Below is our complete Election Night recap of this year’s top education races. For continuing coverage and analysis,听.
6:15 p.m. Dec. 5 鈥 McCrory Concedes: It’s a month late, but it鈥檚 official:听On Monday, Republican Gov. Pat听McCrory听of North Carolina听听to Democrat Roy Cooper in 鈥渢he closest governor鈥檚 race鈥 in state history.听惭辞苍诲补测鈥檚听news followed a weeks-long battle by听McCrory听to retain his seat that prompted a recount and unsubstantiated allegations of voter fraud.
Throughout his campaign, Cooper was an outspoken critic of North Carolina鈥檚 new law barring transgender people from using restrooms that match their gender identity, and the new state leadership could have profound effects on transgender students.
Additionally, Cooper鈥檚 election could have huge national implications for elected officials who oppose inclusive transgender bathroom policies, a heated debate that has largely played out in American schools. In October, the U.S. Supreme Court听announced it would consider听whether the Obama administration could require public schools to allow transgender students to use facilities that correspond with their gender identity. 鈥擬ark Keierleber
3:01 p.m. Wednesday (Nov. 9)听鈥 Political Outsider, Right-to-Work Champion, Wins Missouri Governor鈥檚 Race: Newcomer Eric Greitens, a Republican, will succeed two-term Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon, who was term-limited out of office. The political neophyte defeated Democratic Attorney General Chris Koster 51鈥45.
Greitens鈥 victory, along with continued Republican control of the state Legislature, all but assures that Missouri will become a right-to-work state with laws that diminish the power of labor unions, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch .
That result creates potential for an invigorated school choice movement in a state where well-funded labor unions have traditionally fought tooth and nail against such education reforms.
(Read our prior coverage here: In Missouri, a Fight to Override a Governor’s Veto 鈥 and to Rescue Poor Kids from Failing Schools)
Greitens, who grew up as a Democrat and later switched parties, campaigned as an outsider who promised to clean up corruption in state government, among Republicans and Democrats alike.
The 42-year-old former Navy SEAL and decorated combat veteran is also a humanitarian activist, Rhodes scholar, best-selling author, and founder of the Mission Continues, a philanthropic organization for returning veterans who want to serve their communities, the St. Louis Dispatch reported. 鈥Mareesa Nicosia
12:35听p.m. Wednesday 鈥 Clinton Concedes to Trump; President-Elect鈥檚 Education Aims Remain Hazy:听Speaking to supporters in a midtown Manhattan hotel late this morning, Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton, who held at least a narrow lead over her Republican opponent Donald Trump throughout the campaign, conceded defeat to the billionaire businessman and political novice. Trump will become the nation鈥檚 45th president.
“We owe him an open mind and a chance to lead,” Clinton said.
Trump’s victory shocked pollsters, financial markets, Americans of both parties, and the international community by attracting huge turnouts that helped him win crucial swing states like North Carolina, Ohio and Florida, as well Rust Belt states where Clinton was thought to be safely ahead, including Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Michigan.
Republicans also retained control of the House and Senate.
Trump devoted little time during the campaign to education. He vowed in an October speech to push for some sort of broad education bill during his first 100 days in office that would cover both K-12 and higher ed. His primary policy proposal was a sweeping听school choice plan for poor children that echoed the talking points of choice advocates but fell short on details 鈥 including how he would听fund it and incentivize 鈥渋nner-city鈥 school districts to adopt smaller-scale programs.听鈥揅arolyn Phenicie
12:30听p.m. Wednesday 鈥 Maine Education Tax Too Close to Call:听Maine鈥檚 ballot measure to fund education by taxing听the wealthy had a 6,000-vote lead Wednesday morning, the Portland Press Herald reported, making it too close to call. Question 2 would add a 3 percent tax to those making over $200,000, ultimately raising $123.8 million toward the state鈥檚 requirement to fund 55 percent of K-12 education. Opponents worry the additional levy听cause听wealthy residents to leave the state. 鈥擪ate Stringer
11:45听a.m. Wednesday 鈥撎鼸arly Results Indicate Marcellino, Who Fought Campaign Over Ed Record, Will Retain NY Senate Seat:听Ahead of Tuesday鈥檚 election, all attention focused on a handful of tight contests on Long Island that would determine which party would control the New York State Senate. In one of those races,听 show Republican Sen. Carl Marcellino, the Senate Education Committee chairman, with a narrow victory. Although Democrats have maintained that the race is too close to call until after absentee votes are counted, indications are the GOP will听 of the Senate in Albany.
Democrat Jim Gaughran campaigned hard against Marcellino鈥檚 education record,听 the education chairman to state standardized tests that riled New Yorkers 鈥 especially on Long Island 鈥 last spring.
Marcellino, a former New York City teacher and education administrator who was first elected to the Senate in 1995, has voted to increase the number of charter schools and evaluate teachers based on student performance. When about half of third- through eighth-grade students refused to take state math and English exams last spring, Marcellino鈥檚 district became a battleground in New York鈥檚 opt-out movement. Gaughran, the Suffolk County Water Authority chairman, used the issue to claim that 鈥渃areer politicians鈥 in Albany have demanded 鈥渕ore time be spent on testing than teaching.鈥 鈥Mark Keierleber
11:10 a.m. Wednesday 鈥 Early Results in Tight North Carolina Gubernatorial Race Suggest Democratic Upset:听It appears Democrat Roy Cooper, an outspoken critic of North Carolina鈥檚 law banning transgender people from using restrooms that match their gender identity, will become the state鈥檚 next governor. Cooper over incumbent Republican Gov. Pat McCrory early Wednesday in a speech rebuffed by the GOP as 鈥渞ude and grossly premature.鈥 Media reports said the race was too close to call, with preliminary results showing Cooper up by only about 5,000 votes.
The controversial transgender bathroom law, which also affects North Carolina鈥檚 K-12 students, became a key sticking point in the gubernatorial contest after McCrory approved the measure in March. Cooper听 the law discriminatory and used the widespread backlash as a cornerstone of his campaign.
Cooper鈥檚 election could have huge national implications for elected officials who oppose inclusive transgender bathroom policies, a heated issue that is largely playing out in American schools. The U.S. Supreme Court听announced in late October that it would decide whether the Obama administration can require public schools to allow transgender students to use bathrooms and locker rooms that correspond with their gender identity. 鈥Mark Keierleber
11:05 a.m. Wednesday 鈥斕齅ontana Governor, Public School Advocate Bullock Narrowly Wins Re-election: Montana voters Democratic Gov. Steve Bullock to office, picking him over Republican challenger Greg Gianforte. The race wasn鈥檛 called until Wednesday morning, with the incumbent leading by just over two percentage points. Bullock was backed by the state teachers union, as well as the , a group that opposes charter schools and test-based accountability.
The candidates had sharply views on education policy. Bullock emphasized the expansion of pre-K, while Gianforte focused on school choice initiatives. As governor, Bullock supported a that shares many similarities to traditional public schools, including being overseen by a local school board.
Bullock鈥檚 position was by the Bozeman Daily Chronicle: 鈥溾極nce you start privatizing,鈥 Bullock said, it ends up diverting resources and money from public schools. Charter schools in other states, especially those run by for-profit companies, have had 鈥榤ixed results,鈥 he said, and they lack accountability to elected school boards, to state education standards and to taxpayers.鈥
Gianforte, a tech billionaire who funds private schools and whose family foundation provides private school scholarships to students not doing well in the public schools, has said, 鈥溾淚n education, as in business, one size does not fit all. Competition improves everybody鈥檚 performance.鈥 鈥Matt Barnum
10:54 a.m. Wednesday 鈥撎齂ey races remain undecided in Colorado, though lean GOP:听Control of the Colorado state Senate and Board of Education remained up in the air Wednesday morning.
Three of the board鈥檚 seven members were up for reelection, and as expected, Republican incumbents Steve Durham and Joyce Rankin easily held onto their seats. However, a key race in the Denver suburbs remained too close too call, with the Republican incumbent Debora Scheffel . The race will determine control of the board; Republicans currently holding four seats, although votes have not always split along party lines. In a case of strange bedfellows, both Democrats For Education Reform and the state teachers union backed Scheffel鈥檚 Democratic challenger, Rebecca McClellan.
Control of the state Senate was up in the air as well, with two crucial races yet to be called. However, the Denver Post that Republicans appear to have an edge. The GOP currently maintains a narrow majority, but Chalkbeat Colorado that if Democrats retake power, it could mean more money for education, a less hospitable environment for charter schools, and a greater likelihood of retaining the PARCC exam, which is tied to the Common Core standards.
In one state House race of particular interest to education advocates, DFER-backed Democrat Jeff Bridges maintained a over Republican Katy Brown, who was by the state teachers鈥 union.
Bond and tax initiatives to raise money for schools had state. Most notably, Denver voters two tax hikes to support educator training programs and school facility improvements. 鈥Matt Barnum
10:25 a.m.听Wednesday 鈥斕齀ncumbents Sweep Oakland School Board Race: A heated Oakland school board听contest fueled by the growth of charter schools failed to knock any of the incumbents out. Jody London, Jumoke Hinton-Hodge, Roseann Torres, and James Harris will all be returning to the board, the East Bay Express is reporting. Great Oakland Public Schools, a school reform group, endorsed all the incumbents except Torres, which it said was not a reflection of her stance on school choice, but rather her poor attendance record at board meeting. The teachers union backed Torres and several challengers in a crowded field of 12 candidates vying for four seats. The race was also seen as something of a referendum on Oakland鈥檚 reform-minded superintendent, Antwan Wilson, who has tried to bring universal enrollment to the district where nearly 25 percent of students attend charters schools. 鈥Kate Stringer
9:37听a.m. Wednesday 鈥 Union-backed Democrats Take Two Seats on Nebraska State Board of Education:听Lisa Fricke, a Democrat, ousted Glen Flint, the incumbent Republican in District 2 on the Nebraska State Board of Education, the Omaha World Herald . Flint had been appointed by former Gov. Dave Heineman in March 2014. Though Nebraska is one of the few states without a charter law (advocacy groups have a bill in the works for 2017), Flint for Cornhusker students.
The 28,000-member teachers union backed Fricke as well as Patsy Koch Johns, who ran for a District 1 seat; both are retired educators.
Fricke wants to work with Nebraska school districts and state officials to develop 鈥渞easonable accountability鈥 measures as part of the new state assessments under the Every Student Succeeds Act.
Fricke and Flint appeared to diverge sharply on the issue of transgender student rights, according to their statements on questionnaire. In response to a question about what policy the state should adopt regarding transgender students, Flint advocated against the ability to transition.
鈥淕ender is determined at birth. Let’s get these students the help they need, rather than a lifetime of regret,鈥 he said, adding a link to a website addressing sex change regret. Fricke responded by citing state policy that provides for inclusivity for all students.
鈥淎ll students who enroll in our public schools should be taught in a safe, enriching, and welcoming environment,鈥 she said.听鈥Mareesa Nicosia
9:22 a.m. 鈥撎齍nion-backed Candidates Sweep San Francisco School Board Races:听Two incumbents and two new members were to the San Francisco school board, where four of the seven seats were on the ballot. All four winners were endorsed by the United Educators of San Francisco; the one incumbent not supported by the local union lost her re-election bid. Two candidates backed by charter advocates 鈥 including Phillip Kim, who works for KIPP charter schools 鈥 won little support. Incumbent and Board Chair Matt Haney, who received a surprising endorsement from President Obama, was the top vote getter. The Board was in the news earlier this year for its contract with Teach For America.听鈥Matt Barnum
9:05 a.m. Wednesday 鈥 Common Core Antagonist Takes New Hampshire鈥檚 Governor Race:听Republican Chris Sununu narrowly beat his Democratic challenger Colin Van Ostern in New Hampshire鈥檚 gubernatorial race. He will succeed Democratic Gov. Maggie Hassan, who ran for U.S. Senate. Sununu, a member of New Hampshire鈥檚 Executive Council, the state board of education and Common Core State Standards and the Smarter Balanced assessments his state has adopted. He 蝉肠丑辞辞濒蝉.听鈥Naomi Nix
9:00听a.m. Wednesday 鈥 Amid turmoil, Detroit Elects a New School Board:听In a crowded election with over 60 candidates, Detroit seven members to a newly empowered school board. At least four of the candidates on track to win were by the Detroit Federation of Teachers, and one was a member of the city鈥檚 previous school board. Detroit Public Schools have faced turmoil in recent years, as declining enrollment and the expansion of charter schools have led to mass school closures and severe fiscal distress. The city schools, which have been run by the state for a number of years, have some of the worst achievement scores in the country. The state recently passed a package of policies to reduce the district鈥檚 debt and return some power to a locally elected board. A federal lawsuit was recently arguing that Detroit schools had violated students鈥 constitutional 鈥渞ight to literacy.鈥澨鈥擬att Barnum
8:51 a.m. Wednesday 鈥斕鼵harter-supporting Dems Win Two State Legislative Seats in Northern California:听In two California legislative races closely watched by education observers, Democrats supported by charter advocates bested fellow Democrats backed by teachers unions.
In a state Senate district based in San Francisco, Scott Wiener narrowly beat Jane Kim with 100 percent of precincts reporting,听听to the Los Angeles Times. The race pitted two candidates with many similarities against each other: both were Democrats and members of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. But the candidates appeared to diverge on education, with Wiener receiving backing from the powerful charter lobby and Kim drawing support from the powerful teachers union.
A similar divide听听in other races across the state, which has a relatively unique primary system that allows members of the same party to face each other in the general election. Another such race pitted Mae Torlakson against Tim Grayson for an East San Francisco Bay area Assembly seat. Torlakson, the wife of California鈥檚 state superintendent of public instruction, was backed by unions, while Grayson got support from charter advocates. Grayson听听easily with over 60 percent of the vote. On his campaign site he听听to advocage听鈥渇or non-profit charter schools听in regions where they provide a way to 鈥榯ailor鈥 education to the needs of a community鈥檚 student.鈥澨Matt Barnum
8:35 a.m. Wednesday 鈥斕鼸volution Skeptic Wins Re-election to Texas Board of Education:听Staunch conservative Ken Mercer narrowly听听re-election to the Texas Board of Education, beating his Democratic challenger Rebecca Bell-Metereau. Mercer has made a name for himself for his skepticism of evolution and the Common Core and his support for approving social studies textbook standards that downplayed slavery. This was Bell-Metereau鈥檚 third attempt to unseat Mercer. In District 1, Democrat Georgina Perez won, while Republican Donna Bahorich was re-elected in District 6. Republican Keven Ellis easily won a seat on the board in District 9, while Republican Tom Maynard was re-elected to the board in District 10.听鈥擭aomi Nix
8:30 a.m. Wednesday 鈥 Montana Schools Chief Fails to Nab Historic House Seat:听If elected by Montana voters Tuesday, Democrat Denise Juneau would have added a new historic title to her resume: the first Native American woman to serve in Congress. That didn鈥檛 happen. Juneau, who was already the first Native American woman elected to statewide office when she became Montana鈥檚 superintendent of public instruction in 2008, failed to grab enough votes from Republican Rep. Ryan Zinke. Juneau, an enrolled member of the Mandan Hidatsa tribes and a descendent of the Blackfeet tribe,听made education a priority听throughout her campaign, focusing largely on teacher recruitment and retention, as rural Montana schools often struggle to attract and keep qualified educators. 鈥Mark Keierleber
8:14 a.m. Wednesday 鈥 North Dakota Re-elects Superintendent of Public Instruction Kirsten Baesler:听Voters have handed a blowout re-election victory to Superintendent of Public Instruction Kirsten Baesler in North Dakota. According to听, Baesler defeated challenger Joe Chiang, a ninth-grade teacher, 75-25. Chiang had made news when he听听to abolish the U.S. Department of Education if elected. North Dakota鈥檚 public education system has struggled this year with a statewide teacher shortage, and tougher issues could be ahead for Baesler, as the state faces potential education budget cuts next year because of lagging oil prices. Baesler spent about 23 years with Bismarck Public Schools in teaching and administrative roles before becoming superintendent in 2012. 鈥Mark Keierleber
4 a.m. Wednesday 鈥 North Dakota Decides to Use Oil Tax Revenue听for K-12 Education:听North Dakota voters easily passed an amendment to the state constitution Tuesday that will create听a rainy day fund for K-12 education, the New York Times .听Known as Measure 2, the proposal was backed by the state’s education and public employee union and changes how the state鈥檚 Foundation Aid Stabilization Fund can be used, the Bismarck Tribune .听The state鈥檚 K-12 education budget is currently a little more than $1.8 billion, the Tribune . Measure 2 will allow lawmakers to spend money from the new fund on 鈥渆ducation-related purposes鈥 so long as 15 percent of K-12鈥檚 budget remains in the fund.听鈥擬areesa Nicosia
3:40听a.m. Wednesday 鈥斕齋en. Pat Toomey, Re-Elected in Pennsylvania:听Sen. Pat Toomey, the Republican incumbent in Pennsylvania, has won re-election, according to the Associated Press.听Toomey had been polling a few points behind Democratic challenger Katie McGinty; given Pennsylvania鈥檚 history of voting for Democrats in presidential years, the Keystone state seemed ripe for a Democratic pickup.
Yet Pennsylvania, like the other swing states across the country, seemed to follow the pattern of straight party voting. Donald Trump pulled ahead in Pennsylvania by about 59,000 votes as of 1:30 a.m., the same time that the AP called the race for Toomey.听Other swing states, including North Carolina, Florida, Ohio, and Wisconsin, voted for Republican Senate candidates and as well as for Trump 鈥 or remained uncalled, with a Trump lead.听The Democrats鈥 only pickup seems likely to be one seat in Illinois. Senate races in New Hampshire and Missouri had yet to be called, though the Republican incumbents were leading in both.听As a Senator, Toomey crafted an (unsuccessful) bipartisan compromise on gun control in the wake of the shooting at the Sandy Hook elementary school, and focused on expanding background checks on teachers. 鈥Carolyn Phenicie
3:30 a.m. Wednesday 鈥斕Three-Term North Carolina Schools Superintendent Ousted by Republican:听Mark Johnson, a Republican, appeared to have ousted North Carolina鈥檚 three-term incumbent State Superintendent of Public Schools June Atkinson, . Johnson led Atkinson by one percentage point, with 99 percent of precincts reporting as of 12:52 a.m. Wednesday.听Atkinson was the first woman elected to the position and has served since August 2005.
Johnson has pledged to reduce testing and lessen the 鈥渂ureaucratic demands鈥 on teachers and provide them more and better training opportunities. He has also decried the state鈥檚 track record on college readiness 鈥 52 percent of high school graduates entering community college required at least one remedial course, .听鈥擬areesa Nicosia
3:15听a.m. Wednesday 鈥斕Georgia Rejects State Intervention in Chronically Failing Schools:听Georgia voters answered with a resounding 鈥渘o鈥 to a ballot proposition that would have allowed the state to intervene in schools deemed chronically failing. With nearly all precincts reporting, 60 percent of voters opposed amending the state constitution to give the state the new powers, .
Georgia would have joined Louisiana, Tennessee, New York, and other states that can assume control of failing schools to varying degrees.听鈥擬areesa Nicosia听
2:30 a.m. Wednesday 鈥 Right To-Work Booster Wins Missouri鈥檚 Governor Race:听Republican political newcomer Eric Greitens the Missouri governor鈥檚 seat, beating Democratic challenger Chris Koster. Greitens, a former Navy SEAL with no previous political experience, and Koster, a former state senator and current Attorney General, competed in one of the nation鈥檚 most expensive campaigns. Regarding education policy, Greitens has said he is open to and supports curbing unions鈥 rights with legislation. 鈥擭aomi Nix
2:20 a.m. Wednesday 鈥 Oregon Votes to Guarantee Outdoor Education: Oregon has become the only state to guarantee every child a week of outdoor education, according to polls that show an early lead on Measure 99: 65 percent to 34 percent during early voting, although the race has already called by the Oregonian. The state will use lottery revenue, not to exceed $22 million per year, to fund the camp. Opponents say the measure takes away money from Oregon businesses.听鈥擪ate Stringer
2:10 a.m. Wednesday 鈥 Oregon Voters Agree to Tackle State’s High School Dropout听Rate:听Oregon voters are hoping Measure 98 will curb the state鈥檚 consistently low graduation rate. Passed 65 percent to 34 percent during early voting, as called by the Oregonian, the measure proposes allocating $800 per high school student to improve the diversity of class offerings and dropout prevention programs. This measure received no organized opposition, though teachers unions called it a one-size-fits-all solution.听鈥擪ate Stringer
1:05 a.m. Wednesday 鈥斕California Brings Back Bilingual Education:听Millions of children in California will have greater access to bilingual education, after nearly three-quarters of voters said yes to Proposition 58 in early voting, a race called late Tuesday听by the Associated Press.听Supporters 鈥斕齦ike the unions and the Democratic Party 鈥斕齢ope the proposition will allow local districts to decide how to educate ELL students as well as expose other students to multiple languages. Research bilingual education produces similar results to English-only instruction. English language learners make up one in five students in California.
1听a.m. Wednesday 鈥 Results for the New Orleans School Board:听With all but a few pockets of votes counted, the three Orleans Parish School Board races that weren鈥檛 decided in the summer have been settled. In two races, candidates who enjoyed support from voters opposing the reforms of the last decade as well as proponents of continued change won by wide margins.听With 92 percent of votes in, incumbent Nolan Marshall Jr. has 52 percent of the vote in a three-way race for New Orleans鈥 Seventh District. In the Fourth District, with two-thirds of votes counted, incumbent Leslie Ellison is likely assured a return to the board, which over the next two years will oversee the reunification of the schools currently controlled by the district and the 55 schools overseen by the state and its Recovery School District.
In the most closely watched race, the Sixth District, incumbent Woody Koppel won 53 percent of the vote. His opponent, David Alvarez, had campaigned on an anti-reform platform.听The remaining four races were settled weeks ago. Two candidates won outright when they failed to attract challengers. A third won when the incumbent in the district decided to drop out. In the fourth race the incumbent was forced out of the race when a judge ruled she had failed to pay her taxes.听The races have been described as one more referendum on New Orleans鈥 educational experiment. Education advocates in Louisiana and elsewhere were stunned by the lack of a more heated campaign season given the vocal and strident tenor of calls for the return of the schools to local control. 鈥擝eth Hawkins
12:55听a.m. Wednesday 鈥斕Faso Secures Key New York Congressional District Seat:听New York鈥檚 education reform advocates landed a big victory Tuesday when voters selected state Assemblyman John Faso for an open seat in the state鈥檚 19th congressional district,听. Faso supports charter schools while his Democratic opponent, Zephyr Teachout, has argued they drain money from traditional public schools for the benefit of private organizations. Faso has argued the federal government overstepped its bounds into local education decisions, and opposed implementation of the Common Core State Standards.听鈥擬ark Keierleber
12:50听a.m. Wednesday 鈥斕Vermont Replaces Outgoing Democratic Governor with Republican:听Vermont voters have put Phil Scott in the governor鈥檚 seat, the , with 245 of 275 districts reporting results late Tuesday night.听Scott, a Republican, has been lieutenant governor since 2010 and now steps up to succeed outgoing Democratic Gov. Peter Shumlin, who did not run for re-election.听Scott beat former state transportation secretary Sue Minter, a Democrat.
12:40听a.m. Wednesday 鈥斕Gary Herbert, Who Changed Positions on the Common Core, Wins Utah Governor鈥檚 Race:听Republican Utah Governor Gary Herbert sailed to a re-election victory on Tuesday, beating Democratic challenger Mike Weinholtz by a wide margin, . Herbert faced criticism of his record on education throughout the Republican primary and general election.听Considered a supporter of the Common Core State Standards after they were adopted in 2010, he changed his position during a heated primary campaign against Republican business executive Jonathan Johnson.
Earlier this year, Herbert the Utah State Board of Education to adopt “uniquely Utah standards.” He also called for a review of the state鈥檚 SAGE testing, which was created locally, and for the elimination of the requirement for high school students to take the test. Johnson accused him of flip flopping.听In 2014, Herbert commissioned two studies to examine the effectiveness and implementation of Common Core in the state. One from the Utah Attorney General鈥檚 Office rebuffed criticisms of federal overreach in the state鈥檚 adoption of the standards, arguing that the state controls what students are taught. Another , conducted by a state panel, argued that Utah Core Standards were more rigorous than the state’s previous standards.听During the general election, Herbert was criticized by for underfunding local schools in a state that on education per pupil than most other states. 鈥Naomi Nix
12:30听a.m. Wednesday 鈥斕DFER-Backed Candidate Loses Out in Louisiana Senate Race:听Caroline Fayard, a lawyer and candidate for U.S. Senate in Louisiana by Democrats for Education Reform, was from contention Tuesday evening. Republican John Kennedy, the state treasurer, looked likely to make the run-off election while the second spot remained too close to call between Republican Charles Boustany and Democrat Foster Campbell, who was endorsed by the Louisiana Federation of Teachers. In the state, there is no primary election, and all candidates regardless of party run on the same ballot in November; if no candidate receives a majority, the top two advance to a run-off election in December. 鈥擬att Barnum
12:15 a.m. Wednesday 鈥 Democratic, Union-Backed School Board Candidates Win in Minneapolis:听Four candidates endorsed by Minnesota鈥檚 Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party (DFL) and by the Minneapolis Federation of Teachers won election to the city’s school board, three of them by slender margins. The party historically follows the union鈥檚 lead, which typically endorses candidates in a sparsely attended convention months before voters tune into the race.听Facing token opposition from a perennial dark horse, Kim Ellison won a second term on the board with nearly 80 percent of the vote in the year鈥檚 lone citywide contest. Labor organizer Kerry Jo Felder won the seat representing the city鈥檚 north side by slightly less than 1 percent.听With a four-point lead, music educator Bob Walsh ousted incumbent Josh Reimnitz in the city鈥檚 south-central neighborhoods. And nonprofit leader and education college professor Tracine Asberry lost by two points to car-service driver Ira Jourdain.听A $74 million-a-year revenue referendum renewal passed handily. 鈥擝eth Hawkins
11:55听p.m. Tuesday 鈥斕齌op Democrat on Senate Education Committee Re-Elected:听Senator Patty Murray of Washington, currently the top-ranking Democrat on the Health, Education, Labor and Pension Committee, has won re-election, according to the Associated Press. Murray, a former preschool teacher, pushed to get more early learning opportunities included in the Every Student Succeeds Act. She鈥檚 also defended the Education Department鈥檚 tough regulations around the new K-12 law鈥檚 implementation, in particular the controversial 鈥渟upplement not supplant鈥 spending rule. Murray鈥檚 re-election to a fifth Senate term was considered safe. 鈥擟arolyn Phenicie
11:40听p.m. Tuesday 鈥斕Colorado Senator听Michael Bennet, Former Denver Schools Chief, Is Re-Elected:听Colorado has re-elected Democratic Senator听Michael Bennet, a member of the Senate Education Committee and the former Denver schools superintendent. Bennet bested Republican Darry Glenn in a contest that was somewhat听听than expected.
11:25听p.m. Tuesday 鈥 Massachusetts Voters Say No to Charter School Expansion: Massachusetts voters handed a massive defeat to education reformers Tuesday, with voters overwhelmingly choosing to block a ballot initiative to lift a cap on charter school expansion,听. Possibly the most consequential education fight this election cycle, Tuesday鈥檚 vote could have huge implications for education reform battles nationally, shifting political capital to teachers unions and their allies.
11:20听p.m. Tuesday 鈥 Charter School Supporters Maintain Control Over Indianapolis School Board:听Supporters of charter schools and the current superintendent retained control of the Indianapolis school board, according to the .听Two incumbents won re-election, as well as one candidate backed by reform supporters in an open seat. One incumbent board member lost an at-large seat on the board.
Four seats on the seven-member board were up for election, which served in on the board鈥檚 agenda and its superintendent Lewis Ferebee. Three incumbents, as well as a candidate for one open seat, were backed by Stand For Children, a national education reform group that supports expansion of choice and accountability policies. The group helped school board members significantly outraise their challengers.听However, several of the challengers received backing from a coalition of local pastors and a group, known as OurIPS, critical of the expansion of charter schools.听This drew a sharp rebuke from Ferebee, who in a letter to the editor to the Indianapolis Star, 鈥淭he idea that [Indianapolis Public Schools] can prosper without embracing change and by being unwilling to partner with others is asinine.鈥澨鼳 showed that Indianapolis鈥 charter schools performed at about the same level as the district鈥檚 schools on standardized tests, while private and magnet schools performed worse.听鈥擬att Barnum
11:05 p.m. Tuesday 鈥 Glenda Ritz Loses, as Indiana State Superintendent Falls to Republican:听Indiana鈥檚 state superintendent of public instruction Glenda Ritz, a Democrat and former school librarian, lost her re-eleciton bid to Republican Jennifer McCormick, a district superintendent.听Indiana Public Media McCormick won with nearly 54 percent of the vote.听Ritz was the only Democrat to lead a state office and spent much of the last four years feuding with Gov. Mike Pence. She campaigned on increasing the availability of preschool, reducing testing, proposing a 鈥渇air and adequate鈥 funding formula, treating teachers like professionals, and reaching a 91 percent graduation rate.听McCormick supports increasing broadband access in schools, establishing a 鈥渕eaningful and manageable鈥 assessment system, attracting and retaining teachers, closing the kindergarten readiness gap and reviewing funding problems.听鈥擬areesa Nicosia
10:50听p.m. Tuesday 鈥 Oklahoma Voters Reject Initiative to Raise Teacher Pay:听Oklahoma teachers will not get a raise. A ballot question to boost teacher salaries听, garnering just over 40 percent of the vote.听The initiative, known as Question 779, would have raised the state鈥檚 sales tax from 4.5 to 5.5 percent to give every teacher in the state a $5,000 raise. Oklahoma鈥檚 teachers are among the worst paid in the country, and their average compensation, adjusted for inflation, has听听since 2009. The state听has faced shortages听of certified teachers in recent years, and听research has shown听that pay is a key factor in recruiting and retaining educators. Though many states in the country听听in education spending since the Great Recession, Oklahoma鈥檚 have been the deepest: Between 2008 and 2016, state education funding in Oklahoma has dropped by nearly 25 percent.
The ballot question was听听补苍诲听听in part by Stand for Children, a national nonprofit that generally promotes reform policies like charter schools and accountability measures. The National Education Association 鈥 the nation鈥檚 largest teachers union, which is often at loggerheads with Stand for Children 鈥 also听听the measure.听Supporters鈥 ads have showcased teachers arguing that they deserve a raise and that Oklahoma students deserve well-compensated educators. In one听, Jon Hazell, the state鈥檚 2016 teacher of the year, says, 鈥淥ther states recognizes the value and the training and effectiveness of Oklahoma teachers. That鈥檚 why they come here and recruit every year and take as many as they can.鈥 The Tulsa World has听听that Oklahoma teachers regularly move to schools in neighboring states like Missouri or Kansas, where the salary is several thousand dollars higher.听听featured country music star Toby Keith endorsing the measure.
Opponents of the tax hike have听听that it amounts to a slush fund for school administrators, pointing out that not all the money will go to teachers and dismissing it as a waste of taxpayer dollars. (Some of the additional revenue听听pre-K and the state鈥檚 higher education office.) 惭耻濒迟颈辫濒别听听听听in the state have also opposed the measure, raising concerns about the increased tax burden.听According to Ballotpedia, backers of the initiative听听over $4 million, while opponents spent virtually nothing.听鈥擬att Barnum
10:35听p.m. Tuesday 鈥 North Carolina Republican Richard Burr Is Re-Elected: Republican Sen. Richard Burr of North Carolina has won re-election, according to the Associated Press. Burr, a senior member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, was in a tight contest with former state Rep. Deborah Ross. His victory came as a wave of returns across the country showed bigger wins than expected for Republicans, particularly at the presidential level. Republicans also won closely contested Senate races in Florida and Indiana. 鈥擟arolyn Phenicie
10 p.m. Tuesday 鈥 Paul. Scott. Isakson. 3 Key Senate HELP Members Are Re-Elected: Senate Republicans Rand Paul of Kentucky, Tim Scott of South Carolina, and Johnny Isakson of Georgia have won re-election, according to the Associated Press. All three sit on the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.听Paul, an erstwhile presidential candidate, has argued for abolishing the Education Department and pushed to end federal involvement in the Common Core State Standards. Isakson was an author of the original No Child Left Behind law when he was a House member, and this fall worked on a compromise with top committee Democrat Patty Murray on听early childhood education. Scott has been a听. 鈥擟arolyn Phenicie
9:30 p.m. Tuesday 鈥 Indiana Elects Republican Eric Holcomb as Governor:听Voters in Indiana have selected Republican Lt. Gov. Eric Holcomb to replace Gov. Mike Pence, according to the Associated Press. Pence gave up his shot for re-election to run as Donald Trump’s vice president. Holcomb beat out former Indiana House Speaker John Gregg, a Democrat who made education a staple in his campaign. Throughout the campaign, Holcomb has worked to distance himself from Indiana鈥檚 previous Republican governors, Pence and Mitch Daniels, promising to steer clear of听 with State Superintendent of Public Instruction Glenda Ritz, the only Democrat to lead a state office. Along with calls to replace the maligned state ISTEP test, Holcomb has maintained support for Indiana鈥檚 school choice programs, including charter schools and vouchers. 鈥Mark Keierleber
8:40听p.m. Tuesday 鈥 Senate HELP Committee Member Mark Kirk Loses Seat to Tammy Duckworth:听Republican Sen. Mark Kirk of Illinois has lost his re-election bid to Rep. Tammy Duckworth, according CNN.听Kirk, a moderate Republican,听pushed unsuccessfully during Senate debate on the Every Student Succeeds Act for an 鈥渁ccountability dashboard鈥 that would have made states develop and report on access to measures like quality teachers, advanced courses, and health resources.听It was widely expected that a Republican probably couldn鈥檛 keep the Senate seat (once held by Barack Obama) in the Democratic-leaning state. 鈥斕Carolyn Phenicie
8:15 p.m. Tuesday 鈥 Democrat John Carney, the New Governor of Delaware:听The New York Times that Democratic Rep. John Carney has won the governor鈥檚 seat in Delaware, beating Republican state Sen. Colin Bonini. That result was no surprise; what is less predictable is the direction the state will take on education. Outgoing Gov. Jack Markell has been staunch supporter of the Common Core State Standards and , but Carney has said the state should offered by the Every Student Succeeds Act on testing. 鈥擭aomi Nix
7:50听p.m. Tuesday 鈥 AP Says Republican Senator Rob Portman Is Re-Elected in Ohio:听Portman’s Democratic challenger, former Gov. Ted Strickland, had attracted most of the attention from the education world as of late听after making controversial comments about charter schools at the end of a campaign that went downhill quickly.听鈥淲e have seen Ohio taxpayers raped by the charter school for-profit entities in this state and the e-schools. It’s shameful, it is shameful. It’s an embarrassment,” Strickland said at a candidate forum,听. “If it’s not illegal theft, it’s moral theft of public resources. And I think thousands of our young people have been deprived of the opportunity to get a decent education because of the power of the charter school lobby in this state.”听Strickland later said he regretted using the word 鈥渞aped鈥 but said he still condemned Ohio鈥檚 failure to regulate for-profit and online charters,听. Some political observers thought the Buckeye Senate seat might be a pickup for Democrats in their effort to re-take control of the chamber. Strickland was generally popular and led Portman in polls for a year,听. But it wasn鈥檛 enough to overcome a deluge of outside spending against him. The Democratic national party pulled support earlier in the fall. 鈥擟arolyn Phenicie
7:15 p.m. Tuesday 鈥 Preview of Minneapolis School Board Race: Following weeks of long lines at early-voting centers, supporters of eight candidates vying for four seats on the Minneapolis School Board this afternoon made last minute get-out-the-vote pushes for their candidates and for the renewal of the district鈥檚 existing $74 million levy.听One-term veteran Kim Ellison, who is moving from a geographic seat representing the city鈥檚 northern quadrant to a city-wide seat, faces token opposition from perennial dark horse Doug Mann. In two other races, the local unit of Minnesota鈥檚 Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party (DFL) and the district鈥檚 teacher unions are attempting to unseat two first-term incumbents.
6:50 p.m. Tuesday 鈥 UPDATE…Trump Files Nevada Lawsuit: refused the Trump campaign鈥檚 request to impound ballots while the campaign pursued a complaint alleging that some Nevada polling stations had remained open after they were scheduled to close during early voting. Judge Gloria Slurman found the request defective on several grounds, chiding Trump鈥檚 lawyers for wanting poll workers鈥 personal information. 鈥淚 am not going to issue any order,鈥 Sturman said. 鈥淚 am not going to do that.鈥 ( has gone viral on Twitter) 鈥擠avid Cantor
5:15 p.m. Tuesday 鈥 Nine Close听Senate Races to Watch Tonight: Most Americans鈥 attention is on the Clinton-Trump contest, but voters across the country will also decide pivotal races for U.S. Senate today. The party that controls Congress鈥 upper chamber will have a key role in approving a Supreme Court nominee (who could decide key education cases) and a new secretary of education, as well as continuing oversight of the Every Student Succeeds Act.
2. Florida 鈥听Sen. Marco Rubio, who made a last-minute decision to seek re-election after his failed presidential bid, is running against Rep. Patrick Murphy. Rubio has been ahead in most recent polls, though only by a few points, and most observers still consider the race a toss-up.听Rubio has authored several higher-education bills, advocating for a program that would let private individuals and companies pay for a student鈥檚 college education in exchange for a certain percent of the student鈥檚 post-graduation earnings. Rubio didn鈥檛 vote on the final compromise version of the Every Student Succeeds Act, but he had opposed the Senate鈥檚 bill. (Check out听Rubio鈥檚 interview with 蜜桃影视鈥檚 Editor-in-Chief Campbell Brown during his presidential primary run last year.)听Murphy, too, has sponsored bills in the higher education realm, focusing on income-based student loan repayments and transparency on student loans. He voted for the Every Student Succeeds Act.
3. Indiana 鈥 Former Sen. Evan Bayh, a Democrat, is challenging Republican Rep. Todd Young for this open seat. Bayh served in the Senate from 1999 to 2010. His family of longtime politicos has long been popular in the Hoosier State, but Bayh is widely seen as having run a weak campaign, blowing what had been a seven-point lead to fall slightly behind Young in this very close contest.听Young sponsored a House companion bill to Rubio鈥檚 proposal that would allow for income-sharing agreements to fund higher education.
4. Missouri 鈥 Incumbent Republican Sen. Roy Blunt has faced a surprisingly strong challenge from Democrat Jason Kander, an Iraqi War veteran and the Missouri secretary of state.听Blunt is chairman of the subcommittee that doles out federal funding for education programs and for three years was president of Southwest Baptist University. As a state legislator, Kander voted to expand charter schools.听Most polls show Blunt ahead, but only by about a point, on average.
5. New Hampshire 鈥 Incumbent Sen. Kelly Ayotte, the Republican, is being challenged by Democratic Gov. Maggie Hassan. During her first term in the Senate, Ayotte co-sponsored about two dozen education-related bills 鈥 including some with Sen. Tim Kaine, currently the Democratic vice presidential nominee. She also sponsored an amendment to the Every Student Succeeds Act to let schools use federal dollars for mental health programs.听As a听governor, Hassan听vetoed a bill that would have overturned the Common Core State Standards. Her campaign website also notes that she froze tuition at public colleges in the state, reduced standardized tests in favor of听locally designed assessments, and maintained education funding.听This race is also very close, with each candidate ahead in various recent polls by very slim margins.
6. Nevada 鈥 In the race to fill the seat of retiring Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid, Republican Rep. Joe Heck faces Democrat Catherine Cortez Masto, who previously served as the state鈥檚 attorney general. Heck, a member of the Education and the Workforce Committee, has sponsored bills to simplify the federal financial aid application. Masto, on her campaign website, praised Nevada legislators for increasing education spending and vowed to oppose any efforts to abolish the federal Education Department.听The contest is within two percentage points, with the advantage lately going to Masto. She would be the first Hispanic woman elected to the U.S. Senate.
7. North Carolina 鈥 Incumbent Republican Sen. Richard Burr, a senior member of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, is being challenged by former state Rep. Deborah Ross. Most of the focus has turned to a tight presidential contest and听the governor鈥檚 race, which has largely focused on HB 2 鈥 the controversial law that would overturn anti-discrimination ordinances protecting LGBT people and require transgender people to use restrooms, including in public schools, that match the gender on their birth certificate.听Burr leads in most polls by an average of about two points.
8. Pennsylvania 鈥 Democrat Katie McGinty a former aide to Gov. Tom Wolf, is challenging incumbent Republican Sen. Pat Toomey.听Education-wise, Toomey has focused primarily on including language in bills that would require federal background checks on teachers and others in schools, and on ending the practice sometimes known as 鈥減assing the trash,鈥 which occurs when districts give favorable recommendations to teachers they know have acted inappropriately with students.听McGinty, meanwhile, attracted headlines when she听. She favors universal preschool and curbing college costs, her campaign website sas. McGinty has about a two-point lead in an average of recent polls.
9. Wisconsin 鈥 Sen. Ron Johnson, Republican, faces former Sen. Russ Feingold, the Democrat Johnson beat for the seat in 2010. Over the summer, Feingold had a lead of nearly 12 points in some polls, though that鈥檚 narrowed to about 3 points.听Feingold voted against the final version of the No Child Left Behind law, the only Democrat to do so.听Johnson co-sponsored and voted for an amendment to the Every Student Succeeds Act that would allow states to receive federal education funds with no strings attached, often called the 鈥淎-Plus Act.鈥 Even though the amendment was defeated, Johnson backed both the Senate version and the final compromise of the bill. 鈥擟arolyn Phenicie
5 p.m Tuesday 鈥 Preview of New Orleans’ School Board Election:听Voters report long lines and wet weather in New Orleans for the first school board election since the return to local control. The Orleans Parish School Board elected today will be tasked with making major decisions about how to govern 55 city schools now overseen by the state and a state turnaround district.
4:40 p.m Tuesday 鈥 Preview of California’s Proposition 58:听This measure aims to overturn a 1998 law stipulating that English language learners must be taught in English-only classes. (See our detailed coverage: )听Advocates hope the measure will give districts control over how best to educate the state鈥檚 1.5 million ELL students, and give non-native speakers more exposure to other languages.听The proposition is supported by unions, civil rights groups, and the Democratic Party. It is opposed by Republicans, including a Silicon Valley software developer who funded the original 1998 initiative. 鈥擪ate Stringer听
3:45听p.m Tuesday 鈥 Preview of North Carolina Senate Race: North Carolina Republican Sen. Richard Burr, a senior member of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, is facing a tough battle for re-election against former state Rep. Deborah Ross.听The听North Carolina seat is one of a handful that could decide control of the Senate, now held by the GOP, and how much of an agenda 鈥 in education and elsewhere 鈥 the next president can advance. Democrats are widely expected to win the seat currently held by Republican Sen. Mark Kirk of Illinois, also a member of the HELP Committee. To re-take control of the Senate, the Democrats need to win four more of the eight seats currently considered 鈥渢oss-ups鈥 if Hillary Clinton is elected president, or five if Donald Trump wins.听A Senate controlled by the opposite party of the president likely would block Clinton鈥檚 free college tuition proposal, for example, or Trump鈥檚听sweeping K-12 school choice proposal. 鈥擟arolyn Phenicie
3:15 p.m Tuesday 鈥 Preview of the Missouri听Governor’s Race: Going into Election Day, the听race to succeed Democrat Jay Nixon as governor of Missouri remained听a toss-up. A poll听 at the end of October showed that Democrat Chris Koster, the state attorney general, had a one percentage point lead over Republican Eric Greitens, which fell within the poll鈥檚 plus or minus four-point margin of error.
What’s more clear is that the race’s outcome could have significant implications on education policy in the state.听Under Missouri law, students in unaccredited districts can attend school in other regions on their home district鈥檚 tab. The law became controversial听after hundreds of students used what could be considered vouchers to flee the failing Riverview Gardens and Normandy school districts for higher-performing schools in the suburbs. (See our previous coverage of the vouchers:听Missouri Families in Michael Brown鈥檚 High School Face a Hard Choice)
Lawmakers have passed legislation aiming to expand the educational options of students in unaccredited schools but limit the amount of money unaccredited districts would have to pay for them to attend another school. Nixon vetoed the legislation twice because it did not include a tuition cap and failed, he said, to solve the problems facing poor-performing districts. He called it a “mandated voucher scheme” that burdened districts who were doing a good job.听Asked听 whether he would have signed the legislation, Koster, the Democrat, said he would have looked at it but in general he does not favor vouchers. Greitens, the Republican, said he was open to it.
“I think it鈥檚 terrible for any politician to take something off of the table for political reasons that might actually help our kids,”听he told the station. “If it鈥檚 going to work for our kids, then you need to give it a shot.”
Another significant issue this campaign season has been听. Republicans have been trying to turn Missouri into a right-to-work state for years. While they had enough votes to send a bill to the governor鈥檚 desk, they didn’t have enough to block a veto from Nixon. Greitens has vowed to sign a right-to-work bill while Koster has said he would veto it. 鈥擭aomi Nix
2:50听p.m Tuesday 鈥 Can Democrats Make Inroads on Conservative Texas School Board?听In Texas鈥檚 District 5, the battle lines over education could not be more clear.听Republican Ken Mercer is fighting to keep his seat on the Texas State Board of Education against Democratic challenger Rebecca Bell-Metereau. At stake in this race,听and others across the state, is the political makeup of the right-leaning, 15-member board.
Bell-Metereau鈥檚, a Fulbright scholar and professor of English at Texas State University, is running against the 鈥渃ulture wars鈥 that she said Mercer has perpetuated while in office. Local reporters say Mercer has dialed down his extreme rhetoric in recent years, but Bell-Metereau still thinks his views will be a political liability come election time.听“I think that (Mercer) has continued to be a solid vote for the most extreme and misguided decisions,”听Bell-Metereau听.听“He鈥檚 still pushing for a vision of public education that is really contrary to how we were founded as a nation, the idea that free public education was the backbone of our nation.”
This is Bell-Metereau鈥檚 third attempt to unseat Mercer. She听 by nine percentage points in 2012 and by more than 23 points in 2010. While that may look like progress to her supporters, the outcome of the race will likely be determined by local turnout for the presidential election. Libertarian听 is also running.
Texas School Board districts are often drawn up to be friendly to incumbents but there are several Democrats who hope dissatisfaction with Trump will fuel an upset in normally Republican territories. In District 6, an openly gay听 is running against libertarian Whitney Bilyeu and Republican incumbent Donna Bahorich.听In District 10,听 of Austin faces Republican incumbent Tom Maynard. In District 9,听 and Libertarian Anastasia Wilford are seeking to replace听. 鈥擭aomi Nix
2:15 p.m Tuesday 鈥 Massachusetts Congressman Announces听Last-Minute Support of Ballot Question 2:听Better late than never. As Massachusetts voters took to the polls this morning听to decide the fate of charter school expansion in the Commonwealth, Rep. Seth Moulton, a Democrat, announced at about noon he supports Ballot Question 2.
1 p.m Tuesday 鈥 Trump Campaign Files Lawsuit in Nevada:听Donald Trump鈥檚 campaign has filed a lawsuit in Nevada alleging that officials allowed people to vote after the polls closed during early voting across the state,听.
Under Nevada law, people who are in line before the polls close are allowed to cast their ballot. But according to NBC, Trump’s lawsuit alleges that even those voters who joined lines after the polls had closed were still allowed to cast a ballot.
11:45听a.m. Tuesday 鈥 Preview of Georgia’s ‘Opportunity School District’听Ballot Question:听Georgia voters will decide today whether to allow state intervention in schools that are deemed chronically failing, through the creation of a statewide Opportunity School District.
10:40 a.m. Tuesday 鈥 Preview of New York State Senate Race:听With Democrats battling to regain a majority in the New York State Senate, legislative control could come down to a handful of hotly contested races on Long Island, including the re-election bid of Republican incumbent Sen. Carl Marcellino, the Education Committee chairman.
9:30 a.m. Tuesday 鈥 Preview of Montana’s Historic House Race: Carolyn Phenicie has been monitoring Denise Juneau’s campaign for a couple weeks now:听The first Native American woman in the country elected to statewide office, Juneau听was elected as Montana’s superintendent of public instruction in 2008. If she wins her race today for Montana’s sole House seat, she would not only break a two-decade Republican lock on the post, but would become the first听Native American woman to serve in Congress if she wins her current contest. Read our 74 profile, and see the latest news听about the race . 鈥擲teve Snyder
7:30听a.m. Tuesday 鈥 Final听Clinton-Trump Poll Shows Widening Education Divide:听Leading the NBC Nightly News last night, a , which showed significant movement in the number of college-educated white voters preferring Hillary Clinton.
As Mark Keierleber has previously reported on at听蜜桃影视, Donald Trump has said he “loves the poorly educated,” and has听long recognized the need to appeal to working class white voters 鈥 many of them without college degrees 鈥 but as Chuck Todd explained Monday, the college-educated Clinton swing is bigger than some expected, and may turn out to be the game changer of the election:
The candidates may not have talked much about American education…but boy are their pollsters keeping track of their fan’s education level
鈥 Steve Snyder (@TheSnydes)
6:45 a.m. Tuesday 鈥 Preview of Massachusetts鈥 Question 2: Bay State voters will today decide whether the Commonwealth should lift a cap on charter school growth. More money 鈥 over $38 million 鈥 has flowed into this close contest than any other ballot initiative in the state鈥檚 history. Much of it, especially in support of more charters, from out of state.
The most recent poll did not bode well for pro-charter advocates, with 52 percent saying they planned to vote against Ballot Question 2 and 39 percent saying they favored raising the limit on charters. The poll, released Friday by the Western New England University Polling Institute, seemed to contradict a poll from the week before by The Boston Globe and Suffolk University, which found voters tied 鈥 although the margins of error of the two polls were relatively large.
Ballot Question 2 would allow charter operators to create 12 new or expanded schools each year anywhere in Massachusetts. Current law sets a cap at 120 schools and limits spending.
Outcomes from the vote could provide insight into the expansion of charter schools nationally, and advocates on both sides of the debate have waged huge advertising campaigns. Massachusetts鈥檚 charter schools statewide have been unremarkable, but in Boston, the schools have made large gains in reducing the achievement gap between white and black students and raised SAT scores. Opponents argue that charter schools siphon off money from district schools, lack accountability, and perpetuate inequalities. (See our previous in-depth coverage about what research shows about the quality of Boston鈥檚 charter schools, and the demographic breakdown of those who may vote yes on 2) 鈥擬ark Keierleber
Monday 鈥 A 2012鈥14 Flashback:听We’re monitoring the top 50 education races of 2016, but first, a quick flashback to six big education votes in previous election cycles that changed the landscape.
In 2014: Washington state voters narrowly passed the Washington Class Size Reduction Measure, Initiative 1351, to limit class sizes and ramp up hiring of teachers and staff (the following year, Gov. Jay Inslee would sign a law establishing a four-year suspension on implementation of the initiative); Colorado voters overwhelmingly that would have expanded gambling at horse racetracks to finance a fund for local public schools; and Nevada residents that would have created a 2 percent tax on businesses earning more than $1 million to fund public schools.
In 2012: 68 percent of South Dakota voters supported by Republican Gov. Dennis Daugaard that would have made teacher tenure optional rather than a requirement for school boards, established a statewide teacher-evaluation system and created bonuses for some teachers; Bridgeport, Conn., voters that would have allowed the mayor to appoint a school board rather than maintain an elected one; and Georgia voters restored a state commission that was empowered to approve the creation of charter schools, rebuffing a state supreme court that the commission was unconstitutional. 鈥擭aomi Nix
Monday 鈥斕齈review of 3听Big Colorado Races: Many eyes will be on Colorado Tuesday night, as the perennial presidential swing state decides where to bestow its nine electoral votes. But further down the ballot are a number of important races that are likely to affect education in the state.
Monday 鈥 Welcome to Our EDlection 2016 Live Blog!听We鈥檒l be updating with breaking news, vote tallies and social media buzz through midday Wednesday. Please bookmark and refresh 鈥 or get alerted to updates at the . 鈥擲teve Snyder
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