‘Parents are awake’: School activists prepare for long-term staying power

Two years after COVID-19 school closures provided the catalyst for a nationwide grassroots parent movement, activists across the country have established an infrastructure network to ensure the movement does not fizzle out.

Highlighting the staying power of parent activism was the first annual Moms for Liberty Summit, held last month in Tampa, Florida. The event, which featured appearances from Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL), Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL), former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, and others brought together several hundred parent activists from across the country.

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With more than 200 local chapters in 38 states and over 100,000 members, Moms for Liberty’s rapidly and continually growing network is perhaps a preview of the long-term outlook of local parent activism, even as the motivating factors that prompted its birth in 2020 recede from memory.

In an interview at the organization’s summit last month, Moms for Liberty co-founder Tina Descovich said the grassroots parent movement is “very sustainable” and the structure of the organization was expressly designed to endure.

“The reason we set it up the way we did is for sustainability,” Descovich said. “We’ve seen for a long time that parents have neglected public education for the most part.”
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Descovich said parents in the past, including herself, sent their children to school with the idea that “everything is wonderful,” especially as their children would come home with stellar report cards.

“We neglected our duty to stay involved on what school districts are passing and doing,” she said. “And I think when parents are awake, they’ll never go back to sleep again. And so when we set [Moms for Liberty] up, we did it in a way that had legal structures for each chapter so that it is sustainable.”

Each Moms for Liberty chapter, Descovich explained, maintains its own bylaws, annually elects its own leaders, and has an infrastructure in place that allows the group’s members to respond to each district’s unique challenges.

“There will be issues that come and go,” she said, “Yes, there will be people that, now that schools are open, may not be as active in the chapter, but there’s going to be a new issue, there’s going to be a new curriculum. Before this, there was common core. Before that, there were issues with sex education. This has been going on for decades, but this is the first time that there’s been a sustainable solution.”

And while Moms for Liberty boasts an impressive network of member chapters, the organization does not fully encompass the degree to which parent activism has found a foothold in school districts across the country.

Hundreds of school districts and localities have their own independent activist groups that likewise sprang up in the midst of COVID-19 school closures and later moved on to other issues such as critical race theory and gender theory in school curricula.

Nicole Neily, the president of Parents Defending Education, another parent activist organization, told the Washington Examiner earlier this year that the growth of parent activism was “truly astonishing” and noted that its continued success was due in part to bringing parents together from all sorts of social, political, and racial backgrounds.

“From coast to coast, disenchanted parents have found each other and coalesced around a few simple, discrete ideas: Parents should be involved in their children’s education,” Neily said. “Children should not face discrimination on the basis of immutable characteristics like race or sex. Students should be taught how to think, not what to think.”

“It’s interesting that the current frustration with education transcends political and racial lines — so there are many unusual bedfellows who find themselves working together towards a common goal,” she added.

But forming chapters and organizations was only the first step. Moms for Liberty-affiliated activists and their independent counterparts have taken significant steps to influence political outcomes, beginning with school board elections.

While Moms for Liberty’s national organization does not endorse school board candidates themselves, Descovich and her co-founder Tiffany Justice told the Washington Examiner that they help chapters vet school board candidates in their own communities.

“[The chapters] know who their school board members are, they know how they voted, they know if they … have stood up for parental rights,” Descovich said.

The new attention on school board members and elections has led to scores of new conservative school board members over the last year, many of whom campaigned on opposing COVID-19 mandates and critical race theory in schools.

And with the increased engagement in local politics from parent activists, high-profile politicians such as Florida’s DeSantis have begun offering their own endorsements to school board candidates.

Moms for Liberty endorsed DeSantis’s reelection bid for Florida governor last month, while the governor has backed 29 different school board candidates throughout the Sunshine State.

“I’m proud to release my full slate of pro-parent, student-first school board candidate endorsements,” DeSantis said last month. “Our school board members are on the frontlines of defending our students and standing up for parental rights.”

The parent movement, its organization, and its political effectiveness led Parents Defending Education’s Neily to compare it to the Tea Party in 2010.

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“The grassroots enthusiasm we’ve seen over the past 18 months from parents has been truly astonishing — the last time I can remember anything like this forming was during the Tea Party,” Neily said of the fiscally conservative movement that fueled the 2010 red wave in Congress.

“Without a doubt, parents have recognized that there is strength in numbers — and courage is contagious. We’ve heard many stories where a local activist speaks up and then is contacted by dozens of people in their community who hold similar views.”

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