Federal Collection

Election 2005

Read Education Week’s comprehensive and continuing coverage of the 2005 state gubernatorial elections.

School & District Management N.J. and Va. Governors-Elect Turn to Preschool Promises
Timothy M. Kaine, the newly elected governor of Virginia, told a crowd of supporters during his election-night acceptance speech that one of his first plans is to carry out his campaign promise to start a universal prekindergarten program.
Christina A. Samuels, November 15, 2005
4 min read
School & District Management N.Y.C. Mayor’s Makeover of City Schools to Continue
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg of New York won a chance to expand his makeover of the city’s schools last week, as voters overwhelmingly chose to keep him in office for a second term. In Detroit, schools moved from appointed to elected leadership. And the Los Angeles Unified School District won approval to raise billions of dollars to ease crowded classrooms.
Catherine Gewertz & Karla Scoon Reid, November 15, 2005
3 min read
Education San Francisco Voters Go on Record Against Recruitment
San Francisco voters approved a nonbinding ballot measure last week that opposes, but doesn’t ban, military recruiting in the city’s public schools and colleges.
Mary Ann Zehr, November 15, 2005
2 min read
Education Foes Seek Cooperation After Calif. Showdown
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger needs to look for ways to join with his political opponents to improve California’s failing schools, observers in the state say, instead of pushing proposals like the ones state voters firmly rejected in a special election last week.
Linda Jacobson, November 15, 2005
6 min read
Education Funding Backers of Economic Integration Win in Wake County, N.C.
Supporters of a policy in Wake County, N.C., that seeks to integrate the district’s schools based on family income levels celebrated the outcome of school board elections last week.
Jeff Archer, November 15, 2005
4 min read
Science Evolution Loses and Wins, All in One Day
The forces seeking to subject the theory of evolution to greater criticism tasted both victory and defeat last week. Kansas officials approved an overhaul of their state science standards to do just that, while voters in a rural Pennsylvania district ousted advocates of “intelligent design” from the school board the same day.
Sean Cavanagh, November 15, 2005
9 min read
Education Local Election Results
A roundup of key education-related races in cities across the nation.
November 9, 2005
1 min read
States State Election Results
California Rejects Education Measures; New Jersey and Virginia Pick Governors
November 9, 2005
1 min read
School & District Management Detroit’s First Elected Board in 6 Years to Face Challenges
Detroit residents are voting this week for the city’s first elected school board in six years, but local observers said it was unclear how the change would affect the struggling school district.
Karla Scoon Reid, November 8, 2005
4 min read
Teaching Profession Denver Voters Pave Way for Incentive Pay
Starting this week, Denver teachers will be able to sign up for a groundbreaking new pay plan that city voters endorsed Nov. 1 by accepting $25 million in new property taxes.
Bess Keller, November 8, 2005
4 min read
Teaching Profession Fate of Denver’s Pay Plan Rests With Voters
Denver voters go to the polls next week to decide the fate of a new pay plan for teachers, with only a small band of opponents challenging the property-tax hike that would finance the change.
Bess Keller, October 25, 2005
6 min read
Carol Stearman joins a phone bank at the Burlingame, Calif., headquarters of the California Teachers Association, where she and other teachers called residents urging them to vote against three measures backed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger in a Nov. 8 special election. The union may spend as much as $50 million to defeat the school-related measures.
Carol Stearman joins a phone bank at the Burlingame, Calif., headquarters of the California Teachers Association, where she and other teachers called residents urging them to vote against three measures backed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger in a Nov. 8 special election. The union may spend as much as $50 million to defeat the school-related measures.
Erin Lubin for Education Week
Education Funding Calif. Teachers Rally Against Ballot Measures
The campaign over California education measures pits a political superstar with sagging approval ratings against the state’s most powerful education group in a no-holds-barred bid for power that could leave the loser badly hobbled.
Joetta L. Sack, October 25, 2005
8 min read
Education Funding Colorado Referendum Targets Revenue Cap
To some Colorado residents, Referendum C is the best chance to spare the state’s schools from deep budget cuts. To others, the ballot measure—which will go before voters Nov. 1—represents a steep tax increase and gives lawmakers too much power over how state revenues are spent.
Linda Jacobson, October 18, 2005
4 min read