in the 1980s. So many decades later, his reflex is the same: If the Sandinista­s wouldn’t favor it, he’s not inclined to like it much either. That goes for charter schools that, yes, are publicly funded, but still too flexible and unregulate­d for refined socialist tastes.

Over the weekend, Sanders unveiled his education plan. He wants to end forprofit charter schools (about 15% of all charters) and impose a moratorium on new public funding of charters, while taking steps to impose a one-size-fitsall regulatory regime on existing charters.

Sanders thus seeks to kneecap what has been an astonishin­gly successful experiment in urban education because it doesn’t fit nicely within his ideologica­l preconcept­ions.

That Sanders says he wants to do this to advance the principle that “every human being has the fundamenta­l right to a good education” is hilariousl­y perverse. The comrades will have a good chuckle over that one.

Charter schools aren’t the product of a libertaria­n conspiracy. They fall short of the vouchers favored by conservati­ves to allow parents to get access to private schools. Charters receive public money, but have more leeway to develop policies outside the regulatory and union straitjack­et of traditiona­l public schools.

Charters had bipartisan support before a Vermont socialist became one of the party’s thought leaders. Bill Clinton won the first-ever lifetime achievemen­t award from the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools. Promoting charters was a hallmark of Barack Obama’s education agenda, and a signature of Cory Booker’s mayoralty in Newark, New Jersey.

Not all charters are created equal. Some don’t serve their students well, especially online charter schools, and the performanc­e of suburban and rural charter schools hasn’t been very impressive. It’s the charter schools in urban areas with the worst traditiona­l public schools that have excelled.

According to a well-regarded 2015 study by Stanford’s Center for Research on Education Outcomes, students in urban charter schools got the equivalent of 40 additional days of math instructio­n and 28 additional days of reading annually. The numbers for African American students in poverty were even better. Charters in Newark and Boston have seen enormous academic gains.

In New York City, the Success Academy founded by Eva Moskowitz – one of the foremost education reformers of our time – has eliminated racial and economic achievemen­t gaps.

It’s amazing what schools can do when they impose discipline, have the highest expectatio­ns and focus with a laser intensity on instructio­n.

Anyone interested in the education of minority students should seek to build on these oases of excellence, rather than cut them off. But the teachers unions hate charters, and they are a much more powerful potential cadre in the Sanders “revolution” than poor black kids.

Sanders suggests that charter schools somehow increase segregatio­n. This is nonsense, as Jonathan Chait of

New York magazine points out. Urban charter schools reflect the segregatio­n of their neighborho­ods where they are located – just like traditiona­l public schools do.

The polling shows that minority parents get what Sanders (and white progressiv­es) refuses to understand. A solid majority of black and Hispanic Democrats have a favorable view of charters, while white Democrats have an unfavorabl­e view by a 2-1 margin.

It is doubtful how much of his anticharte­r agenda Sanders would be able to enact if elected, since much of the action is at the state and local level. That he’s hostile to these schools should, regardless, redound to his shame.

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