Minnesota's suburban school board races are seeing more money than ever as the culture wars once again dominate campaigns and outside groups lobby on behalf of candidates in several districts.
Campaign finance records for this year's election show that candidates and political action committees in the state's five largest suburban districts had spent more than $336,000 as of Monday. That's 50% more than at this time during the 2021 election cycle, which was already far more expensive than others.
Candidates and activists say the surge in spending is a continuation of the intense debate over social issues and how to raise sagging academic achievement in the wake of the pandemic.
While liberal candidates say districts should bolster their diversity and inclusion efforts, particularly for LGBTQ students, their conservative counterparts argue for cuts to those programs.
"Per pupil funding has increased dramatically but less than 50 percent of students can read or do math at grade level," said Cristine Trooien, executive director of the Minnesota Parents Alliance. "It is simply a matter of priorities."
Many of the candidates endorsed by the Minnesota Parents Alliance bristle at school districts' inclusion initiatives. Trooien said districts would do better to adopt zero-tolerance policies for discrimination rather than spend time and money on equity training for educators.
"There is a finite number of hours in the school day for academic instruction and a finite amount of dollars in districts' budgets," she said. "Achievement-focused candidates are advocating for refocusing teaching time and funding toward initiatives that effectively and efficiently close the achievement gap."
That campaign rhetoric spurred Education Minnesota, the statewide teachers union, to launch its own get-out-the-vote effort on social media.