
by Andrew Rotherham
A lot of people are asking: Whatโs going to happen on education in Virginia? Itโs a good question. And it matters beyond Virginaโs borders. The commonwealth took several big steps forward on schools over the past few years โ some initiated by the legislature (science of reading and assessment reform), and some by Governor Glenn Youngkin (innovative public lab schools across the commonwealth, more ambitious standards, transparency, and a real accountability system).
Enter Abigail Spanberger. A moderate Democrat, perhaps more by temperament than politics. She worked for the CIA before winning one of Virginiaโs vanishingly few swing districts to serve in Congress (she was my member of Congress for a time before retiring to run for governor).
She enters office with the wind at her back. Virginiaโs countercyclical off-year election cycle, Trumpโs abysmal numbers in the state, a non-Trump on the ballot electorate, and the government shutdown all handed Spanberger a legit landslide. Even seasoned observers and Democratic leaders were surprised by how well the party did โ picking up 13 House seats and giving the incoming governor a commanding 64โ36 majority. The state senate, not on the ballot, remains closely divided, though Democrats now hold a tiebreaker with the lieutenant governorโs seat.
Thereโs alreadyย early pushing and shoving โ mostly about higher ed, UVA in particular.ย Thisย 74ย article by Kevin Mahnkenย is a good place to start on Kโ12, andย Anne Hyslopโs just announced appointment as Kโ12 transition chairย is a positive signal. Anne, a Bellwether alum, was one of the first to call out the problems with ESSA, has state experience, and helped design Virginiaโs new accountability system. She discussed accountability and other issues recentlyย on Bellwetherโs LinkedIn Liveย along with Indianaโs Katie Jenner, state education leader Patricia Levesque, and longtime Senate aide David Cleary.)
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