the staff of the Ridgewood blog
Madison NJ, at the League of Women Voters of Ridgewood candidates forum on several occasions during the evening the audience was told that the school board was not the place to debate state education policy .
The latest FDU poll seems to echo that sentiment:
While New Jersey residents favor Democratic over Republican candidates in the upcoming race for the state legislature, Republican attacks based on parental control of schools cut into those margins substantially, potentially putting Democratic control of the General Assembly at risk. According to the latest results from the FDU Poll, asking residents about the parental control issue makes them six points more likely to say that they’ll support the Republican candidate in the upcoming election in their district, and nine points less likely to support the Democratic candidate.
“Republican candidates are using these attacks because they work,” said Dan Cassino, a professor of Government and Politics at FDU, and the director of the poll. “If voters are thinking about parental control of schools when they go to the ballot box, Democrats are in real trouble.”
In November, all 80 seats in the New Jersey General Assembly and the 40 seats in the State Senate will be up for election. In the 2021 elections, Republicans gained six seats in the General Assembly, and even though that ballot also featured a gubernatorial election, only 40 percent of eligible voters cast a ballot. In the 2019 race, the last time an election was headlined by state legislative elections, turnout was just 27 percent.
As the November election is less than three weeks away, a new poll by Fairleigh Dickinson University shows that not only do more than 76% of New Jerseyans “want to influence what their children are taught in public schools,” but they prefer Republicans over Democrats on the issue of parental control.
While state Democrats are trying to take away the rights of parents when it comes to their children’s education, state Republicans are empowering parents to have a voice in the classroom. “New Jerseyans are not fooled by the fact that Democrats want to decide what students learn in the classroom. Voters are ready to elect more state Republicans this November who will continue to champion parental involvement and send Democrats packing for wanting to be the ultimate guardian.” –RSLC Spokesperson Stephanie Rivera
Overall, 37 percent of NJ residents who say that they’re likely to vote in the upcoming election (or already have cast a ballot) say that they’ll vote for the Democratic candidate in their district, while 29 percent say that they’ll vote for the Republican, and the remainder (27 percent) aren’t sure.
But asking about the parental control issue changes these figures substantially. In order to test the effectiveness of Republican messaging on parental control of schools, half of respondents were asked about their views on the issue before being asked if they were likely to vote in the upcoming election, and which candidate they’d support. A quarter of residents – 24 percent – say that parents should be able to choose what schools do and do not teach. About the same number – 22 percent – say that parents should not really influence curricula. The majority (52 percent) say that parents should have some control over what’s taught in schools. Democrats are more likely than other partisan groups to say that parents should have little control; Republicans are more likely to say that parents should have complete control.
Priming respondents to think about the parental control issue with this question doesn’t significantly change the reported likelihood of voting, but it does change who voters say that they’ll support, especially among political independents. In the unprimed condition – when the parental control question is asked after vote choice – independents prefer Democratic candidates over Republicans by 20 points (28 to 8, with 42 percent undecided). When the parental control question is asked first, independents prefer Republicans by 16 points (24 to 8, with 63 percent undecided). The priming has only marginal effects on self-identified Republicans and Democrats.
The net effect is that when NJ voters aren’t asked about parental control of schools, they say that they’ll vote for the Democratic candidate over the Republican candidate by a 16 point margin (42 to 26); when they’re primed to think about it, they still prefer Democrats – but only by one point, 33 to 32, a difference that’s not statistically significant.
“This issue is doing a lot to move independents into the Republican column,” said Cassino. “The question, though, is whether those independent voters can be mobilized in what’s normally a very low turnout election.”
The news isn’t all bad for Democrats in the state. Even as Republican candidates have made attacks against Democratic Governor Phil Murphy a major part of their campaigns, his job approval has remained stable since the FDU Poll last measured it in May, with 44 percent of residents (including 73 percent of Democrats) saying that they approve of the job he’s doing as governor, up from the 40 percent approval he had a year ago.
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The two Parental Rights candidates for the BOE have no credentials for the job. Carpetbaggers are not needed in ridgewood.
I watched the LWV forum. Five interesting candidates and two disrupters
Given 1/2 the kids can’t do grade level math in a top 5 NJ school system disruption is needed over njea failures
You just want groups like “Mothers for Liberty”, to take over and push your agenda. This assault on what parents actually want for their children is happening all over the country, often forcibly and without the consent of the community, under the guise of parental Rights”. At least we have the chance here to stop people like this from getting close to any schools.
Using the reasoning that we need “system disruption” as a validation for such candidates is extremely dangerous. You then have people who have no idea what they are doing in a position to forcibly indoctrinate children, which ruins doing proper educating. I just need to point to the current disaster happening in Florida with their education system as the perfect example of this. Do you want the children of NJ to not have any chance for good higher education down the road, because that’s where this leads.
If the most important issue was off limits at the candidate forum, then stand clear of any candidate aligned w the Teachers Union. TU wants full control over your child
Which 2 are the parental rights candidates? We need to support them.