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David Harsanyi
David Harsanyi
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Duncan's Fundamental Dishonesty

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Secretary of Education Arne Duncan argues that we have an obligation to disregard politics to do whatever is "good for the kids."

Well then, one wonders, why did his Department of Education bury a politically inconvenient study regarding education reform? And why, now that the evidence is public, does the administration continue to ignore it and allow reform to be killed?

When Congress effectively shut down the Washington, D.C., voucher program last month, snatching $7,500 Opportunity Scholarship vouchers from disadvantaged kids, it failed to conduct substantive debate (as is rapidly becoming tradition).

Then The Wall Street Journal's editorial board reported that the Department of Education had buried a study that illustrated unquestionable and pervasive improvement among kids who won vouchers, compared with the kids who didn't. The Department of Education not only disregarded the report but also issued a gag order on any discussion about it.

Is this what Duncan meant by following the evidence?

When I had the chance to ask Duncan — at a meeting of The Denver Post's editorial board Tuesday — whether he was alerted to this study before Congress eradicated the D.C. program, he offered an unequivocal "no." He then called the WSJ editorial "fundamentally dishonest" and maintained that no one had even tried to contact him — despite the newspaper's contention that it did, repeatedly.

When I called The Wall Street Journal, I discovered a different — that is, meticulously sourced and exceedingly convincing — story, including documented e-mail conversations between the author and higher-ups at his office.

The voucher study, which showed progress compounding yearly, had been around since November, and its existence is mandated by law . So at best, Duncan was willfully ignorant.

But the most "fundamentally dishonest" aspect of the affair was Duncan's feeble argument against the program.

First, he strongly intimated that because only 1 percent of children were able to "escape" (and boy, that's some admission) from D.C.

public schools through this program, it was not worth saving.

So, you may ask, why not allow the 1 percent to turn into 2 percent or 10 percent instead of scrapping the program? After all, only moments later, Duncan claimed that there was no magic reform bullet and that it would take a multitude of innovations to fix education.

Then Duncan, after trashing the scholarship program and study, emphasized that he was opposed to "pulling kids out of a program" in which they were "learning." Jeez. If they're learning in this program, why kill it? And if the program was insignificant, as Duncan claimed, why keep these kids in it? Are these students worse off? Or are they just inconveniencing the rich kids?

Duncan can't be honest, of course. Not when it's about politics and payback to unions who are about as interested in reforming education as teenagers are in calculus.

Politicians say a lot of things, but to glean any insight, we need only examine the decisions they make in their own lives.

President Barack Obama sent his children to a private school in Chicago rather than entrust their education to then-CEO of the Chicago Public Schools, Arne Duncan. He's not alone.

And this is just another example of how the Democrats who killed this scholarship program, specifically designed for disadvantaged kids, are so deeply hypocritical and dishonest. Ask the two kids who attend Sidwell Friends School, home to Obama's children, on vouchers. Their escape from failing schools is about to be cut off by a complicit administration.

"A lot of folks will give you a million reasons to why things can't change," claims the secretary of education.

It's true. And one of the leading disseminators of pitiable excuses is Arne Duncan.

David Harsanyi is a columnist at The Denver Post and the author of "Nanny State." Visit his Web site at www.DavidHarsanyi.com. To find out more about David Harsanyi and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 THE DENVER POST

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


Comments

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Sir... I think you have discovered a dishonest politician...Well that makes one...For God's sake; I hope there are not any more... Too bad the people are not the government...Too bad we do not have self government.... Too bad when we find some one with out honor we do not have to put up with them as president or senator, or justice, or representative; but could simply not deal with them, and make an issue of it... But no matter how crooked, or personally corrupt people are, which makes them all the more inclined to seek out power over others, we cannot get rid of them, or ignore them, or shun them... We have to worry awefully much about them shunning us...We need to do something about education... Here where I live they seem to think of it as a privilage... One of my kids has some educational issues...She cannot do the dozens...She has high highs and low lows, and is dead average...She needs help, but the very fact that she needed help made them get rid of her as soon as she had a mental break...Now they can call her violent, and keep her out forever... Some privilage...They don't have to police the place... They don't have to provide a safe and harrasment free environment... But you do have to make certain to not give them any excuse whatever to kick you out...If it were my choice I would rather be kicked out than kicked around, but that is not much of a choice...And we could sue the school board, and they could defend themselves with our own dime, but the chances of getting them to ever change their ways, or change their minds is slim...And how should that make me feel, to have to go there and beg for the sort of help she needed, and get the reply that those who can clique are going to be the successful ones in life anyway, so that is where the resources should go... I was never for vouchers when it was only the religious right asking for them... Now, she is in a religious school, free of harassment, and gettting a better education than in the public school, and it is breaking me... I had her off their radar for a while, and I wish to God I could have kept her there... In some respects the child has a great mind, and I could teach to her strengths... But I will not waste time testing that is needed for teaching...And that is the thing; it is considered a privialge for a child to be educated, and is considered an obligation for a parent to provide the education...Well; if they are not going to help then I should have that money made available to me......As long as education is just another bloated bureaucracy of people who serve themselves while the country grows dumber we will never see our children educated as life demand them to be... Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Wed Apr 8, 2009 8:48 AM
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