Along with Gov. Bobby
Jindal and Board of Elementary and Secondary Education Chairman Chas Roemer,
state Superintendent John White is one of the three most despised individuals
by established political powers and special interests in education in
Louisiana. Yesterday he made a bid to go to the head of that class and then
some by laying out a stunningly accurate assessment of the state of reform and
where it’s headed in Louisiana and maybe elsewhere.
In remarks made to the invaluable
American Enterprise Institute, White noted that the enemies of reform include
not just the usual suspects – teacher unions, educrats, and ideological fellow-traveling
policy-makers that are invested in the current government-monopoly model because
of the power and privilege it brings them – but also those who preach reform yet
allow themselves to become coopted by that system and those who become
opponents of beneficial reform only because it gets a policy foothold. The
latter category of individuals particularly is noteworthy and disproportionate
in size in Louisiana because of its political culture.
The former bunch’s source of antipathy
is well known and its causes well understood – by expanding choice in
education, this exposes the self-serving, hidebound nature of the structure it
has built and nurtured. That since the advent of the first charter schools the
vast preponderance of scholarly work has demonstrated their performance is
superior to that of government monopoly schools, affirmed
by the latest and most comprehensive study, and particularly
in Louisiana, only this attitude can explain why they view choice as such a
threat. As White noted, choice has not only the effect of reducing bureaucratic
command and control that frees creativity and innovation, but that this very
maze of regulations acts to insulate and protect vested interests.
But much less understood and
largely unacknowledged is the other group, and illustrates the Janus-like
nature of education in Louisiana’s political culture. White excellently
diagnosed that populism – or the idea that a Manichean struggle occurs between
a majority in-group being oppressed by a minority but powerful out-group that
controls government and other sectors of society such as business – can cause
fracturing of reform sentiment.
For example, some who have called
for reforms to improve rigor and accountability, such as restricting the
self-serving and coercive power held by unions, do so only within the
boundaries of the government monopoly model and reject choice because they fear
some imagined private sector conspiracy to control or to disrupt their comfortable
sinecures. Others who might otherwise support rigor and accountability reject good
standards that have any connection at all with the federal government out of (the
reasonable) fear that big government will intrude too much into education even
as adequate controls exist or can be modified to mitigate this.
White called this group “anti-authoritarian
populists,” perhaps because it contains elements of both the political left and
right that differ on what is the “authority.” While the left is the natural
home of populism, for liberalism posits that, absent powerful government to
change these circumstances, societal resources are distributed unfairly through
a system dedicated to perpetuating this arbitrary minority advantage, because of
Louisiana’s long history of infatuation with populism, a strain has developed
on the right as well, where (much more convincingly by the evidence) it is government
controlled by special interests utilizing power from enough discrete groups
among the masses through power redistribution that is the oppressive force.
To these populist conservatives –
who first found their political voice through the discredited instrument of
David Duke but now have discovered much more sensible individuals with
legitimate issue preferences such as state Treasurer John
Kennedy and the “fiscal
hawks” of recent origin in the state Legislature – they concern themselves
more with symbols than with ideas. This is fueled by another historical aspect
of Louisiana politics, that large role that personalistic politics has played traditionally,
where voters decide and politics are analyzed not really on the issue
preferences and ideas expressed, but by the personal charisma exuded or the
relationships built by the politicians. The value of policy options is then not
based on their inherent characteristics, but upon who is articulating them, to
these people.
These combined to make, for this
group, the relevant referent in their evaluation of politics not so much ideas
but placement in government. As long as politicians who articulate reducing the
power and size of government are outside of wielding significant policy-making power
in government, the populists of the right regard them favorably. But as soon as
they become significant policy-makers, they become suspect in the eyes of that
group simply because they are now part of the beast. This explains why Jindal,
despite governing by and large as a principled conservative and unquestionably
far more conservatively in policy than any previous governor, which required
him to challenge the state’s political culture that shapes the worldview of
these people, is seen by many of them suspiciously, if not disliked.
Although White did not put it this
way, he laments that that so many “aginners” that have been and should be reform
proponents are becoming wary of it as it continues down its logical path,
simply because it now is the official government policy. This brings them into
league with opponents whose power is threatened by the content of that policy,
which White diagnoses as hazardous to reform’s progress.
But White also picked off a
consequence of populism from the left as well, when he commented that the
greatest discouragement to improved educational delivery was “passivity.” This
quality fits entirely within the populist legacy, for that maintains that
people have little control over their lives courtesy of the vast conspiracy to
keep them down, and therefore they must put their faith in government rather
than in individual agency to get what they merit. Only an agenda that
encourages educator and family autonomy can rouse them out of this torpor, which
is why where Democrats
see chaos and some
parents complain it’s too “hard,” for the way the state is implementing the
Common Core State Standards, White sees the unleashing of creativity.
In his remarks, White, perhaps
unknowingly, underscored the role Louisiana’s political culture has played in
his experiences of policy leadership of education reform, which presents different
challenges from states where there is little populist history. There are those
who want reform, until they actually have it and realize its implications to their
own power relations and lives. It may mean teachers and parents have to work
harder to help children succeed. It may mean school board members have to
reduce the role politics plays in their decision-making. It may mean administrators
find themselves more accountable on the basis of what children learn rather
than to the lobbying of special interests.
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