While Florida governor and prospective Trump heir Ron deSantis has been earning plaudits in conservative circles for keeping schools in his state open during the pandemic, it should be noted that a Democratic governor from one of the most left-leaning states in the nation has done pretty much the same thing.
Former Rhode Island governor (and recently appointed Secretary of Commerce) Gina Raimondo, like deSantis a product of humble Italian-American roots and a graduate of Harvard, analyzed all of the data she could find on keeping schools open and concluded, "If you look at the risk that children who go virtual will be left behind—get behind academically, suffer from severe mental health issues, suffer from food insecurity, suffer from abuse and neglect—it's 100%. One-hundred percent certainty." (New York Times Magazine, February 14, 2021).
And so Gov. Raimondo fought to keep Rhode Island schools open, even offering to help parents in Warwick, R.I., sue their local school district to reopen schools.
It is too easy to paint officeholders who have pushed for open schools as teachers' union-hating zealots, but here is a clear example of a Democrat whose decisions were driven not by partisan rancor, but by data. —Jim V., New York
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