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Alabama Politics Tweets of the Week

We’re going to try out a new feature here at The World Around You (TWAY). Let’s look at the best tweets from Alabama politicians this week…

We can always count on Attorney General Troy King (@TKtheAG) to give us something memorable

Breakfast with Alabama’s Republican Women – now THAT is the breakfast of champions! I love having the Red Wave in town!

State Senator Hank Erwin (@Erwin4LtGov2010) is another constant source of entertainment

Gambling stalled in Montgomery. They can not get the votes in the Senate. Your prayers are working. Keep it up!

The fact that the Alabama Education Association (@myaea) continues to use a derogatory hashtag REALLY amuses me…I know why they’re using it (to let those who follow that hashtag see it), but it makes the tweets look self-insulting

GOP chair Rep Hubbard tries to kill AEA-endorsed PACT bill that makes AL keep promises to PACT contract holders. #aeafail #alpolitics

 This one made the “Congressional Tweets of the Week” too, but still entertaining, from gubernatorial candidate Artur Davis

Honored to receive the endorsement of the famous Gee’s Bend Quilters today. www.quiltsofgeesbend.com http://twitpic.com/14dp50

We also had an interesting new account pop up @Siegelman4Gov98 which began simply reposting messages from Ron Sparks’s account (@RonSparks2010).  Obviously playing off the accusations that Ron Sparks campaign platform is simply a retread of Don Siegelman’s in 1998.

I guess my #FF is @RonSparks2010 this guy is on to something good. #alpolitics

What did I miss?  What did you find interesting on Twitter this week?  Let us know in the comments.

If you aren’t already following TWAY, check us out on Twitter @TWAY_Kris and #alpolitics hashtag for interesting news and conversation.

Friday Recap – What You May Have Missed

My friend Danny at Political Parlor had to play some catch-up this past Tuesday, and I have been MIA for even longer.  I will be working to try to get back to some form of normalcy here, I appreciate all my readers and friends who have offered support and encouragement during a difficult time for me and my family.

So, what have you missed?

I hope to get back to a more regular pattern of reporting and commenting in the next few weeks.  Thank you for continuing to stop by and feel free to offer your comments on these events below.

Best Press Release of the Alabama Governor’s Race So Far

This statement from the Davis campaign in response to the article by Joe L. Reed in the AEA Journal is about as good as it gets.  Other campaigns should take notes on rebutting histrionics with substance.

Artur Davis: Joe Reed is Wrong on Race and Leadership, Again

Congressman Artur Davis issued the following statement today regarding Dr. Joe Reed’s efforts to inject race into the debate over health care reform.  In an opinion column submitted to the Alabama School Journal, Reed attacks Davis on racial grounds for not embracing one version of health care reform.  Reed writes, “His Congressional district is blacker than any Congressional district in the state and poorer than any Congressional district in the state, yet he was the only black congressman in the nation to oppose Obama’s health care plan. Every other member in the Congressional Black Caucus voted for it.”  Reed also writes, “you cannot curse Bubba and Cooter, Big Man, and June Bug in the daytime and beg them at night.”

“Joe Reed and I have a policy-based difference over whether HR 3962 is the best way to mend our country’s inequitable and costly healthcare system. Unlike Dr. Reed, I believe we can do better than an approach that could cause numerous Alabama employers to reduce their payroll or walk away from offering coverage to their employees.

We have a much more profound difference over race and leadership. Reed believes that a public official’s race matters more than his capacity for independent judgment. He believes that a black American who holds elected office must follow a certain path or be inauthentic.  Dr. Reed also believes in a shameless double standard: when his candidate for Governor, Ron Sparks, denounced the House health care bill in August and refused to say whether he would even enforce a public option as Governor as recently as October, Reed’s response was not outrage but silence.

On all of this, Joe Reed is wrong. Just as he was wrong to fight to overturn the results of a legislative race in 2006 because the winner was white, and in Reed’s opinion, the wrong color for her district; just as he was wrong to stand on the floor of the Democratic convention in Denver to oppose Barack Obama even though the race was over and Hilary Clinton had graciously conceded. Just as he was wrong to urge black Alabamians to reject Barack Obama during the 2008 primary on the flimsy ground that they should appreciate America was not ready for a black President.

I said on the night I won my congressional seat in 2002 that I would not determine my viewpoints and obligations based on race.  I also vigorously reject the insinuation that there is a uniquely “black” way of understanding an issue, and I strongly suspect that most Alabamians will as well.

Joe Reed’s forty-two year career of public service contains much good.  But his injection of race into a serious debate over public policy should offend black and white Alabamians alike, and I hope Ron Sparks will join me in denouncing such a divisive approach.”

UPDATE:

** Chuck Dean of the Birmingham News, Markeshia Ricks of the Montgomery Advertiser, and the Associated Press all touched on this as well.

** My friend, Jennifer Foster also offers her opinion.

** Mooncat at Left in Alabama offers us a side-by-side comparison in classiness.

Battle Lines Being Drawn on Charter Schools in Alabama

Bradley Byrne voiced his strong support today for giving Alabama parents options in educating their children,

“As the father of four children who attended public schools, a former member of the Alabama Board of Education and a former senator, I have long been a proponent of bringing school choice to Alabama,” Byrne said at a news conference Monday afternoon. “I strongly believe that charter schools will better serve the children and families of this state in many ways. They will provide greater educational options for our students, give parents the right to choose the school that best suits each child’s needs, put our education tax dollars to more productive use, incentivize school and teacher performance excellence, and create higher standards for discipline and character development,” Byrne said.

This follows a previous announcement by Governor Bob Riley that he would be pushing charter schools legislation in the session that begins in January.  To no one’s surprise, AEA Executive Secretary Paul Hubbert responsed quickly and negatively to the Governor’s proposal.

First, I want to make sure anyone who reads this understands where I am coming from.  I am a parent of three children in the public schools (two in Montgomery County, one in Elmore County), I am close to many teachers all over Alabama and know them to be outstanding professionals who work extremely hard.  This is not about the teachers failing our students, it is about the system we have built, in which our teachers work, failing all of us.

I understand the fear among many that charter schools will erode the quality of education in public schools and fear is natural, but we can’t build policy based on fear.  Even strong Democratic leaders like President Obama and Rep. Artur Davis believe charter schools are worth a shot.  So please don’t let anyone fool you into believing this an attempt to eliminate public schools.  When done well, charter schools ensure all schools perform at a higher level.

Let’s remember that a “quality” education isn’t easy to come by in Alabama as it is.  Many schools in this state are failing our students and we need to do something.  A huge windfall of new money for education is not coming (despite what Ron Sparks wants us to believe).  We have to be innovative in crafting solutions to improve our education system.  There are other approaches we can take, but those have all been shutdown in the legislature as well.  The time as come to try some real competition.

I certainly am not advocating, nor do I hope anyone else is, that we open the floodgates right from the get go.  The research on charter schools is mixed, but what it does tell us is that you can either create an atmosphere for excellent charter schools to sprout up or one for yet more failure.  We should take a measured approach and begin with allowing experimentation in the lowest performing districts in the state.  And it should never be about forcing students and parents out of existing schools, it should always be about choice.  If Alabamians truly believe their students are getting the best education possible, the experiment will die on the vine.

I also believe in ensuring our most vulnerable students are still provided the best we can offer.  Public charter schools do not generally have to adhere to the same requirements as public schools to serve those with special needs and the funding mechanisms should take that into account.

Finally, opponents of this action should realise that if we had been able to get any of a number of proposed reforms in place over the last couple of decades, I may not have been nearly as inclined to support this effort as I am today.  As it is, I think this is the best chance we have at bringing real alternatives and creativity into our education system.  We may fail to do it properly, and I challenge everyone involved to get it right, but we can’t fail to try.

UPDATE:  Markeshia Ricks of the Montgomery Advertiser fleshes out some additional details and opinion this morning.  It’s sounding like Bradley Byrne and I may be parting ways on part of the plan.  I agree with Dr. Joseph Morton,

But charter schools under a Byrne administration could differ from what state Superintendent of Education Joe Morton has said he might recommend and what local school boards are willing to accept.

For starters Byrne is against caps on the number of charter schools in the state. Morton has said he believes a limited number of charter schools in districts that have struggled to meet federal requirements for progress could benefit the state.

But Eric Mackey, president of the School Superintendents of Alabama, said the states that have had the most success with charter schools are the ones that limit the number of charters, that have stringent criteria for issuing those charters and that hold those schools accountable.

“But just opening it up and giving out two (hundred) or 300 charters is not a good idea,” he said.

I strongly agree.  Would we eventually lift the caps?  Perhaps, but we certainly don’t need to just throw the doors open right from the get-go, we should be measured in our approach and focus on the lowest performing schools first.