The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Teachers could hurt GOP's grip on conservative states
Education might become key issue in midterm races.
CHANDLER, ARIZ. — An intensifying series of red-state battles over education funding and teacher pay threatens to loosen Republicans’ grip on some of the country’s most conservative states, as educators and parents rebel against a decade of fiscal austerity that has cut deeply into public education.
As Arizona teachers laid the groundwork this week for a walkout, thousands of Oklahoma teachers stayed out of the classroom to protest low school budgets and some in Kentucky continued their protests against a pension reform bill. Last month, West Virginia’s Republican-controlled government made concessions to striking teachers.
The clashes could elevate public education into a major issue in several midterm races this fall. Republicans are defending dozens of governorships and state legislative chambers across the country, includ- ing in several Southern and Western states where all-Republican governments have passed sweeping reductions in taxes and spending.
On Wednesday in Chandler, a middle class suburb of Phoenix, hundreds of par- ents and students joined teachers in protesting outside schools. A parent, Chris- tine Clinger Abraham, whose daughter is a senior at Chan- dler High School, wore a red blouse to show solidar- ity with the teachers’ #Red- forEd movement. “They take so much personal interest in the kids,” Abraham said, “but they have to have a second job” to make ends meet.
Abraham typically votes Republican, but said, “I would switch party lines” to support candidates who want to increase education funding. “I am very disappointed in the Republican Party we have locally,” she said.
Both Republicans and Democrats in these strongly conservative states see the unrest around education as symptomatic of broader unease about years of bud- getary belt-tightening that have followed popular tax cuts.
In Arizona, home to weak labor unions and a muscular school-choice movement, Gov. Doug Ducey, a first-term Republican, has championed tax cuts and private alterna- tives to public schools. The state is also holding a referendum this fall on expanding its school-voucher program. Daniel Scarpinato, a spokesman for Ducey, said the governor was prepared to defend his record.
Democrats running for governor have aligned them-
selves closely with teachers . The two Democrats vying to oppose Ducey, state Sen. Steve Farley and David Gar- cia, a former state education official, said they viewed education funding as the strongest issue galvanizing opposition to the Republican-held government. Both Democrats have called for eliminating a range of tax exemptions to create revenue.
But Matthew Benson, an Arizona-based Republican strategist involved in edu- cation issues, warned that teachers risked overplaying their hand if they were too confrontational.
“By demanding 20 percent pay hikes and threatening to walk out of the classroom, Arizona teachers risk alienating voters and blowing their best opportunity in memory to achieve real change in this state,” Benson said. “I suspect Arizona voters’ well of sympathy for teachers is not bottomless.”
In Kansas and Oklahoma, backlash against severe service reductions has spurred Republican-held legislatures to enact taxes that would have been unimaginable a few years ago.