After the 80th AD caucus in San Jose, which vacated the CDP endorsement of Manuel Perez‘s chief rival for the nomination, one of the delegates in support of Greg Pettis treated me to their latest talking point on Manuel Perez, namely that his only elected experience so far was that of a board member of a “failed school district.” This is a bit shortsighted, as Perez’s experience is that of a teacher, healthcare access provider, grassroots youth organizer, researcher, and a successful advocate for millions of dollars for local schools and local jobs in Coachella. The recent David Binder poll has, after positives and negatives are weighed in, both Pettis and Perez running even in the primary, with Perez winning in the general against (R) Jeandron, and Pettis losing.
But let’s address the fallacy of Democrats adopting GOP talking points on NCLB to attack the those who are in the direct line of fire from Bush’s policy:
(Hat tip to Dale Wissman, labor relations representative with California School Employees Association, who listed the following observations on this subject, with my minor edits.)
Coachella serves some of the poorest students in the entire United States, yet manages to create some of the most powerful tools to improve student achievement. It is an amazing, activist, innovative school district dealing with massive budget and social issues, but somehow just found a way to pass a two hundred and fifty million dollar bond, which will be matched by state and federal funds, for the construction of state-of-the-art schools. There might not be three other school districts in the U.S. that serve the population CVUSD serves: 64 percent English learners, 90 percent on free or reduced lunch.
That’s a massive amount of money to bring to bear on one of the poorest communities in the U.S. and Manuel Perez helped shepherd that through. Nothing like that had ever been done before in Coachella, poorest area of one of the poorest states as far as education spending goes. California is now 48th out of 50 in terms of state education funding. If anyone knows intimately what that kind of funding problem looks like on the ground and how it affects achievement, especially in a poor area with lots “of second language speakers, it would be Manuel Perez. Pettis and Gonzales have no comparable experience in education. Incidentally, Perez graduated from local schools and he went on to Harvard Graduate School of Education, so it must be doing something right. . CVUSD has more than tripled its API score (a California measurement) in the past eight years.
Perez is against No Child Left Behind, perhaps the worst education law ever passed, which is soundly hated by Democrats. NCLB provides the mechanism to take schools over from local communities, no matter their funding or challenges with poverty or second language learners. Coachella is an example of a striving school district doing amazing things that nevertheless is punished because of NCLB. The fact that Pettis campaign wants to use this as an issue says loads about Pettis’ inexperience in education. Tacitly supporting NCLB because it hurts your opponent is very bad form for a Democrat, and indicates a disturbing and self-defeating opportunism. Rather than one who parrots Republican NCLB talking points, the 80th AD deserves a representative who doesn’t buy into NCLB, advocates for appropriate funding and accountability for public schools, and can succeed in securing that funding, as Perez has.
Because of his work on behalf of students, parents, teachers and the community, and because of opposition to No Child Left Behind, the education community is endorsing Perez in droves, including the California Teachers Association, with strong local support from the 80th’s school districts. Neither Pettis nor Gonzales have anyone from the education community endorsing them as yet.
Education spending is more than half the state budget, and Manuel Perez is the only candidate in the primary and general with direct experience here. Education combined with healthcare (another of Perez’s areas of expertise) make up the vast, vast majority of the state budget. These are also the areas most in danger of being reduced and cut, simply because that’s where most the money is.
Addendum:
(The other talking point is that noting Perez has a far stronger base than Pettis among crucial East Coachella Valley and Imperial County voters amounts to racism and homophobia, which is bizarre and desperate at worst, and at best misinformed. The “Crashing the Gates” new Democratic delegates from the 80th AD who voted to endorse Manuel Perez included an openly gay man, an openly gay woman, the (Latino) County Chair of the Imperial County Democratic Central Committee, one Jewish woman, and a Coachella-raised union organizer.) Manuel’s passion for and experience in providing healthcare, education, and labor reform in the 80th AD and statewide unites a diverse progressive support base.
There’s a parallel to the Clinton/Obama dynamic here in the 80th- The heir apparent veteran politician vs. the grassroots organizer. Pettis had every expectation of sewing this nomination up by the pre-endorsement caucus, as he had the warchest, the connections, and the longtime familiarity of the local Dem clubs. Manuel was not supposed to pose a real threat, but instead he has the endorsement of
*United Domestic Workers
*California Teachers Association
*SEIU State Council
*Laborers (LIUNA)
*California Nurses Association
*AFSCME
and just today, the California Labor Federation voted for a dual endorsement of Perez and Pettis, overturning the local Central Labor Councils (both San Diego/Imperial and Riverside/San Bernardino) which had previously endorsed Pettis.
“Manuel Perez knows first hand the struggles of working families and will be a champion of healthcare, education and creating new jobs in the State Assembly,” proclaimed Art Pulaski, Executive Secretary of the California Labor Federation, AFL-CIO.
Greg was supposed to be the default Dem here, but a grassroots challenger is upsetting the status quo.
This is my first time facing the wrath of those who got their gate crashed. It’s a bit unsettling, as we were all in the same camp for Roth in the CA-45th, and now we’re at odds. But we’ll be together after the primary, when we can send another people-powered representative to the California Assembly.
Crossposted at dKos