Stanley Kurtz writes for National Review Online about two leading Democrats’ contrasting approach toward leftist causes.
California Governor Gavin Newsom and Minnesota Governor Tim Walz are likely candidates for president in 2028. Each has adopted a different approach to the leftist cultural extremism we call woke. Let’s explore that contrast as it pertains to the issue of ethnic studies, a close cousin of critical race theory and a kind of ultimate exemplar of woke. The crusade to mandate ethnic studies radicalism in all K–12 classes has advanced further in California and Minnesota than in any other state. A Newsom/Walz comparison, then, should tell us something important about the direction of the Democrats and the fate of woke in the culture at large.
In brief, Newsom is running away from woke, while Walz is running toward it. That said, each has attempted, in his own way, to insulate himself from the charge of leftist radicalism. Ethnic studies embodies the reigning extremism of the Democrats’ base, so much so that it can neither be safely embraced nor entirely disavowed by Democratic aspirants for national office.
Newsom, we know, is attempting to refashion himself as a liberal-yet-post-woke Democrat. … Newsom has been walking a tightrope on ethnic studies for years, and lately he has been leaning more to the right. …
… Newsom, then, has played this issue in a clever — if slippery — way. He rebuked the hyper-radical ethnic studies curriculum yet created conditions that encouraged its adoption by a great many districts. In other words, Newsom can tell either side of this controversy that he has given them something. …
… Minnesota under Tim Walz, on the other hand, has surpassed California in ethnic studies radicalism. Since 2020, Walz has been on a mission to mandate ultraradical “liberated ethnic studies” in Minnesota’s schools. He has stacked the various committees that create state standards and advise on curriculum with Minnesota’s most extreme ethnic studies advocates.