Safety through solidarity! No on SB 1277, SB 1287, and AB 2925
JVP California and others have been
plugging away for months in an effort to defeat four education-related
bills in the state Legislature . Each one in its own way attempted to
promote the conflation of criticism of Israel/support for Palestinian
rights with antisemitism. Along
with allies, we have opposed this false narrative by visiting the
offices of most legislators, submitting letters of opposition and
testifying at committee hearings. Last
week, we were thrilled to learn that one of the bills, AB 2918, meant
to place obstacles before implementation of inclusive and progressive
ethnic studies curriculums, was withdrawn in the face of opposition,
including from teachers unions. Our efforts do make a difference. The
other three have all been amended, some significantly, in response to
our and others’ objections, making them “less bad.” They may well pass –
the votes will be any day now –, but we are still making a final effort to defeat them. Will you take a minute now to contact your California legislators and tell them to vote no on all three bills? The
first, SB 1277, is a dangerous bill that would put teacher training and
curriculum development about genocide education for grades 7-12 in the
hands of outside, anti-Palestinian groups that deny the genocide being
carried out by Israel in Gaza. Genocide education should be
unbiased and inclusive. It should be overseen, with the transparency
required of public agencies, by educators working directly for or with
the state Department of Education. It should not be outsourced to
private groups, let alone ones with their own problematic political
agenda. The two additional bills also up for floor votes any day are:: SB
1287, meant to stifle college student protests by ordering the CSU
system to adopt new, vague “codes of conduct” and enforce them in
unspecified ways. (The bill requests the same of UCs, while community colleges were relieved of the obligation in a last-minute concession.) Such
enforcement could well be challenged and found unconstitutional,
costing the state boatloads of money it doesn’t have.Though several
flagrantly unconstitutional provisions were amended out along the way,
SB 1287 still sends a chilling, implied message to campus defenders of
Palestinian rights/critics of Israel, who already face enhanced scrutiny
and are more likely than others to be silenced and harshly disciplined. AB
2925, which would require public higher education institutions to train
students on various forms of bias and discrimination, but based on
unreliable law enforcement data to determine which are most common.
Unsurprisingly, using current statistics, it would make optional the
inclusion of Islamophobia, anti-Palestinian sentiment and discrimination
against both groups, widely known to be underreported – in itself an
indication that they need to be included. Will you help defeat these bills by calling and writing your Assembly member and senator as well as Assembly speaker Robert Rivas, Senate President Pro Tem Mike McGwire and Gov. Newsom?