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Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker continues to court national support for an extreme agenda of attacking public employees and public services while diminishing local democracy and shifting public money to private political allies. Despite the fact that Walker's moves have been widely condemned in his home state, the hyper-ambitious career politician has repeatedly suggested that he will not moderate his positions because he wants to shift the tenor of politics and policymaking far beyond Wisconsin.
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker continues to court national support for an extreme agenda of attacking public employees and public services while diminishing local democracy and shifting public money to private political allies. Despite the fact that Walker's moves have been widely condemned in his home state, the hyper-ambitious career politician has repeatedly suggested that he will not moderate his positions because he wants to shift the tenor of politics and policymaking far beyond Wisconsin.
Walker's stance has earned him talk as a possible darkhorse contender for a place the 2012 Republican nod and the governor has not discouraged it.
To that end, Walker will be in Washington Monday night to deliver a keynote address at the innocuously-named American Federation for Children's "School Choice Now: Empowering America's Children" policy summit. It's actually a key annual gathering of advocates for privatizing public education, and of some of the biggest funders of right-wing political projects nationally.
The appearance comes at a time when education cuts are becoming a front-and-center issue, as New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has stirred an outcry in the nation's largest city by proposing to layoff thousands of teachers.
But while other officials are proposing deep cuts and layoff, Wisconsin's governor has emerged the hero of the right-wing groups that are proposing extreme measures in the battle to privatize public education.
This bunch loves Scott Walker. They hail him as "one of the nation's most visible leaders" on their issues.
"In both of his previous elected offices, Walker distinguished himself as an outspoken advocate for school choice, including both private school choice and public charter schools," declares an American Federation for Children announcement of Walker's appearance tonight before the nation's primary proponents of undermining public education by shifting taxpayer dollars into school vouchers, tax credit scholarships and similar schemes.
In addition to his much-publicized proposal to strips teachers of collective bargaining rights and to make it dramatically hader for their unions to advocate for small class sizes and other priorities, Walker's budget plan seeks to cut funding for local schools and reduce the authority of local school boards to make decisions that defend and strengthen public education in their communities. It also outlines a number of initiatives designed to clear the way for and encourage private-school choice schemes.
"Private school choice" describes the practice of taking taxpayer dollars and shifting them to schools that are operated by non-profit and for-profit concerns - including corporations. It is a high priority of right-wing think tanks and advocacy groups that see breaking teacher unions as a critical policy and political goal for their movement. And it is a top priority for Michigan billionaires Dick and Betsy DeVos.
Dick DeVos is a former Republican nominee for governor of Michigan and Betsy DeVos is a former chair of the Michigan Republican Party. But the couple's real political work has involved the direction of tens of millions of dollars into the ideological and electoral infrastructure that supports school privatization.
"Dick DeVos has used his family's fortune and status to create an intricate national network of non-profits, political action committees and federal groups known as 527's that effectively fund the political arm of the school voucher movement," noted a People for the American Way study of the political projects of the heir to the Amway fortune and his wife. "Nowhere is the impact of the DeVos family fortune greater, though, than in the movement to privatize public education."
Betsy DeVos, the chairman of the American Federation of Children, has for decades been a prime mover in campaigning for school choice - and in funding political groups that have spent millions to support Scott Walker and candidates like him.
One of her groups, the political action committee "All Children Matter," was fined a record $5.2 million by the Ohio Elections Commission after it was charged with illegally shifting money into the state to support candidates considered friendly to private-school "choice" initiatives.
It was also fined for political misconduct in Wisconsin, where the secretive group's 2006 campaigning violated campaign finance laws by expressly urging voters to cast ballots against legislative candidates who were strong backers of public education.
Those troubles led to the evolution of "All Children Matter" into "American Federation for Children," which has collected money from a who's who of right wing millionaires and billionaires, including the political operations of Charles and David Koch - top donors to Scott Walker's 2010 campaign and (in the case of David), the subject of a much-publicized prank phone call to Walker during the current dispute in Wisconsin.
An ardent backer of Walker and his legislative agenda , the American Federation for Children "spent an estimated $820,000 on independent expenditures and phony issue ad activity in the 2010 fall legislative races," according to the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign
The federation has emerged as a major player on the side of the six Republican senators who face recall efforts because of their support for Walker's anti-labor legislation - just as they would certainly be big backers of any effort to protect the governor from recall.
But the DeVos family appears to have bigger plans for Walker.
In celebrating the governor's DC appearance, Betsy DeVos went on and on about how "excited" her group was to welcome Walker to Washington and how he "shares our (beliefs)."
"Governor Walker is leading the battle to bring hope for a brighter future..." she gushed, employing precisely the sort of "new Reagan" rhetoric that Walker and the caller he thought was David Koch talked about in that conversation where the governor declared: "This is our moment, this is our time to change the course of history."
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker continues to court national support for an extreme agenda of attacking public employees and public services while diminishing local democracy and shifting public money to private political allies. Despite the fact that Walker's moves have been widely condemned in his home state, the hyper-ambitious career politician has repeatedly suggested that he will not moderate his positions because he wants to shift the tenor of politics and policymaking far beyond Wisconsin.
Walker's stance has earned him talk as a possible darkhorse contender for a place the 2012 Republican nod and the governor has not discouraged it.
To that end, Walker will be in Washington Monday night to deliver a keynote address at the innocuously-named American Federation for Children's "School Choice Now: Empowering America's Children" policy summit. It's actually a key annual gathering of advocates for privatizing public education, and of some of the biggest funders of right-wing political projects nationally.
The appearance comes at a time when education cuts are becoming a front-and-center issue, as New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has stirred an outcry in the nation's largest city by proposing to layoff thousands of teachers.
But while other officials are proposing deep cuts and layoff, Wisconsin's governor has emerged the hero of the right-wing groups that are proposing extreme measures in the battle to privatize public education.
This bunch loves Scott Walker. They hail him as "one of the nation's most visible leaders" on their issues.
"In both of his previous elected offices, Walker distinguished himself as an outspoken advocate for school choice, including both private school choice and public charter schools," declares an American Federation for Children announcement of Walker's appearance tonight before the nation's primary proponents of undermining public education by shifting taxpayer dollars into school vouchers, tax credit scholarships and similar schemes.
In addition to his much-publicized proposal to strips teachers of collective bargaining rights and to make it dramatically hader for their unions to advocate for small class sizes and other priorities, Walker's budget plan seeks to cut funding for local schools and reduce the authority of local school boards to make decisions that defend and strengthen public education in their communities. It also outlines a number of initiatives designed to clear the way for and encourage private-school choice schemes.
"Private school choice" describes the practice of taking taxpayer dollars and shifting them to schools that are operated by non-profit and for-profit concerns - including corporations. It is a high priority of right-wing think tanks and advocacy groups that see breaking teacher unions as a critical policy and political goal for their movement. And it is a top priority for Michigan billionaires Dick and Betsy DeVos.
Dick DeVos is a former Republican nominee for governor of Michigan and Betsy DeVos is a former chair of the Michigan Republican Party. But the couple's real political work has involved the direction of tens of millions of dollars into the ideological and electoral infrastructure that supports school privatization.
"Dick DeVos has used his family's fortune and status to create an intricate national network of non-profits, political action committees and federal groups known as 527's that effectively fund the political arm of the school voucher movement," noted a People for the American Way study of the political projects of the heir to the Amway fortune and his wife. "Nowhere is the impact of the DeVos family fortune greater, though, than in the movement to privatize public education."
Betsy DeVos, the chairman of the American Federation of Children, has for decades been a prime mover in campaigning for school choice - and in funding political groups that have spent millions to support Scott Walker and candidates like him.
One of her groups, the political action committee "All Children Matter," was fined a record $5.2 million by the Ohio Elections Commission after it was charged with illegally shifting money into the state to support candidates considered friendly to private-school "choice" initiatives.
It was also fined for political misconduct in Wisconsin, where the secretive group's 2006 campaigning violated campaign finance laws by expressly urging voters to cast ballots against legislative candidates who were strong backers of public education.
Those troubles led to the evolution of "All Children Matter" into "American Federation for Children," which has collected money from a who's who of right wing millionaires and billionaires, including the political operations of Charles and David Koch - top donors to Scott Walker's 2010 campaign and (in the case of David), the subject of a much-publicized prank phone call to Walker during the current dispute in Wisconsin.
An ardent backer of Walker and his legislative agenda , the American Federation for Children "spent an estimated $820,000 on independent expenditures and phony issue ad activity in the 2010 fall legislative races," according to the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign
The federation has emerged as a major player on the side of the six Republican senators who face recall efforts because of their support for Walker's anti-labor legislation - just as they would certainly be big backers of any effort to protect the governor from recall.
But the DeVos family appears to have bigger plans for Walker.
In celebrating the governor's DC appearance, Betsy DeVos went on and on about how "excited" her group was to welcome Walker to Washington and how he "shares our (beliefs)."
"Governor Walker is leading the battle to bring hope for a brighter future..." she gushed, employing precisely the sort of "new Reagan" rhetoric that Walker and the caller he thought was David Koch talked about in that conversation where the governor declared: "This is our moment, this is our time to change the course of history."
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker continues to court national support for an extreme agenda of attacking public employees and public services while diminishing local democracy and shifting public money to private political allies. Despite the fact that Walker's moves have been widely condemned in his home state, the hyper-ambitious career politician has repeatedly suggested that he will not moderate his positions because he wants to shift the tenor of politics and policymaking far beyond Wisconsin.
Walker's stance has earned him talk as a possible darkhorse contender for a place the 2012 Republican nod and the governor has not discouraged it.
To that end, Walker will be in Washington Monday night to deliver a keynote address at the innocuously-named American Federation for Children's "School Choice Now: Empowering America's Children" policy summit. It's actually a key annual gathering of advocates for privatizing public education, and of some of the biggest funders of right-wing political projects nationally.
The appearance comes at a time when education cuts are becoming a front-and-center issue, as New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has stirred an outcry in the nation's largest city by proposing to layoff thousands of teachers.
But while other officials are proposing deep cuts and layoff, Wisconsin's governor has emerged the hero of the right-wing groups that are proposing extreme measures in the battle to privatize public education.
This bunch loves Scott Walker. They hail him as "one of the nation's most visible leaders" on their issues.
"In both of his previous elected offices, Walker distinguished himself as an outspoken advocate for school choice, including both private school choice and public charter schools," declares an American Federation for Children announcement of Walker's appearance tonight before the nation's primary proponents of undermining public education by shifting taxpayer dollars into school vouchers, tax credit scholarships and similar schemes.
In addition to his much-publicized proposal to strips teachers of collective bargaining rights and to make it dramatically hader for their unions to advocate for small class sizes and other priorities, Walker's budget plan seeks to cut funding for local schools and reduce the authority of local school boards to make decisions that defend and strengthen public education in their communities. It also outlines a number of initiatives designed to clear the way for and encourage private-school choice schemes.
"Private school choice" describes the practice of taking taxpayer dollars and shifting them to schools that are operated by non-profit and for-profit concerns - including corporations. It is a high priority of right-wing think tanks and advocacy groups that see breaking teacher unions as a critical policy and political goal for their movement. And it is a top priority for Michigan billionaires Dick and Betsy DeVos.
Dick DeVos is a former Republican nominee for governor of Michigan and Betsy DeVos is a former chair of the Michigan Republican Party. But the couple's real political work has involved the direction of tens of millions of dollars into the ideological and electoral infrastructure that supports school privatization.
"Dick DeVos has used his family's fortune and status to create an intricate national network of non-profits, political action committees and federal groups known as 527's that effectively fund the political arm of the school voucher movement," noted a People for the American Way study of the political projects of the heir to the Amway fortune and his wife. "Nowhere is the impact of the DeVos family fortune greater, though, than in the movement to privatize public education."
Betsy DeVos, the chairman of the American Federation of Children, has for decades been a prime mover in campaigning for school choice - and in funding political groups that have spent millions to support Scott Walker and candidates like him.
One of her groups, the political action committee "All Children Matter," was fined a record $5.2 million by the Ohio Elections Commission after it was charged with illegally shifting money into the state to support candidates considered friendly to private-school "choice" initiatives.
It was also fined for political misconduct in Wisconsin, where the secretive group's 2006 campaigning violated campaign finance laws by expressly urging voters to cast ballots against legislative candidates who were strong backers of public education.
Those troubles led to the evolution of "All Children Matter" into "American Federation for Children," which has collected money from a who's who of right wing millionaires and billionaires, including the political operations of Charles and David Koch - top donors to Scott Walker's 2010 campaign and (in the case of David), the subject of a much-publicized prank phone call to Walker during the current dispute in Wisconsin.
An ardent backer of Walker and his legislative agenda , the American Federation for Children "spent an estimated $820,000 on independent expenditures and phony issue ad activity in the 2010 fall legislative races," according to the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign
The federation has emerged as a major player on the side of the six Republican senators who face recall efforts because of their support for Walker's anti-labor legislation - just as they would certainly be big backers of any effort to protect the governor from recall.
But the DeVos family appears to have bigger plans for Walker.
In celebrating the governor's DC appearance, Betsy DeVos went on and on about how "excited" her group was to welcome Walker to Washington and how he "shares our (beliefs)."
"Governor Walker is leading the battle to bring hope for a brighter future..." she gushed, employing precisely the sort of "new Reagan" rhetoric that Walker and the caller he thought was David Koch talked about in that conversation where the governor declared: "This is our moment, this is our time to change the course of history."