Will the Real Hillary Clinton Please Stand Up?
Hillary Clinton with Eli Broad at the pre-ball dinner hosted by Broad
at the Inauguration Ball of Barack Obama
on January 20, 2009.
|
by Ken Derstine
December 23, 2015
Hillary Clinton has caused a major scramble
by her supporters after she spoke at a small high school outside Des Moines,
Iowa. In her remarks she told the students at Keota High School on Tuesday,
December 22,
This school
district and these schools throughout Iowa are doing a better than average job.
Now I wouldn't keep any school open that wasn't doing a better than average
job. If a school is not doing a good job then, you know, that may not be good
for the kids, but when you have a district that is doing a good job it seems
kind of counterproductive to impose financial burdens on it.
Her political opponents have seized on this, claiming
that she is in favor of closing almost half the schools in the country.
U.S. News and World Report
came to her defense Wednesday, December 23, saying
her remarks “were taken out of context”. Education writer Diane Ravitch agreed. Sounding like a Clinton campaign manager, Ravitch echoed
the paper, saying.
She mis-spoke. Hillary
understands that the federal government doesn’t close schools. Period. A
mistake. A slip of the tongue. An unthinking bow to corporatist ideology. She
was wrong and she knows it. She has to walk back this careless statement. We
don’t need any more school closings. Such closings have had a
disproportionately harmful affect on communities of color. Talk about
school support, school helping, not closings. That’s yesterday.
So where does Clinton stand on the Broad
method of closing “low-performing” public schools in low-income communities and turning them over to charters?
In a December 17th article in
the Wall Street Journal, “Clinton
Views on Charter Schools, Teacher Evaluations Upset Some Democrats” (You must
do a Google search for the article title to get the full article.) it was
reported that some neo-liberal Democrats are worried that Hillary Clinton isn’t
fully committed to corporate education reform. Laura Meckler reported,
Their worries
stem from skeptical comments she has made about charter schools and teacher
evaluations, as well as her close relationship with teachers’ unions, who are
critical of both.
There are a
lot of deep-pocketed donors who are concerned, and they’re going to hang onto
their checkbooks until there is more clarity,” said Whitney Tilson, managing
partner of Kase Capital, who has given more than $150,000 to Democrats in
recent years. He hasn’t donated any money to Mrs. Clinton or the super PAC
supporting her this year “primarily because of this issue.”
Another major
Democratic donor, Eli Broad, refused requests for contributions from another
friendly super PAC, and only changed his mind after personal reassurances from
former President Bill Clinton and campaign chairman John Podesta that Mrs.
Clinton will support charter schools.
Besides the misleading
statement that the leadership of the teachers’
unions are opposed to teacher
evaluations based on standardized tests and charters, the article portrays Eli Broad and Bill Clinton as distant
acquaintances. On September 19, 2015, at
the dedication of Eli Broad’s museum in Los Angeles, the LA
Times Reported,
Of his
friendship with the Broads, Clinton turned to them and asked,
“What year
did you come and sit in the living room with me?” Edythe Broad noted that
Clinton daughter Chelsea, now an active figure in the Clinton Foundation and
the Clinton Global Initiative, had been a baby at the time and that Hillary
Rodham Clinton, a Democratic presidential candidate and former secretary of
State, had been Eli’s lawyer. After settling on 1983, Clinton said, “I looked
up one day and Eli was in my living room, and my life has never been the same.”
(Boldface added)
Far from being distant acquaintances,
the Clinton’s have had a close relationship with Eli Broad for more than thirty
years. [See my article “Eli
Broad and the Clintons: Update of the Update” for
the full details.]
It should also be pointed out that Mortimer Zuckerman, the chairman and editor-in-chief of the U.S. News and World Report (and
publisher of the New York Daily News), was
on the Broad Foundation Board of Directors for a
number of years.
Also see:
Context
Does Not Absolve Clinton
Curmudgucation – December 23, 2015
Curmudgucation – December 23, 2015
Hillary
Clinton: Vowing to Close Schools Not “Above Average”
Mercedes Schneider @ deutsch29
Mercedes Schneider @ deutsch29
Mercedes Schneider @ deutsch29
Was Hillary misquoted? Taken out of context?
Mike Klonsky's Smalltalk Blog - December 23, 2015
Includes a report on Randi Weingarten's supporting role in the damage control.
Which Side Are You On, Hillary?
The New York Times - March 12, 2015
Ignored, Uninformed and for the GOP, Crazy for Charters: Presidential Candidates Get an F Grade on K-12 Public Education
Alternet - March 24, 2016
For more related links, see this article on Defend Public Education!
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