Primary Watch: Ignoring Early Education
As the Democratic primary campaign season rolls on鈥攕eemingly interminably鈥攚e鈥檝e read new articles about every imaginable aspect of the campaign (and ). Today we were even treated to a about how Democratic superdelegates鈥 children鈥攁nd Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle鈥檚 7-year-old grandson鈥攁re persuading them to back Barack Obama. Yet we at Early Ed Watch have seen almost no coverage on a subject near and dear to our hearts鈥攖he candidates鈥 proposals for early education. While it鈥檚 certainly fascinating to hear about how children are helping Obama, we think voters would rather know what Obama鈥攁nd his opponent Hillary Clinton鈥攑lan to do to help children learn.
Second, this is one issue where there are real policy differences between Clinton and Obama. The general consensus in this election has been that, for all the contention between the two Democratic frontrunners, their actual policy positions and most issues are quite similar. That鈥檚 not true when it comes to early education. Sure, both Clinton and Obama propose spending a lot of money to educate young children. But there are big differences in what they want to spend that money on. Senator Clinton would focus investment on expanding access to high-quality pre-k for all four-year-olds, and would improve the quality of state pre-k programs. Senator Obama, by contrast, would allow states to use funds to improve childcare and education for children from birth through age five. His plan does not set standards for pre-k quality or pledge to make pre-k universal. These significant differences in the candidates鈥 early education plans align with differences in their policy views on other issues鈥攕uch as health care.
Third, the Democratic candidates鈥 early education proposals mark a dramatic break from the Bush administration鈥檚 record. Under the Bush administration, funding for Head Start and childcare programs stagnated, and the administration even sought cuts for some key programs. But Clinton and Obama are right in tune with the action in the states, where governors and legislators from both parties have been increasing early education investment. That鈥檚 certainly true in
So why aren鈥檛 the media paying attention to early education issues in this cycle? We can鈥檛 say for sure. Numerous media critics have pointed out that campaign coverage tends to focus on the 鈥渉orserace鈥 and personalities more than policy issues. But part of the problem is that the candidates themselves aren鈥檛 talking up their early education proposals all that much鈥攁 real missed opportunity, in our opinion.