John Walton: DFER Catalyst?

John Walton: DFER catalyst? So says Whitney Tilson in an interview from his documentary, A Right Denied. Here is a snippet:

[DFER was started] …with a few other friends that are involved with a couple other other charter schools, and they were money managers like me involved with a couple similarly high-performing charter schools, we finally decided to create a little guerilla movement within the Democratic party. Interestingly, it came about as a result – what really catalyzed it – was a conversation with John Walton, who passed away a couple years ago in a plane accident, as you may be aware. But he, through his foundation, the Walton Family Foundation, has been one of the most generous supporters of KIPP and other charter schools and school reform in general. And he was a big backer of a group called the Alliance for School Choice. So we saw him speak at the Harvard Club, a couple of my friends and I, went to talk to him afterwards and he invited us to come join this organization and so we participated in a few calls. And what we discovered was that we were the only Democrats on the call or in the room, and it was largely backed by well-known Republicans like John Walton and Wal-Mart and so forth, and they were quite successful at persuading Republican politicians to support whatever legislation and so forth but were having a lot more trouble getting traction with Democrats. And the reason became clear to us very quickly. It was because their sources of funding and who they were – all Republicans – when they came to talk to Democrats, the Democrats were sort of like, “What are you doing in my office and why should I listen to anything you have to say? And this is some sort of Republican conspiracy to kill our schools and voucherize everything and harm the Democratic party. The real problem, politically, was not the Republican party, it was the Democratic party. So it dawned on us, over the course of six months or a year, that it had to be an inside job. The main obstacle to education reform was moving the Democratic party, and it had to be Democrats who did it, it had to be an inside job. So that was the thesis behind the organization. And the name – and the name was critical – we get a lot of flack for the name. You know, “Why are you Democrats for education reform? That’s very exclusionary. I mean, certainly there are Republicans in favor of education reform.” And we said, “We agree.” In fact, our natural allies, in many cases, are Republicans on this crusade, but the problem is not Republicans. We don’t need to convert the Republican party to our point of view, and this is an issue that for decades, the intrenched forces of the status quo have successfully resisted change by making this issue a Republican vs. Democrat issue, and it’s not. It’s a people who like the existing status quo and will fight fiercely to preserve it vs. people who are looking out for the kids that are not being served well by the status quo. That’s the real issue here. But in order to even have that conversation, in order to change peoples’ minds on the Democratic side, you had to be a Democrat yourself. So we told John Walton, “Thank you, you’ve inspired us to do this and we’re going to create an organization with quite a similar mission to what you’re doing, not voucher focused so much, but a broader mission, but we can’t take any of your money.” That’s probably the first time in his life anyone had ever said, “You’re our friend. We’re doing something you would support, but we can’t take a penny of your money.” Because the moment we take any Wal-Mart money – that’s anti-union, etcetera, etcetera – then it becomes a partisan issue again.

Here is Tilson’s response to this post.

Comments
4 Responses to “John Walton: DFER Catalyst?”
  1. Mike Klonsky says:

    Of course they didn’t need Walton’s money. Tilson/Buffet had as much money as they could spend on buying over Dems. Ideologically the same as right-wing Walton, they slid around the voucher issue as a tactic. But Tilson and Walton were headed to the same destination. Bust the teacher unions and privatize management of the public schools.

  2. David B. Cohen says:

    Wow – there it is, all laid out. Rich folks looking to get richer, teaming up on a “crusade” (onwards, Christian soldiers!) and they’re the ones “looking out for the kids.” Right. And those of us who spend our entire working lives ACTUALLY LOOKING OUT FOR KIDS aren’t looking out for kids after all. We are the entrenched status quo lovers. Never mind what kinds of reforms we’ve been crying out for all along.

  3. Van Schoales says:

    So how is it all laid out? How is DFER about rich folks getting richer by “privatizing” (please define) public education? How about some evidence? Is that why Cory Booker, Barbara O’Brien, Mike Johnston, Michael Bennet, Terrence Carroll, Kevin Johnson (to name but a few) are involved in DFER?

    It’s fine to disagree about how to improve public education but stop spreading lies about DFER and the hard working people affiliated with it. It’s too bad that some that oppose school reform have to resort to name-calling and unfounded personal attacks to argue their point.

  4. joan says:

    Money managers interested in poor kids- hahahahahahaha. I mean BahHumbug. This piece says it all. DFERers are whores.

    There is not a word in this piece about effects of 30 years of tax cuts and Walton-style business practices that have left our communities impoverished. There was no talk of the effects of poverty on child learning, or 30 years of tax breaks that have made workers poor and Walton rich. NOTHING about money for scientifically confirmed changes that teachers have been begging for, for years in additional direct services for at risk and low performers, curriculum adaptations, social support services, collaborative teaching models, instructional strategies, class sizes, integration of students with special needs.

    Trolling for influence and money is simply moving the oldest profession into to realm of public education.

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