Names of Four Mayors Removed from Controversial Resolution Pushing Critical Race Theory in Public Schools After Document Exposed

by Debra Heine

 

The mayors of four major cities seemed to back away from sponsoring a resolution supporting Critical Race Theory (CRT) in public K-12 schools after their support for the deeply unpopular ideology was made public on social media.

The resolution, which was adopted by the U.S. Conference of Mayors, initially listed the following four mayoral sponsors: Louisville, Kentucky, Mayor Greg Fischer; Boise, Idaho, Mayor Lauren McLean; Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot; and Portland, Oregon, Mayor Ted Wheeler.

According to the resolution, the ā€œbasic tenantsā€ of CRT are: the ā€œrecognition that race is not biologically real, but it is socially constructedā€¦ā€; ā€œacknowledgment that racism is a normal feature of society and is embedded within systems and institutionsā€¦ā€; ā€œrejection of popular understandings about racism, including claims of meritocracy, colorblindness, and arguments that confine racism to a few bad applesā€¦ā€; and ā€œrecognition of the relevance of peopleā€™s everyday lives to scholarship, embracing the lived experiences of people of color ā€¦ and rejecting deficit-informed research that excludes the epistemologies of people of colorā€¦ā€

The resolution concludes by stating that ā€œthe nationā€™s mayors support the implementation of CRT in the public education curriculum to help engage our youth in programming that reflects an accurate, complete account of BIPOC [Black, Indigenous, (and) People of Color] history, and that the U.S. Conference of Mayors supports access to equitable programs that reflect history, decrease achievement gaps, and better ensure that BIPOC students receive resources that ensure their success upon the completion of their primary education.ā€

CASE

CRT foeĀ Christopher RufoĀ posted a screenshot of the entire document ontoĀ TwitterĀ on Wednesday.

ā€œBREAKING: The mayors of Chicago, Portland, Louisville, and Boise have officially endorsed Critical Race Theory in public schools and promised to drive ā€œthe implementation of CRT in the public education curriculumā€ across America,ā€ the independent journalist and filmmaker tweeted.

ā€œThis is a document straight from the Desk of Bozo the Clown, King of Clownworld,ā€ quipped fellow CRT critic James Lindsey onĀ Twitter.

By Thursday morningā€”after the resolution went viral on Twitterā€”all four mayorsā€™ names had disappeared from the controversial document.

A spokesperson for the Idaho mayor said in a statement to Fox News that the inclusion of her name on the resolution was a ā€œstaff error.ā€

ā€œMayor McLean did not give her name or sponsor the resolution at the conference of mayors,ā€ the spokesperson said. ā€œIt was a staff error. Signing on to this resolution wouldnā€™t make sense within Boise city limits since our school systems are operated by the Boise School District and West Ada School District, and she has no role in either.ā€

ā€œI think itā€™s really important to be clear that I didnā€™t, in fact, give my name or sponsor this resolution at the conference of mayors,ā€ McLean toldĀ BoiseDev.Ā ā€œIt was a staff error ā€“ and we know errors happen. And we wish this one hadnā€™t.ā€

The remaining three mayors have not yet explained why their names were removed from the document.

The offices of Fischer, Lightfoot and Wheeler did not immediately respond to inquiries from Fox News regarding the apparent retraction of sponsor names from the resolution on the Conference of Mayorā€™s website.

CRT is formally understood as an academic and legal analysis of race recognizing racism as a systemic problem affecting certain areas of society, but critics argue that the movement is divisive, especially when presented in classrooms, and separates children into groups of oppressors versus oppressed, privileged and underprivileged.

Rufo noted on Twitter that CRT apologists (likeĀ MSNBCā€™s Joy Reid) have argued disingenuously that ā€œcritical race theory is only in law schools.ā€

ā€œThen the NEA pledged to bring it to every K-12 school, the AFT promised to defend teachers who violate the law, and the Conference of Mayors endorsed it nationwide. They are political predators who want to harm your kids,ā€ he argued.

Rufo pointed out that the U.S. Conference of Mayors still endorses the Marxist racial theory, but because it is so deeply unpopular with most Americans, most politicians do not want to be associated with it.

ā€œIf you oppose Critical Race Theory, youā€™re in a giant majority that is mostly disenfranchised and held hostage by a tiny lunatic fringe,ā€ LindseyĀ tweeted.Ā ā€œStop being afraid of them. They fear that more than anything else.ā€

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Debra Heine reports for American Greatness.
Photo “Mayor Ted Wheeler” by Ted Wheeler. Photo “Mayor Lauren McLean” by Melanie Folwell CC BY-SA 4.0. “Mayor Greg Fischer” by Mayor Greg Fischer. “Mayor Lori Lightfoot” by Lori Lightfoot. Background Photo “2021 Adopted Resolutions” by U.S. Conference of Mayors.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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