The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Tea party 2.0? Conservati­ves get organized in school battles

- By THOMAS BEAUMONT and STEPHEN GROVES Groves reported from Sioux Falls, S.D.

MEQUON, Wis. (AP) — A loose network of conservati­ve groups with ties to major Republican donors and party-aligned think tanks is quietly lending firepower to local activists engaged in culture war fights in schools across the country.

While they are drawn by the anger of parents opposed to school policies on racial history or COVID-19 protocols like mask mandates, the groups are often run by political operatives and lawyers standing ready to amplify local disputes.

In a wealthy Milwaukee suburb, a law firm heavily financed by a conservati­ve foundation that has fought climate change mitigation and that has ties to former President Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election helped parents seeking to recall Mequonthie­nsville school board members, chiefly over the board’s hiring of a diversity consultant. A new national advocacy group, Parents Defending Education, promoted the Wisconsin parents’ tactics as a model.

In Loudoun County, Virginia, a Justice Department spokespers­on in the Trump administra­tion rallied parents in a recall effort sparked by opposition to a district racial equity program. In Brownsburg, Indiana, a leader of a national network of parents opposed to anti-racist school programs helped a mother obtain a lawyer when the district’s superinten­dent blocked her from following his Twitter account.

This growing support network highlights the energy and resources being poured into the cauldron of political debate in the nation’s schools. Republican­s hope the efforts lay the groundwork for a comeback in congressio­nal elections next year. Some see the burst of local organizing on the right as reminiscen­t of a movement that helped power the GOP takeover of the House 10 years ago.

“It seems very tea partyish to me,” said Dan Lennington, a lawyer with the conservati­ve Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty, which has offered free legal advice to several parent groups pursuing or weighing school board recalls, including the one in Mequon. “These are ingredient­s for having an impact on future elections.”

Lennington’s group is funded in part by the Bradley Foundation, a Milwaukee-based nonprofit that supports conservati­ve causes. The foundation’s secretary, GOP lawyer Cleta Mitchell, advised Trump as he sought to overturn the 2020 election results and has since worked to push for tighter state voting laws.

Like the tea party movement, the groups have been labeled “astroturf” by some opponents — activism manufactur­ed by powerful interests to look like grassroots organizing.

“Outsiders are tapping into some genuine concerns, but the framing of the issues are largely regularize­d by national groups,” said Jeffrey Henig, a professor at Teachers College at Columbia University, who has written on the nationaliz­ation of education.

But the advocates and their outside backup argue they’re harnessing real outrage and working to counter the disproport­ionate influence of liberal groups in schools.

“There’s a misconcept­ion out there that this is part of some national right-wing agenda,” said Amber Schroeder, a 39-year-old parent of four who is helping lead the Mequon recall. “We’re the ones pushing back on our own here against an extreme liberal agenda by the teachers union.”

The political tracking website Ballotpedi­a counts about 30 active school board recall efforts nationwide. Some are focused chiefly on disputes over anti-racism training and education in schools, often labeled critical race theory. Others were prompted by debates over school policies on transgende­r students and pandemic public health measures.

Local parent activists are quick to claim credit for that work, and the outside groups offering legal help, research, organizing tools and media training are often reluctant to discuss their role.

Among those is Parents Defending Education, an Arlington, Virginia-based group formed in January and dedicated to “fighting indoctrina­tion in the classroom.” It provides templates for requesting public records, a guide to parent rights, organizing strategies and talking points.

“We created Parents Defending Education because we believe our children deserve to learn how to think at school — not what to think,” its president, Nicole Neily, wrote in an email to The Associated Press.

Neily stated the group is “not involved in any recall efforts, in Mequon or elsewhere.” But the group’s website does promote the Mequon activists’ campaign. As part of its national database of parent “incident reports,” the group highlights Mequon’s case by posting, as a guide for others, the Freedom of Informatio­n Act request that parents filed.

Neily declined to name Parents Defending Education’s funding sources. As a tax-exempt organizati­on, the group is not required to make its donors public. Neily has worked in senior positions for conservati­ve groups including the Independen­t Women’s Forum and Cato Institute, according to the group’s website.

Another newly influentia­l group is No Left Turn in Education, an organizati­on that has ballooned to 78 chapters in more than 25 states since it was founded last year by Elana Fishbein.

Since December, Fishbein has secured free legal representa­tion for parents fighting curriculum battles with school districts. Most of those lawyers are affiliated with firms similar to Lennington’s, including the Liberty Justice Center and Pacific Legal Foundation, which also receive funding from the Bradley Foundation, as well as prominent GOP donor Dick Uihlein, a shipping supply billionair­e.

A Uihlein spokespers­on declined to comment. Messages left with the Bradley Foundation weren’t returned.

Fishbein says the journey from local mom to nationally recognized conservati­ve activist was swift.

“A year ago, I had a handful of moms in my suburban Philadelph­ia living room,” Fishbein said. “Three weeks later, I was on Tucker Carlson, and within a week, I had more than a million visitors to my Facebook page.”

Fishbein and leaders of similar groups say they believe conservati­ve activism in schools has exploded as parents have taken a closer look at their children’s schoolwork during remote learning.

“Now this whole problem of radical indoctrina­tion is adding to their agenda,” Fishbein said. “This is a very big fight.”

It’s a fight likely to help Republican­s in congressio­nal elections next year, said Ian Prior, a former Justice Department official who is now the executive director of a conservati­ve organizati­on called Fight for Schools, which is working to recall board members in Loudoun County.

“You’re going to need a team. You’re going to need a command staff. You’re going to need what I call the army of moms,” he said at a conservati­ve conference in Texas in July.

That could include Schroeder, who describes her previous political activity beyond voting as “zero.”

Frustrated chiefly by the district’s $42,000 contract last year with Milwaukee diversity consultant Blaquesmit­h, Schroeder got in touch with Scarlett Johnson, a 46-year-old fellow Mequon mother who had researched strategies for challengin­g school boards on No Left Turn’s website.

“All the critical race theory buzzwords were present,” Johnson noted, referring to the online Blaquesmit­h seminars she watched. “I think it would be bad to backslide into a more race-conscious, racefocuse­d society.”

When Mequon police asked parents collecting signatures at the city park to remove their sign, Schroeder reached out to Lennington, who wrote a letter to the city arguing for the group’s right to assemble.

The letter, offered at no charge, was a small service but allowed parents to return to the park.

It also provided an opening for Lennington, who lobbies at the state Capitol, to invite Johnson and Schroeder to testify at a legislativ­e hearing in Madison for legislatio­n to require school districts to make all curriculum public.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MORRY GASH ?? Scarlett Johnson and Amber Schroeder drop off recall petitions to Paula Taebel, filing officer for the Mequonthie­nsville School District on Monday, Aug. 23, 2021, in Mequon, Wis. The petitions are to recall all of the member of the Mequon-thiensvill­e School District school board. A loose network of conservati­ve groups with ties to major Republican donors and party-aligned think tanks is quietly lending firepower to local activists engaged in the culture war fights in schools across the country.
AP PHOTO/MORRY GASH Scarlett Johnson and Amber Schroeder drop off recall petitions to Paula Taebel, filing officer for the Mequonthie­nsville School District on Monday, Aug. 23, 2021, in Mequon, Wis. The petitions are to recall all of the member of the Mequon-thiensvill­e School District school board. A loose network of conservati­ve groups with ties to major Republican donors and party-aligned think tanks is quietly lending firepower to local activists engaged in the culture war fights in schools across the country.
 ?? AP PHOTO/MORRY GASH ?? Recall petitions are recorded as received on Monday, Aug. 23, 2021, in Mequon, Wis. The petitions are to recall all of the member of the Mequon-thiensvill­e School District school board. A loose network of conservati­ve groups with ties to major Republican donors and party-aligned think tanks is quietly lending firepower to local activists engaged in the culture war fights in schools across the country.
AP PHOTO/MORRY GASH Recall petitions are recorded as received on Monday, Aug. 23, 2021, in Mequon, Wis. The petitions are to recall all of the member of the Mequon-thiensvill­e School District school board. A loose network of conservati­ve groups with ties to major Republican donors and party-aligned think tanks is quietly lending firepower to local activists engaged in the culture war fights in schools across the country.
 ?? AP PHOTO/MORRY GASH ?? Maureen Hall, a supporter of recalling the entire Mequon-thiensvill­e School District board, waves at drivers outside Homestead High School Monday, Aug. 23, 2021, in Mequon, Wis. A loose network of conservati­ve groups with ties to major Republican donors and partyalign­ed think tanks is quietly lending firepower to local activists engaged in the culture war fights in schools across the country.
AP PHOTO/MORRY GASH Maureen Hall, a supporter of recalling the entire Mequon-thiensvill­e School District board, waves at drivers outside Homestead High School Monday, Aug. 23, 2021, in Mequon, Wis. A loose network of conservati­ve groups with ties to major Republican donors and partyalign­ed think tanks is quietly lending firepower to local activists engaged in the culture war fights in schools across the country.
 ?? AP PHOTO/MORRY GASH ?? Volunteers collect signatures to recall the entire Mequon-thiensvill­e School District board outside the Mequon Library Monday, Aug. 23, 2021, in Mequon, Wis. A loose network of conservati­ve groups with ties to major Republican donors and party-aligned think tanks is quietly lending firepower to local activists engaged in the culture war fights in schools across the country.
AP PHOTO/MORRY GASH Volunteers collect signatures to recall the entire Mequon-thiensvill­e School District board outside the Mequon Library Monday, Aug. 23, 2021, in Mequon, Wis. A loose network of conservati­ve groups with ties to major Republican donors and party-aligned think tanks is quietly lending firepower to local activists engaged in the culture war fights in schools across the country.
 ?? AP PHOTO/MORRY GASH ?? Kimberly Klimek with her daughter Lily sign a petition to recall the entire Mequon-thiensvill­e School District board outside the Mequon Library Monday, Aug. 23, 2021, in Mequon, Wis. A loose network of conservati­ve groups with ties to major Republican donors and party-aligned think tanks is quietly lending firepower to local activists engaged in the culture war fights in schools across the country.
AP PHOTO/MORRY GASH Kimberly Klimek with her daughter Lily sign a petition to recall the entire Mequon-thiensvill­e School District board outside the Mequon Library Monday, Aug. 23, 2021, in Mequon, Wis. A loose network of conservati­ve groups with ties to major Republican donors and party-aligned think tanks is quietly lending firepower to local activists engaged in the culture war fights in schools across the country.
 ?? AP PHOTO/MORRY GASH ?? Supporters to recall the entire Mequon-thiensvill­e School District board wave at cars outside Homestead High School Monday, Aug. 23, 2021, in Mequon, Wis. A loose network of conservati­ve groups with ties to major Republican donors and party-aligned think tanks is quietly lending firepower to local activists engaged in the culture war fights in schools across the country.
AP PHOTO/MORRY GASH Supporters to recall the entire Mequon-thiensvill­e School District board wave at cars outside Homestead High School Monday, Aug. 23, 2021, in Mequon, Wis. A loose network of conservati­ve groups with ties to major Republican donors and party-aligned think tanks is quietly lending firepower to local activists engaged in the culture war fights in schools across the country.

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