A day after Jeb Bush’s unofficial 2016 debut in Detroit, Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal delivered a preview of his own.
The stated topic of Jindal’s address was near and dear to Bush’s heart: Common Core. Bush championed the federal education standard, but it’s since become a major issue on the right and one of the former Florida governor’s biggest vulnerabilities in the Republican primaries. The venue was a luncheon sponsored by the American Principles Project, a conservative group that’s led the charge against the standards.
The Bush connection was not subtle. Emmett McGroarty, director of APP Education, warned in his opening remarks that if the GOP nominated a pro-Common Core candidate, they’d be “unelectable” against Hillary Clinton who “has no Common Core baggage.”
“[In] this Common Core fight,” Jindal said in his speech. “We are going to sometimes have people who we agree with on other issues fight us on this.”
He did not single out Bush, telling reporters afterwards that he’s “been complimentary in the past — apart from Common Core — about some of the things he’s done in education.” But the event was a reminder that the issue will loom large in the 2016 election for the Florida governor.
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Jindal wasn’t always a Common Core opponent. Louisiana, with his backing, was one of the 45 states to voluntarily adopt Common Core standards and as recently as 2012 he said it “will raise expectations for every child.” Last year, however, he withdrew the state from the program over the objections of his own top education official. He has since gone on an all-out offensive against the standards, which he has likened to “centralized planning” in Soviet-era Russia, and is suing the federal government to block them.
Objections to the standards are varied and not limited to conservative groups. Some critics object to the executive branch playing a prominent role in state and local education or fear uniform standards will have negative effects. The standards were negotiated between the states themselves, do not dictate class curriculums, and are not required by the federal government, but Jindal and others complain that the Department of Education included Common Core adoption as a condition for competing for its Race To The Top grants.
Then there’s the darker side of Common Core opposition. The standards have become fertile ground for conspiracy theories about shadowy government plots to brainwash children, especially in the hands of conservative host Glenn Beck. Any candidate running for president in 2016 can expect to hear plenty of these concerns in town halls for the next year.
Jindal’s speech struck a balance between the two flavors of opposition. The Common Core does not regulate history curriculums, for example, but he asked – just generally, mind you – “What happens when American history is not the American history you and I know about, but rather it becomes a history of grievances?
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But education was only one part of his address on Thursday.









