Chuck Schumer, Bill Clinton and Education Reform
My
wife and I went to an Obama fundraising dinner with 30 or so people
last night. The warm-up act was Chuck Schumer, who was followed by Bill
Clinton, who spoke and
took questions for more than an hour. He’s amazing – every time I see
him, I’m in awe of his political skills. He’s just an incredible speaker
and really connects with people, whether it’s one-on-one, a small
group, or to a stadium full of people and a national
television audience. He’s an incredible story teller – and actually
mentioned this last night: he said there wasn’t a TV in his home until
he was 10 years old, so he had to learn to tell good stories.
There
are two parts of the evening I want to share: First, during Schumer’s
Q&A (before Clinton arrived), I raised my hand and said:
“Senator
Schumer, I’m Whitney Tilson and my primary political involvement is
through an organization I helped start called Democrats for Education
Reform. If you have
a long memory, you may recall that I gave you a hard time at an event
like this one a few years ago, when I asked why the Democratic party was
selling out inner city kids to do the bidding of the teachers unions.
And you said, “Just wait and watch this President.”
And you know what, I owe you an apology. President Obama and Secretary
Duncan have been incredible on this issue and I think it speaks volumes
that one of their closest allies, Rahm Emanuel, was willing to take a
strike in our third largest city only two months
before a tight election. So thank you, and I wonder if you could
comment on what’s likely to happen if Obama’s re-elected?”
He
of course loved the question (my first softball question to a
politician ever??? ;-) and really engaged for 5-10 minutes, giving a
nice shout-out to DFER and Joe Williams
by name. He underscored the importance of education and said that while
Congress would have to be cutting back in many areas sacred to
Democrats, he would fight hard to get an extra $100 billion for
education, and specifically talked about how much he supports
Race to the Top and wants to see it expanded and broadened.
My
only regret is that I didn’t ask a similar question to Clinton, so the
topic never came up when he was in the room. During the brief photo op,
however, I said, “Hi
Mr. Clinton, I’m Whitney Tilson. I was on the board of the National
Charter School Alliance and I last met you when you spoke at our
convention in Atlanta a couple of years ago. Thank you for all you’ve
done on this issue.” He replied, “Thank you for the work
you’re doing” (as we were shooed away – we only had maybe 10 seconds
with him).
The
second most memorable moment for me was when Clinton was talking about
how the Republicans have screwed themselves by being so anti-immigrant,
which has resulted them
losing the Hispanic vote by a wide margin (they’re supporting Obama by
roughly 70-30), which isn’t inevitable he believes, given how deeply
religious and culturally conservative many Hispanics (and, he noted,
African Americans) are (he specifically said many
don’t support gay marriage). Given where the Republicans are today,
however, he said that their strategy is to try to suppress Democratic
turnout to the levels of the 2010 midterm elections, rather than the
higher turnout in the last Presidential election,
and that one way they’re doing this is to try to pass laws making it
harder for traditional Democratic voters to vote.
This is where he got really passionate. He said,
“I
DESPISE (he spit the word out) what they’re doing. I’m an older white
man from a Southern state, and I can remember the old poll taxes that
were used to disenfranchise
minority voters. I despise (he repeated the word) this.”
(I
checked and Clinton spoke the truth: he was 18 years old in 1964 when
Arkansas finally abolished its poll tax; the last four states to do so,
Texas, Alabama, Virginia,
and Mississippi were in 1966. See:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Poll_tax_%28United_States%29)
I
feel just as strongly. Every time I write about this, somebody emails
me saying something along the lines of, “You have to show a driver’s
license to do X, so what’s
the big deal about requiring it to vote?” or “Hey, both sides play lots
of dirty politics like gerrymandering districts.” My simple answer is:
BULLSH*T! If you think Republicans are really concerned about voter
fraud, please contact me immediately – there’s
a bridge in Brooklyn I want to sell you. Republicans know exactly what
they’re doing and who they’re targeting – and it’s despicable. Moreover,
what’s the word to describe a calculated attempt to deny minorities the
ability to vote? RACISM, pure and simple.
And it’s not some fringe Tea Party group doing it – Republicans are
passing voter suppression laws in nearly every state they control. Thank
goodness the courts (for now anyway) are killing most of these laws…
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