- The Washington Times - Thursday, August 24, 2023

Parents’ rights groups and their Republican allies have won some key education battles over leftist lessons in American classrooms, but defenders of transgender rights, critical race theory and LGBTQ curricula are regrouping for round two at the start of another school year.

High-profile Democrats nationwide are racing to reinforce woke activists, left-leaning school district administrators and liberal teachers against skirmishes with conservative students and their parents.

New Jersey Attorney General Matthew Platkin, a Democrat, won a temporary injunction last week against newly enacted parental notification rules in three districts. He called the decision “a major victory for civil rights — especially for the civil rights of our State’s LGBTQIA+ students.”



Michele Exner, senior adviser for Parents Defending Education, warned that Mr. Platkin and other left-of-center elected officials are “really underestimating the parental rights movement.”

“If these officials think they’re going to kick off the school year by excluding parents, keeping them in the dark, and keeping up these same political fights that do nothing to help the students in the long run as far as academics go, I think they’re completely miscalculating the moment,” Ms. Exner told The Washington Times.

The school year hasn’t even started in New Jersey, but parents protested last week outside the courthouse where the judge slapped the injunction on parental notification rules. The Middletown, Marlboro and Manalapan-Englishtown school boards adopted the rules in June.

Mr. Platkin insisted that “the State has never sought and never will seek a ‘ban’ on parental notification.”

Frank Capone, president of the Middletown Township Board of Education, challenged that declaration.

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“Notifying parents about issues affecting their children is not discrimination,” Mr. Capone said in a statement. “Contrary to the Attorney General’s false statement that he has never sought to ban parental notification, that is precisely what he did here.”

He said the policy provides for parental notification when students change their official record, when they want to participate in a club or sport of a different gender, when they want to use the opposite-sex bathroom, and when receiving referrals for mental health counseling.

“The Attorney General is taking a premature victory lap before this case was actually decided,” said Jacqueline Tobacco, board vice president. “The State’s position is preventing some of the most vulnerable students from receiving the support they need from parents and mental health counselors and eroding trust between parents and our district.”

Mr. Capone and Ms. Tobacco were political newcomers who ousted incumbents in November 2020, the beginning of a wave that swept in hundreds of candidates supported by groups such as the 1776 Project, Moms for Liberty and Back to School PAC, driven by frustration over pandemic shutdowns and racially charged curricula.

Alarm over gender ideology has risen in the past year. An estimated 1,040 school districts have policies allowing staff to conceal from families their children’s transgender or gender-nonconforming status, including new names and pronouns, as shown on the Parents Defending Education tracker.

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Democrats say such policies enable schools to protect transgender students from unsupportive parents. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, New York Democrat, said requiring parental notification amounts to forcing the “outing of LGBT people before they are ready.”

On the other side are voters. A CRC Research poll conducted in March for Parents Defending Education showed that 74% of registered voters “believe schools should not help students change their gender identity without parental consent.”

In addition, 71% “oppose letting schools withhold information about a child’s gender identity from their parents,” the poll found.

Polls show that Democrats’ double-digit lead on education has evaporated since the onset of the pandemic. A Democrats for Education Reform survey released last month found Democrats trailing Republicans by 3 percentage points on trust in education in four battleground states: Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and North Carolina.

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The education issue was credited with pushing Virginia Republican Glenn Youngkin over the top in his 2021 gubernatorial race. This year, the Virginia Department of Education approved a state policy prohibiting schools from concealing from parents “material information” about students, including gender status.

Parents have clashed with Northern Virginia school boards that refuse to change their policies. Mr. Youngkin’s office issued a statement last week saying the Fairfax County School Board is expected to “follow the law.”

Hundreds marched Tuesday to the Los Angeles Unified School District building in a protest organized by Leave Our Kids Alone. Police reportedly detained three people in a skirmish with LGBTQ counterprotesters.

Four California school districts, including Chino Valley Unified, have issued rules requiring school staff to notify parents if their children begin identifying as transgender. The school policy defies Democrats’ push for pro-transgender legislation.

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California Attorney General Rob Bonta, a Democrat, announced this month that he would investigate the district’s “policy of forced gender status disclosure.”

“Chino Valley Unified’s forced outing policy threatens the safety and well-being of LGBTQ+ students vulnerable to harassment and potential abuse from peers and family members unaccepting of their gender identity,” Mr. Bonta said in an Aug. 4 statement.

The Anderson Union and Temecula Valley Unified school boards approved parental notification policies this week on transgender status. Ms. Exner described it as an encouraging sign.

“The Anderson school district was the first to pass parental notification in Northern California,” she said. “The fact that you’re seeing this reaction from school districts in California is a good indicator of where we might go in the future as parents get fed up.”

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Democratic state legislators are fighting back with Assembly Bill 1078, which would raise the threshold for banning books from a simple majority to a two-thirds majority, and Senate Bill 596, which would fine those who create a “substantial disruption” at board meetings.

Drawing most of the attention is AB 665, which would allow children 12 and older to agree to mental health treatment and “residential shelter services” without parental consent if a “professional person” deems the child mature enough to consent.

A “professional person” may include a “credentialed school psychologist.” The bill has cleared the Assembly.

Assembly member Wendy Carrillo, a Democrat, said the bill is needed for “removing barriers to mental health access.” Our Duty attorney Erin Friday called it “the worst bill I have ever read.”

“This is the ultimate goal: Pull that child from parents like me who believe in biological reality, put them in a residential facility, take a lot of money from those parents, too — fighting, taking classes — bankrupt them to try to get their child back, but in the interim, that child is going to be owned by the state,” Ms. Friday said at a rally last week in Sacramento.

Ms. Friday urged parents’ rights advocates to keep fighting in the face of opposition from the left. She said even moderate Democrats like her are saying “enough.”

“Be hopeful because, I’ll tell you, two years ago, there were few people standing up,” she said. “And now we have thousands.”

• Valerie Richardson can be reached at vrichardson@washingtontimes.com.

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