KLA
Slate of Conservative political novices win school board election races.
The four candidates, Katie Stewart, Sara Jonas, Bob Bibb, and Linda Marie Hausfeld, ran together as "Four For Forest Hills" on a platform against critical race theory being taught in schools. The four candidates were also backed by the "Ohio Values Voters" group, a political nonprofit that backs candidates who support pro-life policies and "family values."
Source.
This is exactly what parents need to be doing across America to combat Leftism.
Hope it becomes a big trend.
ADA
Scott: GOP Exploiting CRT to Win Races
Senator Rick Scott continues to project optimism about the electoral climate for Republicans, forecasting an "unbelievable" shift in school boards in 2022. During an interview Wednesday morning on Fox News Radio's Brian Kilmeade Show, the Senator said there would be an "unbelievable number of school board changes this next year."
Scott expects cultural backlash to prevail, "Because parents are fed up with these school boards telling them that your kid's oppressed or your kid's an oppressor. That is so crazy," Scott added.
Scott, the chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, closed out 2021 trumpeting much of the same message he has all year, an expectation that critical race theory can be used to mobilize November voters.
ADA
Republican Party's Midterms Strategy: Sow Outrage
Originally posted by Adam_PoE
Senator Rick Scott continues to project optimism about the electoral climate for Republicans, forecasting an "unbelievable" shift in school boards in 2022. During an interview Wednesday morning on Fox News Radio's Brian Kilmeade Show, the Senator said there would be an "unbelievable number of school board changes this next year."Scott expects cultural backlash to prevail, "Because parents are fed up with these school boards telling them that your kid's oppressed or your kid's an oppressor. That is so crazy," Scott added.
Scott, the chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, closed out 2021 trumpeting much of the same message he has all year, an expectation that critical race theory can be used to mobilize November voters.
Emboldened by a string of off-cycle electoral victories, Republicans are embracing the culture war battles that Donald Trump waged from the White House as a strategy for winning back control of the House and Senate in the 2022 midterm elections. "Lean Into the Culture War," was the title of a June memo from the leader of the House Republican Study Committee, Indiana congressman Jim Banks.
Grievance politics is not a new strategy for Republicans. In 1968, Richard Nixon employed the "Southern Strategy" to exploit white racial grievances coded in language such as "law and order" and "states' rights." But as partisanship grows and the parties become increasingly hostile to one another, so too has the potential political benefit of cultural warfare that inflames division and energizes their base.