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Updated 10/22/98 6:50PM
Movement conservatives in Texas are upset by an Oct. 12 New York Times
story on the school-board wars there. Not so much by Rick Lyman's
reporting, which was pretty fair: the conservative board members were
given several chances to make clear that they were fighting for phonics,
serious curricula, and local control rather than for, say, creationism
(as one might expect from the rhetoric of their "moderate Republican"
critics).
No, what has them hopping mad are the quotes from prominent allies of
Gov. George W. Bush. Republican board chairman Jack Christie said that
he could negotiate more easily with the PLO than with the board's
conservatives, which may say more about him than them, but he's used
such rhetoric before. Republican state senator Bill Ratliff reiterated
his view that the conservatives are "an embarrassment for the State of
Texas." The show-stopper, however, is the comment of top Bush adviser
Karl Rove: "I thought I was a right-winger, but these people are far out
there. In the carnival of life, they are in a very distant booth."
No doubt all this dissent annoys Bush and his appointees, especially
coming from a group used to rubber-stamping education-establishment
initiatives. But as the editors of the feisty Lone Star Report point
out, the conservatives' record is quite defensible. "The conservatives
forced a rewrite of the original Texas [education standard] guidelines
from the [Texas Education Agency], which even Bush agreed were 'mushy.'
. . . Phonics were returned to reading instruction only after
intermediaries for the [state board's] conservatives convinced Bush to
back 'phonics' and reverse the TEA position on the 'whole language'
method."
The Lone Star Report editorializes that Bush should "replace his
education commissioner Mike Moses and his liberal apologist board
chairman Jack Christie--the first and foremost defenders of the
education bureaucracy. . . . When the governor *really* gets serious
about education he will need a new set of allies. At such times the
[board] conservatives that he has repeatedly allowed to be trashed would
be good candidates.
"Texas conservatives have rallied around Bush despite reservations in
important policy areas, believing his political popularity would
generally promote conservative goals. But if his hatchetmen are allowed
to undertake 'search and destroy' missions which confirm these
reservations--wrecking the truce at will--conservatives will reevaluate
this accommodation and start deserting his ranks."
Anyone looking for informed, incisive conservative commentary on Texas
politics as the presidential race draws closer needs to check out LSR.
Its phone number is 1-888-472-6089.
The Last Conservative?
Quote of the Day
More evidence: Michael Milken has a cookbook; Anna Quindlen has a movie;
and a new, "dark and edgy" Fantasy Island is on the air. Are the end
times upon us?
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