蜜桃影视

Explore

Arizona Has Long Been a Testing Ground for Education Reformers. Now Teachers Could Lead an Election-Year Backlash Against Republicans

An Arizona teacher holds up a sign in front of the State Capitol during a #REDforED rally on April 26, 2018 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Ralph Freso/Getty Images)

In Arizona, summer heat isn鈥檛 something you complain about 鈥 it鈥檚 something you survive.

Cars . Water bottles and garbage bags . And residents to the safety of their climate-controlled homes and offices until fall comes to the rescue.

But this summer, the state鈥檚 teachers will be out on the sidewalks, absorbing as much direct sunlight as they can bear while clad in bright red T-shirts. Instead of plotting getaways to Lake Havasu, hundreds of volunteers will brave scorched parking lots and flea markets in the pursuit of a most unlikely goal, at least in Arizona: to boost education funding.

The campaign to promote the Invest in Education Act 鈥 a doubling of the state income tax on Arizona鈥檚 highest earners, which supporters are trying to put before voters this November 鈥 is a bold step forward by Arizona鈥檚 growing education activist movement. But it鈥檚 also a repeat of their successful effort last summer, when teachers collected hundreds of thousands of signatures in a bid to roll back a recent expansion of private school choice. In both cases, they鈥檝e rushed out of the air-conditioning and into huge conflicts with some of the most powerful forces in the state.

But the upcoming midterm elections, which will feature closely fought races at both the local and state levels, set 2018 apart from 2017. Animated by the fight to increase teacher pay, which resulted in the state鈥檚 first-ever statewide teacher walkout this April, educators and their allies are aiming to set off an earthquake that could alter the political landscape in one of the country鈥檚 most reliably conservative states.

The mecca of Ronald Reagan鈥檚 Sun Belt strategy, Arizona has produced iconic Republican leaders like Barry Goldwater and John McCain. Democrats haven鈥檛 held a legislative majority in the state house for 26 years, and voters have elected a Democrat for president only once since 1948. But Democrats like their chances this year, especially with a corps of organized teachers pushing hard against GOP leaders from the governor on down.

鈥淚鈥檝e followed politics in Arizona for 40 years, and I鈥檝e never seen anything like this,鈥 Mike O鈥橬eil, a local pollster, told 蜜桃影视. 鈥淭hese teachers are numerous. They are becoming activists 鈥 people who鈥檝e never been involved in politics in any way, shape, or form. And they have a degree of sophistication because they communicate with one another.鈥

Voucher fight

The seeds for this moment 鈥 which could cause one or both chambers of the legislature to change hands, as well as the governor鈥檚 mansion and a U.S. Senate seat 鈥 were laid last year, when Gov. Doug Ducey and his Republican allies made Arizona the first state to offer education savings accounts to any family that applied.

As in other states that have implemented ESAs, the program has generated controversy by directing taxpayer funds to private school tuition. Depending on family income, participants can receive up to 100 percent of Arizona鈥檚 annual per-pupil funding to offset educational expenses if they remove their children from the public school system. The accounts were made available only to special needs students when they were rolled out in 2011, but eligibility has since been expanded to students from foster homes and military families, those living on Native American land, and those attending a school receiving a grade of D or lower on the state鈥檚 accountability system.

Last year鈥檚 proposal was the furthest step yet, making the accounts available to any family that applied (though with a cap of 30,000 participants through 2022). It passed on party lines, with Democratic Sen. Steve Farley warning that a statewide ESA expansion would mean 鈥渢he beginning of the end of public education in Arizona.鈥 Christine Porter Marsh, the state鈥檚 2016 teacher of the year, , before comparing the bill to 鈥渁 nuclear bomb鈥 dropped on public schools.

The move won praise from school choice advocates around the country. and , two of the most influential organs of conservative advocacy and messaging, specifically pointed to Arizona as a model for other states to follow. Closer to home, Jonathan Butcher of the Goldwater Institute, a right-leaning think tank based in Phoenix, praising the accounts as a valuable option for low-income families.

It didn鈥檛 take long for an organized response to build. Beth Lewis was a fifth-grade teacher who had followed the expansion fight in disbelief with five friends. All of the women were 鈥渋n the Mom and educator phase of life,鈥 she says, but after witnessing what they considered an assault on public education, they felt they had to get involved.

鈥淚t took us going down there to see what on earth was being perpetrated in the name of schools,鈥 Lewis told 蜜桃影视. The ESA expansion 鈥渞eally stood out, because not only were they slashing funding, they were going to divert it from public schools to private schools. And that鈥檚 what didn鈥檛 seem right.鈥

In Arizona, laws passed by the legislature can be struck down by voters at the ballot box 鈥 provided that enough signatures are collected to trigger a referendum. The women formed an advocacy group called Save Our Schools Arizona, with Lewis serving as chair. In less than 90 days, they organized volunteers to collect on a petition to ban the statewide ESA expansion. After surviving a lawsuit in January, the referendum, known as Proposition 305, was cleared to go before voters this November, much to the surprise of longtime political observers.

鈥淎nd all of the old pros said, 鈥楾hat鈥檚 nice, but you鈥檙e never going to get all those signatures without a pile of money,鈥 鈥 says O鈥橬eil. 鈥淎nd they did.鈥

Though the group won鈥檛 endorse candidates until after the Democratic and Republican primaries in August, Lewis says they鈥檒l be active in September and October to elect candidates they consider friendly to public schools. That will mean organizing against Gov. Ducey and Republicans in the legislature.

鈥淭o be honest, every candidate down here says they鈥檙e for education, and that can mean a host of things,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 certainly not single-handed 鈥 there are many key players that have decimated our schools in Arizona. But [Ducey] is no friend of education.鈥

The governor鈥檚 office did not respond to a request for comment.

鈥榃e鈥檝e gotten to the end鈥

Beth Lewis and SOS Arizona weren鈥檛 the only ones moved to organize over last year鈥檚 ESA fight. Christine Porter Marsh, the 2016 Teacher of the Year, also felt she had to play a part. That鈥檚 why she鈥檚 now running for state Senate.

An English teacher at Scottsdale鈥檚 Cactus Shadows High School, she had always been politically active. During the 2016 election for Maricopa County sheriff, she brought in Republican Joe Arpaio and his Democratic opponent to speak to her class. With schools now in the headlines, she became in the state to run for a state legislative seat 鈥 most, , as Democrats.

鈥淭his is all cause and effect,鈥 she told 蜜桃影视. 鈥淭his level of political activism on behalf of educators is the effect of decisions the governor and our legislature have made for a very long time 鈥 a couple of decades, but culminating in the last year or two. We鈥檝e gotten to the end, where the last couple of straws have broken the camel鈥檚 back.鈥

For Marsh and her colleagues, those straws go past school choice. Since the Great Recession, Arizona by nearly 37 percent 鈥 more than any other state. The state ranks among the lowest in the country in teacher salary and the highest in student-teacher ratio, and has been reduced.

The effects of that austerity were felt in April, when thousands of teachers walked off the job demanding pay raises. Enthusiastically emulating teachers in West Virginia and Oklahoma, they dressed in red and in Phoenix. Soon Ducey, who had considered green-lighting , was pushing for an astonishing 20 percent pay increase over four years. GOP legislators went along, dreading an extended labor stoppage in an election year.

Even more striking than the concessions was the spontaneity of the movement. The walkout, conducted under the ubiquitous hashtag banner #Red4Ed, was largely provoked by a newly founded organization called Arizona Educators United, which organized in Facebook groups and acted independently of the state teachers union, the Arizona Educators Association.

鈥淭heir organization was extraordinary 鈥 it just formed out of nowhere,鈥 says O鈥橬eil, the longtime pollster. 鈥淭he AEA was a witness to all this. There was a train coming down the track, and they just jumped onboard.鈥

The train has kept rolling along since April. Working with , members of Arizona Educators United are now pounding the pavement in support of the Invest in Education Act, which would raise taxes on Arizonans who make more than $250,000 and direct the revenue to school funding. They have until July 5 , the threshold to initiate a ballot measure for this November.

Gov. Ducey in recent remarks before a local Republican group, claiming that the #Red4Ed protests in April were an effort to grease the skids for future tax increases. Teachers, including some of the strike鈥檚 leaders, rejected that assertion. But fresh from last year鈥檚 triumph on Proposition 305, they are feeling bullish.

Perhaps that鈥檚 because the various groups making up their coalition are happily collaborating. While Lewis of SOS Arizona says her organization strives to maintain its independence, it shares many of the same goals, slogans, and tactics as Arizona Educators United. Activists share one another鈥檚 posts on social media. Marsh says that one of her most dedicated campaign volunteers often works at her office for five hours a day, then leaves to attend AEU events.

Increasingly, a movement that formed around school-specific issues is venturing into new arenas. SOS Arizona that it will support the Outlaw Dirty Money initiative 鈥 yet another ballot initiative, this one to require the disclosure of donors who give more than $10,000 to a political campaign. Noting that prominent conservative activists Charles and David Koch had financed the unsuccessful lawsuit to derail Proposition 305, Lewis said that out-of-state money was dragging the Arizona GOP rightward and weakening public schools in multiple states.

鈥淚f it weren鈥檛 for dark money in our state, we would have fully funded schools,鈥 she said. 鈥淎ny time a Republican in our legislature tries to do something for public education, the result is the threat of a primary [funded] by the Koch brothers. I鈥檝e been told this by so many legislators.”

Tight races

The question is whether that high tide of coordination, ambition, and enthusiasm will pass referenda or elect candidates in November. Ducey has drawn two strong Democratic challengers: Steve Farley, the state senator who inveighed against last year鈥檚 ESA expansion, and David Garcia, an ASU education professor who lost a 2014 race for state superintendent by just 1 percent of the vote. He was aiming for a rematch this year, but he switched to the governor鈥檚 race after the passage of the ESA bill.

Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey. (Michael Brochstein/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

Garcia 鈥 running slightly ahead of Ducey in 鈥 said he originally intended to take another shot at the state superintendent鈥檚 race. After the Republicans鈥 2017 moves on education, though, he felt a need to aim higher.

鈥淸My] commitment to public education remains the same,鈥 he said in an interview. 鈥淏ut I realized when the governor passed the voucher bill that the fight was not to be superintendent, since I would have had to administer that bill. I realized the fight was at the governor鈥檚 office.鈥

The freshman governor is favored against both Garcia and Farley, but his approval rating in the state is , where incumbents begin to feel comfortable. In an election season that will be shaped by voters鈥 attitudes toward Donald Trump 鈥 who defeated Hillary Clinton by in 2016, a much smaller margin than Republican candidates usually enjoy there 鈥 the president鈥檚 support in Arizona has also slipped considerably since his inauguration.

The state legislature could be an even more tempting target for Democrats. As consistently Republican as Arizona has been for over half a century 鈥 the GOP has held the state House of Representatives since 1966 鈥 the party鈥檚 majorities in Phoenix are typically narrow. A flip of just three seats in the Senate, and six in the House, could tip both bodies toward the Democrats. A development like that, whether or not it was accompanied by a similar shift in the governor鈥檚 mansion, would fundamentally alter the picture for school funding and choice in Arizona.

鈥淚 expect to see very high levels of activism,鈥 says O鈥橬eil. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a high likelihood that the teachers will win Democrats some seats in the legislature that under normal circumstances they wouldn鈥檛 have a prayer鈥 of winning.

If he鈥檚 right, Ducey might start feeling some of that famous Arizona heat. But this year, it could get worse as summer turns to fall.

Did you use this article in your work?

We鈥檇 love to hear how 蜜桃影视鈥檚 reporting is helping educators, researchers, and policymakers.

Republish This Article

We want our stories to be shared as widely as possible 鈥 for free.

Please view 蜜桃影视's republishing terms.





On 蜜桃影视 Today