Monday, July 13, 2020

Trump's campaign to open schools provokes mounting backlash even from GOP

TRUMP WANTS PARENTS BACK WORKING AT SHIT PAYING JOBS

An overwhelming alignment of local, state and even Republican-aligned organizations oppose the rush to reopen schools and colleges.


ANOTHER LISTENING SESSION
 WHERE TRUMP DOES NOT LISTEN

President Donald Trump speaks during an event with students, teachers and administrators about how to safely re-open schools amid the coronavirus Tuesday. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images


By MICHAEL STRATFORD, NICOLE GAUDIANO and JUAN PEREZ JR.
07/10/2020 


President Donald Trump has been on a rampage against public schools and colleges all week, threatening to use the power of the federal government to strong-arm officials into reopening classrooms.

But his effort is now creating a backlash: An overwhelming alignment of state and even Republican-aligned organizations oppose the rush to reopen schools. The nation’s leading pediatricians, Republican state school chiefs, Christian colleges and even the U.S. Chamber of Commerce have all challenged parts of Trump’s pressure campaign.

“Threats are not helpful,” Joy Hofmeister, the Republican state superintendent of public instruction in Oklahoma, told POLITICO on Friday. “We do not need to be schooled on why it’s important to reopen.”

Both Trump and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos have issued federal funding threats to schools that don’t fully reopen. On Friday, Trump went a step further in blasting online learning — which many school districts and colleges are planning to use this fall as an alternative or supplement to in-person instruction.

The American Academy of Pediatrics, whose prominent study on the importance of reopening schools was repeatedly touted by administration officials this week, criticized Trump’s threats to withhold money from schools as a “misguided approach” in a new statement on Friday.

The pediatricians, in a statement with teachers unions and school superintendents, also pushed back on Trump’s focus on schools providing in-person instruction, seemingly without any regard to the intensity of the pandemic in a community. Schools in areas with high levels of Covid-19 community spread, they wrote, “should not be compelled to reopen” against local experts’ judgment.


Education Secretary Betsy DeVos. | AP Photo

State school chiefs like Hofmeister are wary as well.

“Educating our kids shouldn’t be about politics — it’s about focusing on what’s needed,” she said, adding that schools are in need of federal support to help purchase things like safety supplies and internet hot spots to make sure vulnerable students have access to digital learning.

“We're encouraging our schools to get past some of their concerns about, for example, wearing a mask or not wearing a mask,” she said. “Just wear a mask. That's going to help us stay open.”

In Indiana, the home state of Vice President Mike Pence, the Republican state schools chief also responded to threats to cut funding to schools amid the pandemic in a tweet on Friday. “Students deserve an unprecedented federal investment in resources not cuts or diversion of funds,” said Jennifer McCormick.

Other school leaders have been similarly critical. “The bullish position of 'open your doors or don’t get money’ is ill timed, misinformed and doesn’t reflect the nuanced work that goes into the decisions state and local leaders have to weigh,” said Noelle Ellerson Ng, of AASA, The School Superintendents Association.

But Trump’s drive to reopen schools has found support, certainly among congressional Republicans, and some state leaders.

Elsie Arntzen, the Republican superintendent of public instruction in Montana, said in an interview on Friday that she supported the Trump administration’s approach. She said that she didn’t view Trump’s comments about school funding as a threat to take away money.

“For a president to say that schools are connected to the economy, I embrace that,” she said. “I believe that we need to have our state open and it needs to be done very safely.”

Arntzen said she believes in local control of schools and would support a local superintendent's decision to either close or reopen classrooms. But she praised the Trump administration’s focus on reopening physical school buildings as a way to return to normalcy.

Not dangerous: DeVos defends schools reopening according to CDC guidelines

“Having schools come back to a more traditional model, a sense of normalcy, is going to reduce the panic and allow Montanans to function and allow Montana families to be able to supply an income for our children and for our children's future,” she said. “I’m all in.”

White House officials defended the Trump administration’s threats to school funding. "If Disney World can be open so can our schools," spokesperson Judd Deere said, referring to Disney's upcoming phased opening.

As the administration continues to push its viewpoint, DeVos will be deployed for interviews Sunday on "Fox News Sunday" and CNN's "State of the Union."

And the Trump administration is planning to continue its reopening offensive into next week. Pence plans to travel to Louisiana State University on Tuesday to discuss “fall reopening plans and university sports programs” with education leaders and Democratic Gov. John Bel Edwards, his office said.

Schools that provide “a full school year of learning” and that are “fully operational” aren’t at risk of losing funding, said Education Department spokesperson Liz Hill in a statement. "But should a school choose to neglect its responsibility to educate students, they should not receive taxpayer money for a job that’s not being done.”

Congressional Democrats say the administration doesn’t have the authority to yank schools’ funding. And the Education Department has not given any public indication that it’s actually planning to make good on Trump’s threat with a plan to withholding existing funding.

But Trump’s criticism of schools went beyond a funding threat this week. He also targeted the online learning that many schools and colleges are planning to rely on this fall.

In Oklahoma, Hofmeister said “it’s perplexing” why the Trump administration would be so critical of virtual learning as an option — especially since much of the emergency relief funding passed earlier this spring was about helping schools transition to virtual instruction.

Indeed, as DeVos distributed the money, she recommended that school leaders use the funding for things like technology and training “that will help all students continue to learn through some form of remote learning.”

Hofmeister said that she had twice spoken to DeVos during the pandemic and had discussed the state’s investment in online tools to develop individualized learning. “That was applauded,” she said of her conversation with DeVos.

Higher education also has also been roiled over the past week by the Trump administration’s effort to oust international students from U.S. campuses unless colleges agree to physically hold classes this fall.

The proposed policy — which a top official said is meant to prod campuses to reopen — marks an abrupt reversal for the Trump administration, which set out different standards just a few months ago during the pandemic’s springtime peak.

Acting DHS Deputy Secretary Kenneth Cuccinelli told CNN the new rules for international students would encourage schools to reopen.

“Anything short of 100 percent online is the direction that we’re headed,” Cuccinelli said. “This is now setting the rules for one semester, which we'll finalize later this month that will, again, encourage schools to reopen."

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce blasted the plan as “ill-conceived” and harmful to businesses. On Friday, a coalition of Christian groups, including the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities, the National Association of Evangelicals and Bethany Christian Services, said that international students shouldn’t be expelled from U.S. campuses during the pandemic.

“We believe the proposed temporary student visa rule violates tenets of our faith to ‘not mistreat the foreigner’ (Lev. 19:33) but to love these neighbors as ourselves (Lev. 19:34, Matt. 22:39),” the group led by the InterVarsity Christian Fellowship wrote in a letter to the Department of Homeland Security.

Harvard and MIT sued this week to halt the policy from taking effect, and a federal judge could determine if that occurs as early as Tuesday. Johns Hopkins University and California Attorney General Xavier Becerra have filed separate suits.

Taking one more punch at higher education, Trump tweeted Friday that he instructed the Treasury Department to review the tax-exempt status of U.S. schools, colleges and universities.

"Too many Universities and School Systems are about Radical Left Indoctrination, not Education," Trump tweeted.

"Therefore, I am telling the Treasury Department to re-examine their Tax-Exempt Status...... and/or Funding, which will be taken away if this Propaganda or Act Against Public Policy continues. Our children must be Educated, not Indoctrinated!"

The Treasury Department did not respond to a request for comment on Friday.

The administration says returning to school is in the best interest of kids’ social and emotional development but also economic revival, considered essential to Trump’s reelection prospects in November.

Trump needs support from women and suburban voters in his reelection bid against Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee. Larry Kudlow, director of the National Economic Council, spoke on Fox News Friday about the bind that parents are in as they try to balance work and kids at home.

“You talk to a single working mom, she's got to send her kid to school, the kids at home, she can't go to work, she may not be able to afford help,” he said. “It's also true with working folks who are two-person families and I think that's an important part of this.”

But teachers unions, parents and other education leaders have said they need more funding to reopen safely and that Trump’s political priorities will put children and educators in harm’s way. “Public health agencies must make recommendations based on evidence, not politics," said Friday's statement from the pediatricians, teachers unions and superintendents.

Pediatricians split with Trump on school reopening threats

"If Disney World can be open, so can our schools," an administration spokesperson said.



Teachers unions, parents and other education leaders have said they need more funding to reopen safely and that Trump’s political priorities will put children and educators in harm’s way. | Getty Images


By NICOLE GAUDIANO

07/10/2020

The American Academy of Pediatrics is joining teachers unions and school superintendents in blasting Trump administration threats to withhold federal funds from schools that do not fully reopen, splitting with the president even as he tweeted again on Friday that schools "must be open in the Fall."

The alignment of the children's doctors with unions and superintendents is significant, following a week in which the Trump administration widely touted an earlier report from pediatricians that "strongly advocates that all policy considerations for the coming school year should start with a goal of having students physically present in school."

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The doctors said Friday that a “one-size-fits-all approach is not appropriate” for decision making.

“Withholding funding from schools that do not open in person fulltime would be a misguided approach, putting already financially strapped schools in an impossible position that would threaten the health of students and teachers,” the pediatricians wrote in a statement with the American Federation of Teachers, National Education Association and AASA, The School Superintendents Association.

While the statement does not specifically refer to President Donald Trump, it follows a week in which Trump and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos have issued federal funding threats as part of an administration-wide push to get schools to reopen for in-person classes, which is widely seen as critical to jump-starting the economy ahead of the presidential election.

On Friday, Trump tweeted, “Now that we have witnessed it on a large scale basis, and firsthand, Virtual Learning has proven to be TERRIBLE compared to In School, or On Campus, Learning. Not even close! Schools must be open in the Fall. If not open, why would the Federal Government give Funding? It won’t!!!”

White House spokesperson Judd Deere, responding to the groups' statement, said, "If unions and misguided local leaders are going to hold schools hostage, putting our children’s mental and social development in jeopardy, President Trump is not going to waste taxpayer dollars."

Highlighting Disney World's phased reopening, beginning Saturday, amid the coronavirus surge in Florida, his statement continued, "If Disney World can be open so can our schools and this Administration will work in partnership to provide the resources and guidance needed for higher education institutions as well as local school districts to do that."


The administration agrees "the science is clear" that it's "better and healthier" for kids to return to school this fall, Education Department spokesperson Liz Hill said in a statement.

"Schools that are willing to provide a full school year of learning and be fully operational have no risk of losing funding," she said. "But should a school choose to neglect its responsibility to educate students, they should not receive taxpayer money for a job that’s not being done. Schools can and must reopen safely, and the federal government will provide the resources, flexibilities and guidance needed for local leaders to make that happen."

Teachers unions, parents and other education leaders have said they need more funding to reopen safely and that Trump’s political priorities will put children and educators in harm’s way.

The Friday statement, led by the academy, says reopening schools in a way that maximizes safety, learning and the well-being of students and teachers “will clearly require substantial new investments in our schools and campuses.”

The groups called on Congress and the administration to provide the federal resources to ensure that “inadequate funding does not stand in the way of safely educating and caring for children in our schools.”

The groups stressed the importance of learning in a classroom, but said reopening should be pursued in a safe way and with public health experts, education leaders and parents at the center of decisions. Schools in areas with high levels of Covid-19 community spread, for example, “should not be compelled to reopen” against local experts’ judgment.

“Public health agencies must make recommendations based on evidence, not politics,” they said. “We should leave it to health experts to tell us when the time is best to open up school buildings, and listen to educators and administrators to shape how we do it.”

Michael Stratford contributed to this report.
Trump conflated Stone's case with that of Flynn and George Papadopoulos, a Trump campaign aide who served 12 days in prison for lying to investigators over his contact with individuals tied to Russia during the campaign. Speaking to reporters outside the White House en route to Walter Reed medical center to visit military veterans, Trump said: "Roger Stone was treated very unfairly. Roger Stone was brought into this witch hunt, this whole political witch hunt and the Mueller scam. It's a scam, because it's been proven false. And he was treated very unfairly, just like Gen. Flynn is treated unfairly, just like Papadopoulos was treated unfairly."
WAIT WHAT
I THOUGHT TRUMP DIDN'T KNOW PAPADOPOULOS 
HE WAS JUST THE COFFEE BOY 
Oct 31, 2017 - He also belittled Papadopoulos, despite having called him “an excellent guy” to The Washington Post editorial board in March 2016. “The Fake ...


Sep 8, 2018 - President Donald Trump on Friday mocked the two-week prison sentence ... before the 2016 election, despite declaring hours earlier: "I don't know him." ... He did not elaborate on the $28 million price tag he cited, though it ...
Oct 11, 2019 - As he did on Thursday. ... Trump on Sondland: 'I hardly know the gentleman'. Skip ... What Trump said about him: “I don't know Papadopoulos.
Jul 29, 2019 - Trump's warm words for Papadopoulos contrasted with his attempts to distance himself from ... 2017 as part of former special counsel Robert Mueller's probe, Trump was not so friendly. ... You know there were a lot of people.
May 3, 2019 - When Donald Trump says he's "never met" someone, it can mean a lot of things. ... In that case, Trump was claiming he didn't know someone who had ... as he did when former campaign adviser George Papadopoulos got ...
George Papadopoulos, who went to prison for lying to the FBI, runs for Katie Hill's ... Privacy and Cookies Policy and we want you to know what this means for you ... Papadopoulos was the first former Trump aide arrested in the US Department of ... has not resigned despite being indicted on charges of using campaign funds ...
Mar 26, 2019 - Former Trump campaign aide George Papadopoulos asked the ... Papadopoulos' lawyer, Caroline Polisi, did not respond to CNBC's inquiries. ... “I realize that I misspoke to the FBI,” Papadopoulos wrote in “Deep State Target ...
Oct 11, 2019 - Most Americans have come to understand the basics of the theory that Trump ... (Papadopoulos did not respond to a request for comment.).
Oct 24, 2018 - The former Trump campaign aide who has pleaded guilty will say in ... It is still not clear how Mifsud seemed to know in advance that Russia ...
Former Trump campaign aide George Papadopoulos told Hill.TV's "Rising" on Friday that he has no regrets about working for the Trump campaign. ... and I wrote a book that allows the readers to understand how I got from A to Z, and how the ...
Trump on private border wall segment: ‘It was only done to make me look bad’

A report indicated a section of the wall is already displaying structural troubles.

WHERE ARE THE SPIKES I ORDERED SPIKES

President Donald Trump inspects part of the border wall in Arizona on June 23, 2020. A section in Texas has come under scrutiny for construction flaws. | Evan Vucci/AP Photo

By DAVID COHEN

07/12/2020 

Saying it was done to embarrass him, President Donald Trump on Sunday said a reportedly defective section of his new border wall should not have been built by a private company.

ProPublica and the Texas Tribune reported Thursday that a segment of the wall along the Texas-Mexico border was showing dangerous “signs of erosion“ only months after being completed. The section was constructed by Fisher Industries of North Dakota, whose owner called the design a “Lamborghini.” It cost $42 million.

“I disagreed,” Trump tweeted Sunday, “with doing this very small (tiny) section of wall, in a tricky area, by a private group which raised money by ads. It was only done to make me look bad, and perhsps it now doesn’t even work. Should have been built like rest of Wall, 500 plus miles.“ (The misspelling of “perhaps” was part of the tweet.)

Trump subsequently tweeted: “We have now built 240 Miles of new Border Wall on our Southern Border. We will have over 450 Miles built by the end of the year. Have established some of the best Border Numbers ever.“

The ProPublica-Texas Tribune report spotlighted an approximately three-mile section in the Rio Grande Valley with apparently severe structural issues: “Six engineering and hydrology experts consulted by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune said it was concerning to see the level of erosion around the fence so soon after construction and added that segments of Fisher’s steel structure could topple into the river if not fixed.“

Critics have argued that Trump has exaggerated the amount of wall that has been built along the border, saying much of it is merely the replacing of existing fencing.

Fisher, according to the Associated Press, said the president was misinformed. “The wall will stand for 150 years, you mark my words,” said Fisher, a regular donor to Republican candidates.
Trump isn't secretly winking at QAnon. He's retweeting its followers.

There were 14 retweets on July 4th. And those around Trump are even more explicit. It’s giving a boost to the sprawling, Trump-centric conspiracy movement.


A man holds up a "Q" sign while waiting in line to see President Donald Trump at a Pennsylvania rally in 2018. | Rick Loomis/Getty Images

By TINA NGUYEN

07/12/2020

On July Fourth, before President Donald Trump spoke to the nation from the White House lawn, he spoke indirectly to another community on Twitter: QAnon.

That afternoon, he retweeted 14 tweets from accounts supporting the QAnon conspiracy theory, a sprawling and ever-mutating belief that a mysterious government official who goes by “Q” is leaving online clues about a messianic Trump’s secret plan to dismantle a cadre of Washington elites engaged in everything from pedophilia to child sex trafficking.

It wasn’t the first time Trump has nodded — accidentally or not — to QAnon followers on Twitter. But Trump's QAnon-baiting has gone into overdrive in recent months. According to a Media Matters analysis, ever since the pandemic began, Trump has retweeted at least 90 posts from 49 pro-QAnon accounts, often multiple times in the same day.

Those around Trump have followed suit. Eric Trump, the president’s son, recently posted a giant “Q” on Instagram as well as the hashtag version of the community’s slogan: “Where we go one, we go all.” White House deputy communications director Dan Scavino sparked glee on Facebook when he posted a photo with Q symbology in it back in March. Over on Parler, the niche Twitter alternative and MAGA hub, Rep. Devin Nunes of California, one of Trump’s most strident congressional defenders, directed people to The Dirty Truth, a video producer who has promoted QAnon-related conspiracies in the past.

And over that July Fourth weekend, Michael Flynn, Trump’s first national security adviser, recorded a video of himself taking the QAnon loyalty pledge, a slightly altered version of the U.S. oath of office.

All this has occurred with barely any pushback from Trump or Republican leaders — or even much acknowledgment that the phenomenon exists. And the engagement has continued even as the FBI has labeled the amorphous online community a potential source of domestic terrorism after several people radicalized by QAnon have been charged with crimes, ranging from attempted kidnapping to murder, inspired by the conspiracy theory.

To Trump’s critics, the reason is simple enough: QAnon followers are some of Trump’s biggest boosters. They show up at rallies. They promote the president’s narrative online, even coming up with their own conspiracy theories to protect him. And as the president struggles in the polls amid criticism over his handling of the coronavirus pandemic and response to nationwide protests over police killings, there are political benefits to engaging Trump’s most fervent fan base.

“It's easy enough for them to say OK, well, because of that, we can accept this other crazy level of behavior because those people love the president,” said Rick Wilson, a former GOP strategist and co-founder of the Trump-critical Lincoln Project. “They unequivocally support Donald Trump.”

For the uninitiated, QAnon refers to a conspiracy theory centered on the existence of a shadowy government official known simply as “Q,” who communicates with his followers through various online channels, dropping cryptic, Nostradamus-esque notes hinting at the elite’s secret machinations. QAnon alleges that the global elite, all part of a pedophile sex trafficking ring in Washington, are responsible for an amalgamate of baseless conspiracies, ranging from the murder of a Democratic National Committee staffer to widespread satanic worship and deliberately spreading the novel coronavirus.

In the QAnon mythos, Q and Trump are working toward an event called “The Storm,” the day that he finally arrests thousands of these elites and ships them to Guantanamo Bay. Occasionally, QAnon followers see various setbacks as The Storm in action; others have attempted to explain the lack of mass indictments through science fiction.

“Supposedly, I'm already in Gitmo and my clone is speaking to you right now,” Wilson said.


QAnon followers are hungriest for signs that the Trump administration is watching them — an errant hand-wave, for instance, can result in hundreds of followers insisting that Trump had drawn a “Q” to acknowledge them. But rather than leave it in the realm of “Da Vinci Code”-esque symbology, Trump’s actions, as well as his repeated insistence that the “deep state” is conspiring against him, have given them even more reason to believe in him.

And to QAnon followers, Trump’s regular retweeting of their messages indicates that he or someone on his team is acknowledging their work.

What’s more, his staffers have indicated their familiarity with QAnon content, too. Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale retweeted content from The Dirty Truth in the past. Trump personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani has retweeted posts with actual QAnon hashtags. Prominent QAnon boosters have made their way into the White House as well, such as Bill Mitchell and Michael William Lebron.

The White House did not comment. The Trump campaign did not respond to a request for comment.

Over the destabilizing crises of the past several months — Covid-19, mass protests over racial injustice and a divisive conversation over removing symbols honoring Confederate leaders — QAnon’s influence in Washington has tracked upward. At least two GOP congressional candidates with histories of promoting QAnon-related claims on social media are likely headed for a seat in Congress.

Notably, the Republican Party has not addressed those claims. Lauren Boebert, a restaurateur who won an upset victory over a five-term GOP incumbent in Colorado’s 3rd District, garnered the National Republican Congressional Committee’s endorsement, despite previously saying that she had “hope” that QAnon was “real”. She has declined to disavow that statement.

And when several House Republicans withdrew their endorsements of QAnon supporter Marjorie Taylor Greene, who beat her nearest primary opponent in Georgia's heavily Republican 14th congressional race by over 20 points and is headed towards a runoff, they cited her racist attacks on Muslims and Black activists, as well as her anti-Semitic remarks — but not her belief that QAnon is a real person. Other Trump defenders in the House GOP caucus, like Jim Jordan of Ohio and Andy Biggs of Arizona, did not pull their endorsements after her racist comments surfaced.

Travis View, a researcher who tracks conspiracy theories and hosts the QAnon Anonymous podcast, called their approach a “middle way” in the conservative world, navigating the gray zone between Q debunkers in Trump’s orbit, like Sebastian Gorka, and Q acolytes like comedian Roseanne Barr, who has tweeted her belief that Trump was breaking up child sex trafficking rings.

“They've done absolutely nothing to discourage QAnon followers from believing as they do,” said View — a position that only stokes the community’s fervor more. “I mean, QAnon is premised on the idea that there is a secret plan to save the world, so they take the silence more as part of that secrecy.”

Then again, going on the offensive against Q might not do much. Gorka, a former White House official and Trump loyalist, himself became the target of QAnon attacks after he called the community “garbage” in 2019. Q followers started posting his home address and claiming, without evidence, that he had engaged in various crimes. Even top conspiracy figures like Alex Jones of Infowars, who claims QAnon is actually a deep state disinformation plot to mislead Trump voters, are not safe from the QAnon community’s wrath.

“The whole community is volatile,” said Angelo Carusone, president of Media Matters for America, who has tracked QAnon since its beginning in 2017. “They expect not just loyalty, but they have expectations in terms of behavior that are extraordinarily suspect and susceptible to feeling like they're being betrayed — or alternatively, feeling like there’s some shadowy puppet master rigging things.



A Trump supporter holding a QAnon flag visits Mount Rushmore National Monument on July 1. | Scott Olson/Getty Images
Denials, too, won’t be enough to shake QAnon followers. View brought up Flynn’s recent oblique oath to Q, in which Flynn declared “where we go one, we go all.” Flynn’s lawyer Sidney Powell insisted after that her client was making a reference to John F. Kennedy’s yacht, not courting QAnon.

“This is such incredible bullshit, but even though she's attempting to distance herself from it in these public statements to the media, QAnon followers, they won't take that as an explicit denial,” Carusone said. “They'll think that this is just part of the game.”

View admitted that the GOP’s “strategic silence” was an unexpected development.

“I always thought that it would be possible for QAnon to reach a boiling point, where it becomes so prominent and gain such influence and get promoted by people in high level of power or people who are slated to reach a high level of power, that it would demand a response from other high-level Republicans,” he said.

But ultimately, the only person who needs to stoke the QAnon community, other than whoever is controlling the Q account, is Trump himself.

“If Trump feels like these people support him 100 percent, he’s gonna protect them and that’s it,” Wilson said.