Monday, July 16, 2018

We Told You So: OEA Turns On Republicans


 
We Told You So Months Ago
  Gotta love it when the RINOs start parroting what we were saying months ago. Weldon Watson, GOP Party Platform score of 8 points out of 100, with one correct vote out of 20 total votes, replied to the following Oklahoman editorial send by Pat Ownbey, GOP Party Platform score of 15 points out of 100, on Friday. Weldon had replied to the copy and paste editorial with: "Reminds me of the old adage, "Doing the impossible for the ungrateful."

Ownbey had sent out the editorial on Friday morning:


Union Targeting it's allies in GOP

Oklahoman Editorial  THIS year, at the Oklahoma Education Association's urging, most Republican legislators approved roughly $600 million in tax increases and provided an average $6,100 raise per teacher while boosting the school appropriation almost 20 percent. If Republicans thought those actions, which broke campaign promises for many, would win OEA support, they're learning otherwise now.
The OEA has released a list of teacher-affiliated candidate to bolster support for those individuals.  Reps. Greg Babinec, R-Cushing, and Scooter Park, R-Devol, both voted for tax increases and increased school funding. Both were ousted in primaries last week by OEA-touted opponents. Apparently, toeing the OEA line isn't enough to avoid being considered "anti-education."  Rep. Mark McBride, R-Moore, voted for tax increases. In April, he attended a town hall on education. In opening remarks at the event, Amanda Ewing, chief lobbyist for the OEA, introduced McBride and another lawmaker as "public education advocates." Now the OEA is touting the candidacy of a Democrat working to defeat McBride in November.
  Rep. Jadine Nollan, R-Sand Springs, voted for this year's tax increases and has been among the most liberal members of the House Republican caucus. Nollan has openly advocated for raising the income tax rate on individuals earning as little as $8,700, and she's called for raising energy taxes by an even greater amount than what was approved this year. Yet the OEA is highlighting the GOP candidate who forced Nollan into a runoff and the Democratic nominee Nollan could face in November.
  Reps. Terry O'Donnell, R-Tulsa; Dell Kerbs, R-Shawnee; Todd Russ, R-Cordell; and Chris Kannady, R-Oklahoma City; were all tax-increase Republicans who supported 2018's education spending increases. The OEA is touting opposing candidates in all four races.
  Without the votes of the above lawmakers, teacher pay raises probably don't happen this year. Yet now the teachers' union is targeting lawmakers who supported the union's agenda.  This pattern is nothing new. Two years ago, several lawmakers were elected as part of a "teacher caucus" movement. Sen. Greg McCortney, R-Ada, was endorsed by the OEA. His mother taught school. His father served more than 20 years on the Ada Board of Education. His wife served as vice president of the Ada City Schools Foundation.
  But in a March Facebook post, McCortney wrote, "I started this job as strongly supportive of public education as a person could be. The hateful actions of educators and their supporters toward me, my wife and especially my children over the past year have started putting cracks in that wall." After he supported a $450 million tax increase that failed because of unified Democratic opposition, McCortney wrote that Democrats who defeated the bill "were treated as champions of education" while he "was cussed at and told that I hate teachers."
Similarly, Sen. Micheal Bergstrom, R-Adair and a 20-year teacher, has written of how he was "chastised" and accused of "doing nothing" to help end the teacher walkout after he voted for tax and spending increases.
  Moving ahead, Republican legislators must understand the need to pass true education reform that improves student outcomes, and not just hike taxes and spending. Because supporting reform won't draw any more OEA opposition than what happens otherwise.

  Okay, and weren't we and the conservatives in the House saying the exact same thing throughout the special sessions and into the end of the regular session? Might save everyone involved some time to just listen next time.