Once upon a time, Walters was a history teacher, and pretty good at it by many accounts. But his trek to the higher levels of Oklahoma politics has been accompanied by lurch into MAGAville, where he somehow became a chosen buddy of Governor Stitt. That's despite the fact that he mismanaged a bunch of federal relief funds in an attempt to boost vouchers. He tried to make an example out of a school librarian who let students, you know, read books.
Once Walters was elected to the State Superintendent spot, he made it clear that his brand would be culture war baloney; one of his first acts was to take down the Oklahoma Educators Hall of Fame pictures, and when folks protested, he offered a statement:
Walters drew headlines for moves like explaining that Tulsa Race Massacre was not about race. He called the teachers union a "terrorist organization." He also proposed a host of rules for restricting reading, mandatory outing of students, searching out the dread CRT, and backing it all up with threats to take away a district's accreditation if they dared to defy him. In fact, just today followed the Chris Rufo playbook and announced his intent to ban DEI from all schools.
By February, Rep. Mark McBride of the Education Committee was ready to "put this gentleman in a box" and "focus on public education and not his crazy destruction of public education."
Things have not improved since. Walters has tried to push school prayers, the proposed religious charter school, and a variety of other hard right christianist supremacy noises.
But while Walters' ideological activism may draw the headlines, there also seems to be a problem with basic competence in the job.
Employees have been fleeing the department--80 gone by September. In May, one departed whistleblower said that Walters office had simply failed to follow through on millions of dollars in federal grant money. Terri Grissom estimated between $35 and $40 million hasn't been given to districts to spend, and uncounted other millions hadn't been applied for at all. And Grissom says that Walters simply lied to legislators about the state of grants. This fall, districts have discovered that Walters' office has somehow gummed up the works so badly that millions in federal grants are not getting to the schools where they could do some good.
Another resignation came from Pamela Smith-Gordon, a handpicked Walters ally who left out of frustration with the lack of leadership. She sent an angry letter that said in part:
The lack of Walters physical presence in the office has been a recurring theme. Reported Rep. Jacob Rosencrans
We’re hearing from folks that are looking in and they're all saying the same thing. Ryan Walters isn’t there. I talked to someone who is a constituent of mine who said that he is not a mean guy. He is always there with a handshake and a smile, but he is never there, literally.
In response to Smith-Gordon's departure, McBride (who is an actual Republican) said, “I really don’t know what’s going on over there. Nobody does. There is some lack of transparency.”
Walters' department, which regularly cranks out Trump-style PR about how Walters is "driving change in education for Oklahoma students like never before" doesn't just stonewall the legislature--they thumb their nose at it. When McBride made a second request for certain basic information from the department, Walters' top advisor Matt Langston sent a note--which someone slipped under McBride's office doors--saying "Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me." (Fun fact: Langston allegedly lives in Texas.) In another response was a letter from Langston, on OSDE letterhead, calling McBride a "whiny Democrat."
In response to this petty dickishness, House Demnocrat Mickey Dollens proposed the "Do Your Job Act" aimed directly at Walters and his department. Well, he's a Democrat, and angry at that.
But McBride and House Speaker Charles McCall and Rep. Rhonda Baker are GOP, and they signed off on the subpoena to get Walters to show up and answer some questions, including details --but not to the legislature. In interviews, McBride just sounds tired and frustrated.
“If there's nothing there, show me,” said Rep. Mark McBride, ( R) House Education Budget and Appropriations Chair. “There's no ‘I gotcha' question’ here. It's just questions about public education that any appropriator would ask.”
McBride says he tried to work with Walters and his chief policy advisor Matt Langston, but after many requests for basic information were left unmet, he says he had no other option but to issue the subpoena.
And McBride's more formal statements don't seem aimed at grinding axes.
Walters' office has responded with its usual grace. Langston has called McBride a liar. And after initially not responding to the subpoena, Walters decided to give an "exclusive" to Fix affiliate Fox23, in which he said stuff like this:
It's disappointing to see some folks in my own party decided to sell their souls for 30 pieces of silver from the teachers union, but I'm never going to stop or back down. I'm going to keep fighting for the parents of Oklahoma [and] the tax payers of Oklahoma. Your kids are too important. The future of this state is too important,
He also claims that his has been the "most transparent" administration. And he touts his "town halls," some of which have been pretty contentious. And while Walters has often pointed to his meetings with superintendents around the state as a sign of his outreach and transparency, a survey of superintendents found that 150 of the 190 who responded had met with him exactly zero minutes. A touted Zoom meeting was about 15 minutes long, superintendents were not allowed to speak, and no questions were answered. They reported a "continued silence." And they report that Walters' culture war concerns do not reflect the day to day issues they actually deal with in the real world. From an NPR story:
“What he has done through his entire approach to public life, from what I’ve seen, is create dragons for himself to slay,” Riggs said. “Do we have students here that, you know, some may identify in different ways? I’m sure we do. But our charge is to try to make those students’ lives better. Our charge is not to make them part of some kind of political conversation.”
Riggs said those dragons — leftist indoctrination, pornography pushing, terrorist teachers’ unions — just don’t exist. In a high-poverty area like Macomb, there are real problems, but Riggs says he doesn’t see a point in bringing those issues to Walters.
But the legislature sees a point in bringing Walters to address those issues. He might even have to explain his desire to slay his imaginary dragons instead of getting school districts the support they need and that their taxpayers deserve.
In the end, the worst thing about Walters may not be his Trumpian bombast, his thirst for media attention, his obsession with culture wars, or his ideological certainty that he need answer to nobody. The worst thing about Walters may be that he won't actually do the job for which he campaigned so hard. Is incompetence worse than intolerance? I'm not sure even a legislative hearing can determine that one, but Walters is both, and that's bad news for the children of Oklahoma.
Walters has till January 5 to answer the subpoena. Mark your calendar.
Welp, that pretty much sums up our last year in Oklahoma. Thanks for seeing us.
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