From school boards to statehouses, conservative Moms for Liberty push to
grow influence
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[April 06, 2022]
By James Oliphant
(Reuters) - Last month, Iowa Governor Kim
Reynolds surrounded herself with members of the conservative
parents-rights group Moms for Liberty when she signed a bill that
outlawed transgender students from playing girls’ sports.
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis invited a member of the group to stand
alongside him weeks later as he signed a bill that allows parents more
say in public school teaching materials.
Just over a year ago, Moms for Liberty formed with a few parents upset
over their school districts' COVID-19 mask mandates and raced-based
equity initiatives. The group has since grown in size and influence,
capturing the attention of Republican officials who recognize it has
become a fulcrum for culture war issues that dovetail with education.
Moms for Liberty says it now has 80,000 members in 34 states, figures
Reuters could not independently verify. Its leaders are looking to move
beyond local school-board tussles and become a force in bigger political
battles.
At the same time, Republicans appear to be trying to harness the energy
of the grassroots group and others like it to stoke voter enthusiasm in
the coming November elections, when key governorships and control of
Congress are at stake.
A CNN poll in February found that 46% of voters, including about half of
parents with children younger than age 18, said education will be
extremely important to their vote for Congress in this year's midterms.
About one-fourth of those voters listed curriculum and content in school
lessons as a concern.
Former Trump administration official Ian Prior, who has launched a
separate parents' rights group in Virginia, says the movement could form
the “biggest single-issue bloc of voters” in the country and potentially
attract Democrats and independents.
“We see this as the highest energy (among Republicans) since the Tea
Party,” said Noah Weinrich, a spokesperson for Heritage Action, the
political arm of the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank.
The Tea Party, a grassroots movement born of the financial crisis of
2007-08 and opposition to Obamacare, helped steer Republican politics in
a more populist direction in the 2010 midterms and beyond.
The Republicans embracing Moms for Liberty's activism are following the
lead of Glenn Youngkin, who used education and cultural issues to propel
himself to a stunning victory in the Virginia governor’s race last year.
DeSantis and others are taking Youngkin’s approach a step further by
partnering with Moms for Liberty on policy and affiliating themselves
with the movement’s goals. In March, DeSantis named a member of the
group, Esther Byrd, to Florida's Board of Education.
As the group’s profile has grown, so has the backlash. Teachers’ unions,
school board organizations and Democrats say the movement promotes
disruptive public behavior, anti-gay and trans ideologies, and book
bans.
The National Education Association, a top teacher’s union, calls the
group "dangerous."
But some Democrats warn their party cannot afford to take the Republican
push on education lightly, saying parents remain deeply frustrated in
the wake of the pandemic and will support candidates they feel are
listening to them.
“Our party has lost significant support as the party that focuses on
students,” said Shavar Jeffries, president of Democrats for Education
Reform, an advocacy group that works with state and federal candidates
on education issues.
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Robin Steenman, chair of the local chapter of Moms for Liberty,
leads the group's chapter meeting at Generations Church, in
Franklin, Tennessee, U.S., August 17, 2021. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File
Photo
LOBBYING AND CANDIDATE FORUMS
In February, more than 100 Moms for Liberty activists descended upon
the Florida legislature in Tallahassee.
They were advocating for the measure giving parents greater input in
school curriculum, as well as what critics nicknamed the “Don’t Say
Gay” bill, which prohibits classroom instruction for young children
on gender and sexuality issues.
Both bills passed, and DeSantis signed them into
law.
The latter bill's sponsor, Representative Joe Harding, said Moms for
Liberty members effectively warned lawmakers who opposed it that
they would be "held accountable” in their districts.
"They were a huge encouragement to me,” said Harding, a Republican
who spoke at a dinner organized by the group.
Across the aisle, however, Democratic Representative Carlos
Guillermo Smith said the group preyed on unsubstantiated fears of
teachers “grooming” young children for sexual abuse and promoted
conspiracy theories that were once only on the party’s fringe.
“Every single day, I am bombarded by baseless accusations of
pedophilia by Moms of Liberty-type advocates that say I need to stay
away from children,” said Smith, who is gay. “It’s unhinged.”
In response, Tina Descovich, a co-founder of the group, said "Moms
for Liberty is concerned about anyone that is opposed to a bill
protecting children . . . from sexual content."
Moms for Liberty members also lobbied lawmakers in states including
South Carolina, Tennessee, Wisconsin, New York and Ohio. The group
says it plans to hire a series of paid state coordinators, who will
organize local chapters into a more cohesive political force and
engage with legislators, as well as a Hispanic outreach expert.
Descovich said the group will endorse candidates for local school
boards this year, not in state and federal races. But it will press
candidates at every level to embrace its priorities ahead of the
midterms, she said.
Local chapters recently hosted events for Republican candidates such
as Mike Gibbons in Ohio's Senate race and Garrett Soldano in
Michigan's governor's contest to speak to its members.
"Mama Bears and Papa Bears are engaged like never before to reclaim
our schools from power-hungry bureaucrats and the radical left,"
Soldano tweeted after the March 21 meeting.
Moms for Liberty has formed three federal PACs and one Florida state
PAC to eventually support candidates and causes. According to
federal and state records, the committees have received no
contributions and made no expenditures. Ultimately, the PACs "can be
a tool in our toolbox," Descovich said.
"We are making a difference. I don’t see an end in sight,” said
Alexis Spiegelman, who helped organize the group's legislative
efforts in Florida. “You can’t manufacture what’s going on here.”
(Reporting by James Oliphant; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and
Alistair Bell)
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