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Mark McKinnon: Why I’m Working With Hillary Clinton Now (McCain/Bush advisor defects)
Daily Beast ^ | Jun 14, 2013 4:45 AM EDT

Posted on 06/14/2013 11:38:15 AM PDT by drewh

As a Republican, I never expected to be working with Hillary Clinton. But, because I’ve been through the partisan microwave so many times, I care more these days about problem-solving than scoring political points (which is why I helped cofound No Labels. I care more about what works than who wins).

I’ve spent the better part of my career in politics and public policy working on and fighting for education reforms. I worked for a Texas governor in the mid-’80s who passed the infamous “No Pass, No Play” rule, which meant if a student didn’t pass their courses, they couldn’t play football. You can imagine how that went over in Texas: it got the governor un-elected.

And it was work I was doing to support charter schools in Texas that was the focus of my initial meeting with George W. Bush, who went on to enact significant charter laws as governor of Texas. I later went to work for him when he ran for reelection, then worked on his campaigns for president, where we spent a lot of time talking about "No Child Left Behind," an idea which became landmark federal education legislation.

But as I’ve recently reflected on almost 30 years of working on this issue—after the billions of dollars that have been spent and hundreds of programs and pilots that have been tried—the fact is that we have made remarkably little progress. In fact, we’ve gone backward. I was shocked to see that while some innovative charter schools that represent very poor students are sending almost 100 percent of their students to college, nearly three-quarters of them are dropping out.

Then I began reading Republican David Brooks’s columns about emerging research and science revealing the wisdom of very early intervention strategies. It is increasingly clear that if learning and nutrition strategies are implemented with very young children, they will be significantly more likely to succeed in life—and less likely to need costly remediation later.

Folks on my side of the aisle will say it is heresy to be working with Hillary Clinton. Fortunately, at this stage of my life, I don’t care. Says Brooks: “millions of parents don’t have the means, the skill, or, in some cases, the interest in building their children’s future. Early childhood education is about building structures so both parents and children learn practical life skills.”

Seems like a very conservative approach to me. Invest a little early and save lots later.

“We’ve got big challenges; our students are falling further and further behind in math and science,” says Sara Martinez Tucker, CEO of the National Math + Science Initiative and the former undersecretary of education under President George W. Bush. “But we can fix it. The research shows that the early years really matter. Getting them excited. Getting them to want to learn about what’s out there. If we get it right there, hooked on either math or science, that’s huge. Not just for our kids, but for the future of our country.”

A year ago or so, I was connected with a nonprofit organization, The Next Generation, which is dedicated to precisely these issues. Since then I have been working closely with the organization’s professionals, who have been developing smart strategies on these topics.

Then a few months ago, Hillary Clinton expressed an interest in what we were doing. She wanted to learn more, which was not entirely surprising, given her early and long history of working on related issues. As she learned more about the Next Generation, we learned more about her thinking on the subject, which was insightful and intellectually penetrating. It became clear there was a lot of potential synergy and that a partnership made a lot of sense.

It pleased my conservative instincts to see Secretary Clinton’s push for a focus not on government solutions, but on personal responsibility and behavior, supported by private-sector approaches to the problem. To provide American parents with the resources they need to help their children succeed, Too Small to Fail will work to: • Promote new research on the science of children’s brain development and on the effect of early nutrition on childhood development; • Launch a personal action campaign aimed at encouraging parents and caregivers to take simple actions that are proven to improve learning and health; • Launch a private-sector action campaign designed to secure business commitments that will improve conditions for families; and • Convene childhood-development experts, parents, private-sector leaders, and other stakeholders in a major, national discussion that helps advance understanding of the science of early childhood development.

I know I’m going to take a lot of heat from some folks on my side of the aisle who will say it is heresy to be working with Hillary Clinton. Fortunately, at this stage of my life, I don’t care. More to the point, if hyper-partisans will look at these issues and the remarkable science and research surfacing now about the wisdom and efficacy of these strategies, I believe they will recognize it is the smart thing to do. It is the right thing to do. And it is the conservative thing to do.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Texas
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To: drewh

He helped Republicans lose and Hillary wants his advice?
What a joke!

I doubt Sarah Palin will be picking advisors with a history of losing presidential elections when she runs for president.


61 posted on 06/14/2013 1:36:01 PM PDT by RginTN
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Comment #62 Removed by Moderator

To: drewh
Duh! I think he was ALWAYS working for Hill, or at least for the Dems. So were most of McPain's advisers , as well as Mitt's--actually they were mostly one and the same.

vaudine

63 posted on 06/14/2013 1:55:57 PM PDT by vaudine
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To: VRWCarea51; cherry
Unfortunately, Cherry, the stupid voter is not the exclusive property of the Democrat Party. Many Republicans are just as stupid and just as ill-informed.

The difference is that the Democrat Party has developed a system for getting the votes out of their stupid voters, whether the dumb bastards show up or not, and furthermore they are not limited to the actual number of the stupid. You see, they have a series of processes they can use to multiply them and develop as many votes as are needed to carry an election.

OTOH, the Republican Stupid Voter (aka "Our Dumb Bastards") gets confused, or angry, or angry and confused, and just stays home on election day. They answer my-not-always-polite queries with,
"Oh what difference does it make? They're all the same bunch'o'crooks, etc. etc. etc, my vote doesn't count, I need a ride, gotta do the garden, watchin' the game...yadda yadda yadda."
I estimate that at least 20% of my VFW pals do not show up! Then they hang around bitchin' about "Obama," who ain't got nuthin' top do with nuthin'!

To repeat: The equally stupid Democrats say the same thing, but their voting is handled for them. As long as the GOP turns a blind eye to fraud ... and neglects driving the stupid Republicans into registration and actually voting ... no chance, baby.

64 posted on 06/14/2013 2:10:58 PM PDT by Kenny Bunk ("Obama" The Movie. Introducing Reggie Love as "Monica." .)
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To: Slings and Arrows

Perhaps he’s a homo.


65 posted on 06/14/2013 4:24:22 PM PDT by IbJensen (Liberals are like Slinkies, good for nothing, but you smile as you push them down the stairs.)
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To: IbJensen
Perhaps he’s a homo.

Probably not, read his bio. He was a big Dem media guy before working for GW Bush. Acolyte of Paul Begala with names like Ann Richards in his resume.

He strikes me as very much a Dick Morris type. Hired political gun, goes wherever the power and money are. Remember that Morris consulted for both Jesse Helms AND Howard Metzenbaum. During the same freakin' campaign cycle.
66 posted on 06/14/2013 4:33:32 PM PDT by tanknetter
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To: tanknetter

So he’s basically a whore.


67 posted on 06/14/2013 4:34:23 PM PDT by dfwgator
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To: dfwgator
So he’s basically a whore.

That's my take. He's gone Dem to GOP and now back to Dem. Granted he didn't do what Morris managed with the Helms/Metzenbaum consulting (same cycle for opposite ends of the political spectrum). This guy is at least allowing an "honorable gap" between his flips ;-)
68 posted on 06/14/2013 4:41:30 PM PDT by tanknetter
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To: drewh

It is amazing who you can work for when you don’t have core beliefs.


69 posted on 06/14/2013 5:13:17 PM PDT by fini
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To: drewh

The phrase “I care about problem solving” always gives it away. Liberal democrat.


70 posted on 06/14/2013 6:42:02 PM PDT by DPMD
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