The alt-right MAGA-Republicans are determined to take over the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate in the November 8 election. If they should succeed, their announced program includes impeaching President Biden and reversing all the progressive programs that he and the Democrats in Congress have achieved during the past two years.
Their ambitions are not just at the national level, however. They are aiming to take over local school boards and radically change the way our children are educated; their intent is to end our American democracy at every level and to educate our children for the new autocratic order that they hope to impose.
One such organization that is working to further the extreme right-wing cause at the school board level is Moms for Liberty. The organization is headed by Tina Descovich and Tiffany Justice, two former school board members from neighboring Florida counties. The group now has 135 chapters in 35 states with 56,000 members and supporters.
There is at least one chapter right here on the Eastern Shore in Kent County, and they promote certain school board candidates. Let’s take a look at what they stand for.
An article in the Washington Post suggests that the group is primarily member-funded, which is the official organizational line, but this characterization leaves out important details about the organization’s extreme right-wing affiliations that provide financial support. For example, they receive funding from an organization called Conservatives for Good Government, a right-wing Florida political action committee. They also frequently promote the Heritage Foundation, a right-wing think tank with a history of attempting to influence public education.
Members of Moms for Liberty target local school board members, as well as teachers and administrators, and attend meetings just to harass them. On October 4, Attorney General Merrick Garland announced that the FBI would take the lead on law enforcement’s response to what he called “a disturbing spike in harassment, intimidation, and threats of violence against school administrators, board members, teachers, and staff.”
Moms for Liberty’s insistence on what they refer to as local and parental control of curriculum would increase already existing inequalities in our education system as well as resulting in a curriculum skewed toward extreme right-wing values.
In Maryland, local school board elections are “non-partisan,” which means that the candidates’ party affiliation is not identified on the ballot. Voters should not be misguided into believing that candidates do not have party as well as ideological affiliations that may very well run contrary to their own. At Common Sense for the Eastern Shore we encourage our readers to vote and to be sure they know who and what they are voting for.
In the face of the politicization of school board elections by Republican candidates on the Eastern Shore and elsewhere, voters should be very careful to determine whether candidates have the experience, qualifications, and temperament needed to serve on their county board of education.
Many organizations and publications have posed questions to candidates and made their responses available. Here are two resources:
League of Women Voters, Election Information
All responses come directly from the candidates and are unedited by LWV. The League does not support or oppose any candidates or parties.
Capital News Service, Board of Education Voter Guide
https://cnsmaryland.org/board-of-education-maryland/
The Local News Network at the University of Maryland's Philip Merrill College of Journalism and Capital News Service compiled the school board candidate Q&As.
Additionally, if you have questions as to whether any candidates are affiliated with Moms for Liberty or have extreme views, your local Democratic Club or Party should have those answers. We asked Eastern Shore county Democratic parties and clubs to let us know which candidates they are supporting; here are the answers from those that answered:
Cecil County
There are three reasonable candidates for Board of Education that the Cecil County Democratic Club has endorsed. The club does not ask party affiliation.
Board of Education District 3
Joe C. Ferdinando
https://www.facebook.com/ferdinandoforcecilcountyboardofeducation
Board of Education District 4
William H. Malesh
https://www.facebook.com/WilliamMaleshBOE
Board of Education District 5
Diana Hawley
https://www.facebook.com/diana.b.hawley
Dorchester County
There are two seats up for election this year.
Council District 2
There are two Democrats running in District 2:
Theresa Stafford
LeOtha N. Hull, incumbent
Council District 4
Sheri Hubbard, incumbent
You will find interviews with these candidates here:
Kent County
There are six candidates running for three at-large seats. The Democratic Club is recommending the following candidates:
Aretha Dorsey
Nivek Johnson, incumbent
https://www.facebook.com/marylandnivek.m.johnson/
Trish McGee, incumbent
You can watch the League of Women Voters forum here.
Wicomico County
There are district candidates and at-large candidates. There are two at-large candidates recommended by the Lower Shore Progressive Caucus:
George Demko
https://www.electgeorgedemko.com/
Bonnie Ennis
https://www.facebook.com/bonnieforschoolboard/
School boards do important work. They tackle “complex questions of public health, education, and budgeting amid a great deal of uncertainty.” These critical issues are drowned out and derailed when members with “culture wars” agendas are elected. Let’s not let that happen in our communities. We can do that if we vote.
A native of Wicomico County, George Shivers holds a doctorate from the University of Maryland and taught in the Foreign Language Dept. of Washington College for 38 years before retiring in 2007. He is also very interested in the history and culture of the Eastern Shore, African American history in particular.
Jan Plotczyk spent 25 years as a survey and education statistician with the federal government, at the Census Bureau and the National Center for Education Statistics. She retired to Rock Hall.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk