Obama’s Applause Lines on Education

teacherPresident Barack Obama’s 35-minute speech on education at Wright Middle School in Madison on Wednesday was interrupted by applause at many points, but most of the reaction was pretty low-key. Three lines drew what seemed to be more enthusiastic responses from the crowd of more than 500, most of them teachers, parents, and students at the 250-student school. Each of those lines says something significant about public sentiment and Obama administration priorities on education issues.

One: Obama said, “I’ve got to be honest, we’ve got to do a better job of moving bad teachers out of the classroom, once they’ve been given an opportunity to do it right.” His calls for recruiting higher-quality teachers and rewarding top teachers better didn’t get applause, but this line did. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said in a telephone interview after the speech that this didn’t surprise him — it happens wherever the president speaks about education, he said. Raising the quality of teachers, in large part by doing more to identify quality teachers (and those who aren’t) is one of the highest, but most difficult, priorities for Obama and Duncan. And moving out the ones who really aren’t good at it is especially difficult, particularly given the defensiveness of teachers’ unions when such issues come up.

Two: His call for overhauling the way testing is done nationwide. 

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President Chester A. Arthur and the Birthers, 1880’s Style

arthurThe Obama citizenship “debate” has surprisingly brought former president Chester A. Arthur (1829-1886) back into the pages of American newspapers, which is no small feat.  Unlike President Obama, who is clearly eligible to hold the nation’s highest office, Arthur, the twenty-first president (1881-84), may well have been an “unconstitutional” president.

Although Arthur is frequently seen as Millard Fillmore primary competition for the title of “Most Obscure President in U.S. History,” the circumstances of his birth have raised questions eeriely similar to those asked about President Barack Obama by the birthers.

Before 1880, Chester Arthur was a minor New York City politician who was a protégé of Sen. Roscoe Conkling of the Empire State.  Although he was a prominent lawyer, he had never run for, let alone held, elective office at any level.  Nevertheless, at the 1880 Republican Presidential Convention in Chicago, he was added to the Republican national ticket as the running mate of presidential candidate James Garfield.  Arthur was selected to balance the slate geographically — Garfield was from Ohio, part of the Midwest in an era when regions mattered — and to placate Sen. Conkling, a presidential aspirant himself and the leader of the Stalwart faction of the Republican Party.

In 1871, President Grant, with Conkling’s blessings, had appointed Arthur to the lucrative position as Collector of the Port of New York.  However, seven years later, he had been removed from that position by President Rutherford B. Hayes, as part of a presidential effort to crack down on the spoils system.  Although there was no evidence of real corruption at the custom house while Arthur was Collector, it was also clear that Arthur had no objections to padding the Collector’s payroll with loyal Republicans. Once elected, Arthur remained loyal to Conkling and the spoils system, and he and Garfield clashed repeatedly on questions of federal appointments, which led Garfield to ban Arthur from the White House.

However, on July 2, 1881, Garfield was assassinated by Charles Guiteau, a deranged supporter of Conkling, who, after shooting the president, shouted, “I am a Stalwart of the Stalwarts . . . Arthur is president now!”  Guiteau’s two shots actually did not prove to be fatal, and Garfield lived until September 19, when he was finally done in by a combination of infection and poor medical care.

Although he was a product of, and, at least initially, a supporter of the spoils system, as president Arthur actually turned out to be fairly progressive and a strong supporter of civil service reform.  In 1883, he signed the Pendleton Act, which established the first Civil Service Commission.  Although he sought his party’s presidential nomination for 1885, he was not renominated by the Republican Party.  Even so, he left office widely respected by members of both parties.  Even Mark Twain begrudgingly acknowledged that “it would be hard indeed to better President Arthur’s administration.”

Questions of Arthur’s eligibility for the nation’s highest office surfaced during the 1880 campaign.  Arthur was the son of an Irishman who emigrated first to Canada and the then to the United States, and who finally became a naturalized United States citizen in 1843, fifteen years after his son Arthur’s birth in 1829.  Arthur’s mother was a United States citizen born in Vermont but whose family emigrated to Canada where she met and married her husband.  By the time of Arthur’s birth, his parents had moved back to Vermont.

The controversy over Arthur’s citizenship status centers around the place of Arthur’s actual birth.  By one account he was born in his family’s home in Franklin County, Vermont.  If this was true, then he was clearly a natural born citizen.  On the other hand, the competing account has it that he was born during his pregnant mother’s visit to her family’s home in Canada.

If the latter story is true, then Arthur was technically foreign-born, and in 1829, citizenship in such cases passed to the child only if the father was a United States citizen, and, of course, at this point Arthur’s father was still a citizen of the British Empire.

The principal advocate of the “born in Canada” theory was Arthur’s fellow New York lawyer Arthur P. Hinman who was hired in 1880 by the Democratic Party to investigate Arthur’s ancestry.  Hinman initially undermined his owned credibility by embracing an argument that Arthur was himself born in Ireland and didn’t come to the United States until he was fourteen years old.  That story was patently false and easily disproven.

However, Hinman later discovered acquaintances of the Arthur family in Canada who told him the story of Arthur’s accidental Canadian birth.  Convinced that he now had proof of Arthur’s foreign citizenship, he published his findings in 1884 in a short book entitled How a Subject of the British Empire Became President of the United States.  Hinman’s book appeared near the end of Arthur’s presidency, and no official action was ever taken on the basic of his alleged evidence.

Arthur himself always insisted that he was born in Vermont, but he may not have known the place of his birth. By the time he was six years old, his family had left Vermont for New York, and he never lived in the Green Mountain State again.  It is possible that his parents considered the circumstances of his Canadian birth to be personally embarrassing and never shared the details of the story with him.

An investigation by the Boston Globe earlier this year — no doubt inspired by the Birther controversy — confirmed that there are no official records regarding Arthur’s birth in either Vermont or in Canada.  See Boston Globe, “Chester Arthur Rumor Still Lingers in Vermont,” August 17, 2009.

We will probably never know if Arthur was really eligible to be president of the United States in 1881.

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President Obama Behind in the Count in the Sports Arena

Whatever success he may have in regard to health care reform, economic recovery, or the war in Afghanistan, President Barack Obama has already demonstrated that his ability to influence the world of sport is quite limited.  His unsuccessful efforts to convince the International Olympic Committee to award the 2016 Summer Olympics to his adopted hometown of Chicago have been well documented in recent days.

Furthermore, his call for college football to institute a playoff system to determine the champion of what most people still call Division 1A football has fared no better.  Although such a change has admittedly not been a top priority of Obama’s administration, he did quite openly throw his support with those opposing the current BCS championship system (based on polls and giving priority to the teams that make up the six so-called BCS conferences)  both during the campaign and after he was elected.

Support for Obama’s position seemed to congeal at the end of the 2008-09 college season when the BCS formula left undefeated University of Utah out of the BCS championship game and undefeated Boise State and Texas Christian University (which would finish the season ranked #7 in the country in the AP poll) out of BCS bowl games altogether.

On January 9, 2009, eleven days before Obama’s inauguration and the day after one-loss Florida defeated one-loss Oklahoma for the BCS championship, Rep. Joe Barton of Texas, the ranking Republican on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, introduced a bill that would prohibit as a “deceptive practice” the promotion of a postseason NCAA Division I football game as a national championship game unless it was the final game of a traditional playoff.   Barton represented a district that abutted Fort Worth, the home of TCU, and his bill was co-sponsored by fellow Texas Republican Michael T. McCaul and the peripatetic former Black Panther Bobby Rush (D-IL), whose constituents include Barack and Michelle Obama.

Six days later, Democrat Neil Abercrombie of Obama’s native Hawaii proposed a somewhat less dramatic approach when he introduced a nonbinding resolution calling for a playoff system and for a Justice Department investigation into the legality of the BCS system under the federal antitrust laws.  Abercrombie’s resolution was endorsed by Lynn Westmoreland (R-GA), Jim Matheson (D-UT), and Michael K. Simpson (R-ID), all of whom represented districts lacking teams in BCS conferences.  The following day, a third bill was introduced, this time by Republican Gary Miller of California.  Rather than label the BCS system a fraud (as Barton’s bill would do) Miller’s proposal denied all federal funds to schools in the Division I Football Bowl Subdivision unless the championship game resulted from a playoff system.

However, the movement to force the NCAA to adopt a playoff system quickly ran out of steam once the new president was inaugurated.  Although  Barton and Miller endorsed each other’s bills and Abercrombie’s resolution, and Abercrombie signed on as a co-sponsor of Miller’s bill (but not Barton’s), only two other congressmen, Ken Calvert (R-CA) and  John Carter (R-TX), subsequently endorsed any of the above legislation.  Barton and Miller’s bills both died in committee in January while Abercrombie’s resolution was apparently tabled in March.  Hearings conducted in May by the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Commerce, Trade and Consumer Protection Subcommittee attracted almost no attention.

The idea that Congress might intervene on behalf of a playoff was briefly revived in July when Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, the ranking Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Antitrust, Competition Policy and Consumer Rights held hearings on the legality of the BCS system.  Although Hatch’s hearings primarily focused on the possibility of the Justice Department prosecuting the NCAA under the federal antitrust laws, they appeared also to revive the idea of direct congressional intervention.  During the Hatch hearings, Congressman Barton, who had earlier denounced the BCS as a form of Communism, predicted that if the NCAA did not adopt a playoff system by the start of the next season, Congress would intervene and impose one itself.

Well, the NCAA did nothing, and Congress followed suit.   The president, presumably, was busy with other matters.

Given the reluctance of Congress to interfere with the sports industry, even after 50+ years of investigatory hearings, in matters of franchise relocation, expansion, pay television, and performance-enhancing drugs, it would have been shocking had it been moved to act in regard to what is clearly a matter of style rather than substance.

But now that he has two strikes, the president should be careful before he takes another swing at the sports industry.

[Thanks to John Foust for bringing several misspellings in the original version of this post to our attention.  Eds.]

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