Pre-K and the Right
In an otherwise solid piece about Oklahoma’s universal pre-K program -- the nation’s gold standard that also happens to be in a solid red state -- the Times’ David Leonhardt fumbles toward the end when he writes: “…preschool cuts across some of the usual ideological lines. Liberals like its antipoverty bent; conservatives prefer education to straight income redistribution….The biggest opponents tend to be religious conservatives worried about the creation of a nanny state.” Leaving aside that liberals support universal pre-K for all kinds of good reasons beyond its ‘bent’ (sic), the broad conservative movement – not just the religious right -- HATES the idea. Why? Not only because it’s an expansion of government, but because it’s an expansion of government that also works. Movement conservatives really hate stuff like that, because it makes their cerebrums itch.
The right has opposed Head Start since day one. And movement fortresses like Heritage, Cato, the Reason Foundation, the Pacific Research Institute, the Heartland Institute, and so forth have spewed out their usual intellectually bankrupt garbage for years attacking the idea of any new public investments in pre-school. At the state and local level, some Republican officials have indeed supported universal pre-school. But highlighting the broader conservative movement’s opposition to an increasingly popular idea that's effective is another way that our side can continue to isolate, shrink, and ultimately drown the right in a bathtub. They are running out of ideas, and no one should be confused that pre-K is in any semblance one of theirs.
