House Majority Leader Eric Cantor took a shot at New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio on Wednesday, vowing to use his legislative platform to push back against de Blasio and any efforts to slow the expansion of charter schools.
“Right now, school choice is under attack,” Cantor said during a speech on school choice at the Brookings Institute. “It is up to us in this room and our allies across the nation to work for and fight for the families and students who will suffer the consequences if school choice is taken away.”
Cantor, a Republican from Virginia and ardent supporter of charter schools and school vouchers, has recently visited charter schools in Philadelphia and New Orleans, and said the schools offered inner-city youth a chance at a productive life they might not have in traditional neighborhood public schools.
Cantor said students in big cities could benefit most from so-called school choice offered by charter and private schools, and blasted de Blasio for his education agenda, which includes proposals to place a moratorium on charter schools and begin charging rent for those sharing space with traditional public schools.
“This move could devastate the growth of education opportunity in such a competitive real estate market like New York City,” Cantor said in his prepared remarks. “Just think, how many families will have their choices taken away if Mayor de Blasio pursues these policies? Mayor de Blasio should abandon this plan and allow New York’s charter schools to continue to flourish.”
“We are going to remain vigilant at attempts to thwart the growth in public school choice and in education choice,” Cantor said, adding that De Blasio’s policies “are going to hurt kids and their families and they ought not to go into effect.”
Cantor said he would work to “ensure no one from the government stands in the schoolhouse door between any child and a good education.”
Wednesday’s event at the Brooking’s Institute was held to promote the release of its 2013 Education Choice and Competition Index, which ranks America’s largest school districts with “A” thru “F” grades for how well each district “supports school choice, provides a framework for efforts to improve choice and competition, and recognize leaders among school districts in the design and implementation of choice and competition systems.”
On this year’s index, New York City, which boasts the country’s largest public school population–about 1.1 million students–was given an “A-.”









