Federal

Ravitch Leaves Bush Campaign Over Log Cabin Stance

By David J. Hoff — January 12, 2000 3 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

A prominent education adviser has left Gov. George W. Bush’s presidential campaign team because of the candidate’s unwillingness to meet with a group that represents gay Republicans.

Diane Ravitch

Diane Ravitch said she resigned because of the Texas governor’s statement in a Nov. 21 television interview indicating that he would not sit down with the Log Cabin Republicans, a Washington-based group that urges the GOP to address issues that concern the party’s gay and lesbian members.

“It was something I found to be intolerable,” Ms. Ravitch, a top education appointee in the administration of President George Bush, the governor’s father, said in an interview last week. “I believe in an inclusive approach to politics.”

Ms. Ravitch—now a research professor at New York University and a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank—was one of a team of advisers that helped shape Gov. Bush’s education platform in a series of three speeches he has delivered since August.

She said she had urged the governor, for example, to call for increasing the educational content of the federal Head Start program for preschoolers. Mr. Bush did so and proposed moving administration of the program from the Department of Health and Human Services to the Education Department. (“Bush Zeroes In on Accountability For Federal K-12 Funds,” Sept. 8, 1999.)

“She contributed a lot,” said Eric A. Hanushek, the chairman of Gov. Bush’s education advisory group and a professor of economics and public policy at the University of Rochester. “She’s a very knowledgeable observer ... particularly in how federal programs can most effectively be developed and used.”

Scott McClellan, a spokesman for the Bush campaign, said the candidate, who is considered the frontrunner for this year’s Republican nomination, had not changed the stance he outlined in the interview on the NBC News program “Meet the Press.”

In a response to a question, Mr. Bush had said he would “probably not” meet with the Log Cabin Republicans. “I am someone who is a uniter, not a divider,” he said. “I don’t believe in group thought, pitting one group of people against another. And all that does is create kind of a huge political, you know, nightmare for people.” Mr. Bush added that he opposes gay marriages and adoptions by gay couples—two issues the Log Cabin Republicans support.

Sen. John McCain of Arizona, Mr. Bush’s chief rival for the Republican nomination, met with Log Cabin Republicans shortly before the Nov. 21 interview.

A spokesman for the group said the governor’s comments had surprised Log Cabin leaders. The 11,000-member group had worked behind the scenes with the Bush campaign and helped it shape policies to gain the support of its members, said Kevin Ivers, a spokesman for the Log Cabin Republicans.

Now, several people who have endorsed Mr. Bush or are organizing local and state campaigns are angry with him, Mr. Ivers said. “Diane’s decision reflects the fact that, for a lot of people, this has been a bitter disappointment,” Mr. Ivers said last week. “There are still a lot of people on the inside who are very upset about it.”

Ms. Ravitch is a well-regarded education historian whom the Bush administration lured from Teachers College, Columbia University, to become the Department of Education’s assistant secretary for educational research and improvement in 1991. She served until January 1993.

Independent Voice

She was registered to vote as a Democrat when she came to Washington, but has since declared herself an Independent. Ms. Ravitch, who has championed school choice and other issues favored by Republicans, said she had decided to support the two-term Texas governor in the 2000 race because of his willingness to overhaul federal education programs. “He seemed to be ready to look at them freshly and not just endorse the status quo,” she said last week.

But she added that she had decided to leave the campaign because she could not endorse Mr. Bush’s conservative stands on homosexuality.

“Just a few weeks earlier, he was urging Pat Buchanan to stay in the party,” Ms. Ravitch said, referring to the conservative commentator who left the GOP to seek the Reform Party’s presidential nomination. “I think the Log Cabin Republicans are more respectable than Pat Buchanan.”

Related Tags:

A version of this article appeared in the January 12, 2000 edition of Education Week as Ravitch Leaves Bush Campaign Over Log Cabin Stance

Events

Teaching Profession K-12 Essentials Forum Supporting the New K-12 Workforce: What Teachers Need to Stay at School
 Join this free virtual event to discover what teachers say they need to feel supported to stay in classrooms for the long haul.
College & Workforce Readiness K-12 Essentials Forum Career and Technical Education Takes Its Next Big Step
Join this free virtual event to hear creative approaches to modernize CTE programs and navigate the shift away from a near-exclusive focus on "college preparedness."

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

Federal Opinion The Ed. Dept.'s Civil Rights and Special Ed. Offices Are Moving. Here's What That Means
Short-term changes are unlikely to be noticeable. Longer term, they may be consequential.
9 min read
The United States Capitol building as a bookcase filled with red, white, and blue policy books in a Washington DC landscape.
Luca D'Urbino for Education Week
Federal Opinion ‘None of This Is Abstract’: The Real Harm of Trump’s Ed. Dept. Civil Rights Move
Here’s why families will feel it when student civil rights enforcement moves to the Justice Dept.
Alumni Collective of the U.S. Dept. of Ed., Office for Civil Rights
4 min read
Image of a box of files
Laura Baker/Education Week + Getty
Federal Special Ed. and Civil Rights: What We Know About the Ed. Dept.'s Latest Moves
Special education is moving to HHS, and civil rights enforcement is moving to DOJ.
6 min read
Letters on the Department of Education building are missing after removal of America 250 banners, which included those of Booker T. Washington, Catharine Beecher and Charlie Kirk, March 18, 2026, in Washington.
Letters on the U.S. Department of Education building are missing in this March 18, 2026, photo in Washington. The agency last week announced it's transferring day-to-day management of special education and civil rights enforcement to different Cabinet agencies, the latest push by the Trump administration to dismantle the Education Department.
Allison Robbert/AP Photo
Federal Trump's Justice Dept. Investigates Dozens of Districts Over LGBTQ+ Curricula
The investigations target how schools discuss sexuality and gender identity and whether parents can opt their children out of lessons.
8 min read
The U.S. Department of Justice is investigating how 43 school districts in three states teach about sexuality and gender identity and whether they give parents the opportunity to opt their children out of lessons that conflict with their religious beliefs on June 16, 2026.PICTURED, Protesters gather outside the Glendale Unified School District headquarters in Glendale, California, on June 20, 2023. Over 300 people gathered outside the Glendale Unified School District headquarters, as protests continued over the issue of teaching children about same-sex parents and queer issues.
Protesters gather outside the Glendale school district in Glendale, California, on June 20, 2023 over the issue of teaching children about same-sex parents and queer issues. The U.S. Department of Justice is now investigating three other school districts over LGBTQ+ themes in sex ed. and beyond. (The Glendale district is not one of them.)
DAVID SWANSON / AFP via Getty Images