Just a few years ago, the governor of Louisiana was an enthusiastic supporter of Common Core
Now, Bobby Jindal is leading the charge against the program
Why the switch? "It wasn't what we had been promised"
WashingtonCNN
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When Louisiana Republican Gov. Bobby Jindal recently finished a speech blasting the Common Core education standards, a room full of activists from the conservative American Principles Project jumped from their seats in applause.
Less than a year ago, they might have rushed for the door.
The scene of Jindal railing against Common Core – the education standards embraced by more than 40 states – stands in stark contrast to his enthusiastic approval of the program when it was first introduced. Jindal proclaimed to business leaders in 2012 that Common Core “will raise expectations for every child.”
In a short time, Jindal has gone from serving as a steward of the Common Core standards to one of the nation’s chief critics. But what’s more remarkable is that conservatives – known for seeking ideological purity in their politicians – aren’t blasting Jindal as a flip-flopper as he considers a 2016 presidential run. Instead, they see him as uniquely positioned to be a leading advocate for their cause with the governor’s office to back up.
Indeed, many on the right have accepted Jindal’s repentance and are propping him up as an unlikely model for the anti-Common Core movement.
“Of the governors, he’s been the most active in speaking out on the issue,” Emmett McGroarty, APP’s education policy director, told CNN. “Quite frankly, he is the governor who has done the most to remove his state from Common Core.”
This week, Jindal released an education proposal through his nonprofit advocacy network, “America Next,” that in part recants his support. The paper seeks to absolve Jindal of his previous position by claiming he had been misled through “deception.”
“It was a bait-and-switch,” Jindal told reporters Monday at a luncheon at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank. “It wasn’t what we’ve been told. It wasn’t what we had been promised.”
But how did Jindal go from championing the program to becoming one of its leading opponents?
00:42 - Source: CNN
Jindal: Moms know best on Common Core
In 2012, after Jindal and other governors implemented the program, Common Core became a lightning rod issue among grassroots conservative activists who bemoaned it as a “federal takeover of education.” In 2013, Jindal began expressing concerns about the program after his staff held meetings with Common Core opponents in the state.
While some of the most vocal opposition to Common Core came from conservatives worried about increasing federal control of local education, many parents also voiced concerns about the substance of the curriculum, particularly noting that their children found it confusing.
Other savvy Republicans, particularly those with White House-sized ambitions, began to take note. At conservative gatherings over the next year, Common Core grew into one of the most talked-about issues. Suddenly, almost every conservative who had ever hinted at having presidential ambitions wanted to make it clear that they opposed the new standards.
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who once supported Common Core, came out against it.
The rallying cry “repeal Common Core!” became – and remains – a consistent crowd-pleaser in speeches by U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas.
In the context of the burgeoning presidential race, the opposition has one added bonus: It lets Jindal use Common Core as a proxy to outline a case against former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, a consistent Common Core supporter who has also shown interest in running for president.
Jindal didn’t become one of the movement’s biggest proponents overnight. Activists cite his leadership and what they describe as tireless advocacy as handing the anti-Common Core movement new momentum.
Anna Arthurs, a mother with school-aged children who has helped lead the grassroots push in Louisiana, said she first met with Jindal’s staff in September 2013, bringing detailed information about the ills of Common Core.
Over the next year, Arthurs and other activists lobbied legislators in Louisiana and the governor’s staff to gather support. Finally, frustrated with the lack of results, Arthurs reached out to her legislator and demanded a meeting with the governor — and she got it early that summer.
Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush has said his decision to run for the Republican nomination will be based on two things: his family and whether he can lift America's spirit. His father and brother are former Presidents.
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker has created a political committee that will help him travel and raise money while he considers a 2016 bid. Additionally, billionaire businessman David Koch said in a private gathering in Manhattan this month that he wants Walker to be the next president, but he doesn't plan to back anyone in the primaries.
Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal is establishing a committee to formally explore a White House bid. "If I run, my candidacy will be based on the idea that the American people are ready to try a dramatically different direction," he said in a news release provided to CNN on Monday, May 18.
Sen. Bernie Sanders, an independent from Vermont who caucuses with Democrats, has said the United States needs a "political revolution" of working-class Americans looking to take back control of the government from billionaires. He first announced the run in an email to supporters early on the morning of Thursday, April 30.
On March 2, retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson announced the launch of an exploratory committee. The move will allow him to raise money that could eventually be transferred to an official presidential campaign and indicates he is on track with stated plans to formally announce a bid in May.
South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham has said he'll make a decision about a presidential run sometime soon. A potential bid could focus on Graham's foreign policy stance.
Hillary Clinton launched her presidential bid Sunday, April 12, through a video message on social media. She continues to be considered the overwhelming front-runner among possible 2016 Democratic presidential candidates.
Sen. Marco Rubio announced his bid for the 2016 presidency on Monday, April 13, a day after Hillary Clinton, with a rally in Florida. He's a Republican rising star from Florida who swept into office in 2010 on the back of tea party fervor. But his support of comprehensive immigration reform, which passed the Senate but has stalled in the House, has led some in his party to sour on his prospects.
Lincoln Chafee, a Republican-turned-independent-turned-Democrat former governor and senator of Rhode Island, said he's running for president on Thursday, April 16, as a Democrat, but his spokeswoman said the campaign is still in the presidential exploratory committee stages.
Jim Webb, the former Democratic senator from Virginia, is entertaining a 2016 presidential run. In January, he told NPR that his party has not focused on white, working-class voters in past elections.
Vice President Joe Biden has twice before made unsuccessful bids for the Oval Office -- in 1988 and 2008. A former senator known for his foreign policy and national security expertise, Biden made the rounds on the morning shows recently and said he thinks he'd "make a good President."
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has started a series of town halls in New Hampshire to test the presidential waters, becoming more comfortable talking about national issues and staking out positions on hot topic debates.
Rep. Paul Ryan, a former 2012 vice presidential candidate and fiscally conservative budget hawk, says he's keeping his "options open" for a possible presidential run but is not focused on it.
Sen. Rand Paul officially announced his presidential bid on Tuesday, April 7, at a rally in Louisville, Kentucky. The tea party favorite probably will have to address previous controversies that include comments on civil rights, a plagiarism allegation and his assertion that the top NSA official lied to Congress about surveillance.
Texas Sen. Ted Cruz announced his 2016 presidential bid on Monday, March 23, in a speech at Liberty University. The first-term Republican and tea party darling is considered a gifted orator and smart politician. He is best known in the Senate for his marathon filibuster over defunding Obamacare.
Democrat Martin O'Malley, the former Maryland governor, released a "buzzy" political video in November 2013 in tandem with visits to New Hampshire. He also headlined a Democratic Party event in South Carolina, which holds the first Southern primary.
Republican Rick Perry, the former Texas governor, announced in 2013 that he would not be seeking re-election, leading to speculation that he might mount a second White House bid.
Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, a social conservative, gave Mitt Romney his toughest challenge in the nomination fight last time out and has made trips recently to early voting states, including Iowa and South Carolina.
Political observers expect New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo to yield to Hillary Clinton's run in 2016, fearing there wouldn't be room in the race for two Democrats from the Empire State.
That first meeting came around the time when Jindal began to express his firmest opposition to Common Core.
And when he flipped, Jindal flipped hard.
By May 2014, Jindal began comparing the way Common Core was being implemented to “central planning” in Soviet Russia. Amid a separate education battle with the Department of Justice over the use of school vouchers in Louisiana, Jindal began to accuse Democrats of standing “in the schoolhouse door to prevent minority kids,” comparing them to segregationists who fought against the civil rights movement in the 1960s and blocked black students from attending classes with white students.
Arthurs, who sat next to the governor at the APP event last week, said that she believes Jindal’s conversion was “genuine” and doesn’t blame Jindal for his initial opposition.
Instead, activists claim that Republican governors were duped by a massive public relations campaign and pressure from the National Governors’ Association urging them to sign onto Common Core to secure funding for their cash-strapped states.
“I don’t really blame the governors,” Arthurs said. “They heard an informercial… and they were all picking up the phone and ordering the product before it really ended. … They didn’t stop to ask the question: has this been tested?”