Rick Santorum’s secret army: home-schoolers

Strapped for cash and paid staff, Rick Santorum has enlisted a ragtag but politically potent army to keep his campaign … Continued

Strapped for cash and paid staff, Rick Santorum has enlisted a ragtag but politically potent army to keep his campaign afloat: home-schoolers.

Heading into Super Tuesday (March 6), Santorum is urging home-schoolers to organize rallies, to post favorable features on social media and to ring doorbells on his behalf.

“Santorum has been very aggressive in reaching out to the home-schooling community, especially in the last month,” said Rebecca Keliher, the CEO and publisher of Home Educating Family Publishing.

Drawing on his experience as a home-schooling father of seven, the former Pennsylvania senator has also sought to rally enthusiasm by pledging to continue that course in the White House.

“It’s a great sacrifice that my wife, Karen, and I have made to try to give what we think is the best possible opportunity for our children to be successful,” Santorum said during a March 1 campaign stop in Georgia. “Not just economically, but in a whole lot of other areas that we think are important — virtue and character and spirituality.”

Rallying home-schoolers could provide a huge boost to Santorum’s bare-bones campaign. The tightly knit and predominantly Christian communities are famous for furnishing favored candidates with hundreds of steadfast foot soldiers. Studies show that home-schoolers are disproportionately likely to vote, donate and volunteer for campaigns.

“When they find someone who gives credence to the fact that they home-school, they tend to be very loyal and active and engaged,” said Keliher, a home-schooling mother of five in Nashville, Tenn. Many are motivated by the unwelcome prospect of seeing home-schooling critics elected to office.

An estimated 2 million children are home-educated in the U.S., according to Brian Ray of the National Home Education Research Institute. Nearly three-quarters have conservative Christian parents who seek to instill the moral and religious values that they believe are lacking in public schools, according to Ray and other experts.

Despite their growing diversity, home-schoolers also tend to be politically conservative.

“They have an army of volunteers when they want to get behind a candidate,” said Bob Vander Plaats, president of The Family Leader, a conservative group in Iowa. “They’re great at door knocking, stuffing mailers and phone calling. They are really the feet on the ground.”

Michael Farris, chairman of the Home School Legal Defense Association, said Santorum staffers believe home educators have already provided a “huge” lift to his insurgent campaign. The Santorum campaign did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Farris, a leader in the home-schooling movement, said he will not endorse a candidate during the GOP primary, but he has praised Santorum profusely “for his stalwart defense of life, marriage, and the rights of parents.”

Home-schooling families often use campaigns as real-world civics lessons, with mothers taking their children along on afternoons as they make calls and volunteer at campaign headquarters, Keliher said.

“And you have triple or quadruple the effort when they bring the children,” she added.

Santorum is getting several times that effort with the Duggars, one of the country’s most famous — and largest — home-schooling families. The reality TV stars and their brood of 19 children have been stumping for Santorum across the country in a campaign-style bus.

Like the Duggars, many home-schoolers say Santorum’s staunch opposition to abortion and gay marriage is as important as his experience in home education.

“It’s his willingness to speak up for what’s true and not back down,” said William Estrada, the HSLDA’s federal lobbyist.

Estrada has endorsed Santorum in his private capacity and is helping his campaign network with home-schoolers in Super Tuesday states.

Estrada also runs the HSLDA’s Generation Joshua program for teenagers. A recent post on the group’s blog portrayed “Sir Santorum” as a gallant knight preparing to battle the “Knight of Washington.”

But not all home-schoolers support Santorum. Many have a strong independent streak and favor Texas congressman Ron Paul. “One of the reasons people home-school is they don’t want anyone, especially the government, telling them what to do,” Keliher said.

Some home-schoolers also take issue with Santorum’s Senate vote for the No Child Left Behind Act, which increased federal oversight of local schools.

Others accuse Santorum of enrolling his children in a public cyberschool and sticking Pennsylvania taxpayers with the bill while he lived in Virginia from 2001-2004.

“In spite of all of his rhetoric about the evils of public schooling, Santorum had his children enrolled in a public school but called it ‘home-school,’” Catherine Dreher, a home-schooling mother in St. Charles, Mo., wrote on her blog, “The Tiny Libertarian.”

Still, many home-schoolers see Santorum as the more viable candidate, and have begun rallying to his side in large numbers, said Bruce Eagleson of the National Alliance of Christian Home Education Leadership.

“The key for a candidate is to excite the imagination of home-schoolers,” Eagleson said. “And Santorum has taken charge on that.”

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  • david6

    Rick Santorum has a bachelors degree, a masters and a professional degree, but he wants his followers to be satisfied to be dropouts and homeschooled. Maybe he knows that he cannot mislead educated people.

  • TopTurtle

    Homeschoolers: people who know they have The Truth, yet afraid that any exposure to other ideas will convince their children otherwise.

  • plattitudes

    I find it interesting that the author mentions how home-schoolers tend to be politically engaged, and look here are some who support Santorum, therefore a majority of homeschoolers must support Santorum. As a homeschooler who doesn’t support Santorum, I sent an email out to my local community of homeschooling families to get a quick straw poll. I have about a 50% return rate so far (only been an hour) and of the responses I got back, 98% say they are using the elections as a civics lesson, so the article appears to have gotten that right. As for who they support for the 2012 election, here’s the breakdown:

    26% Santorum

    34% Romney

    12% Paul

    24% Obama

    4% Undecided.

    The skew of 72% to the republican right doesn’t stand out as an indication that homeschoolers must be republican, because this community is in a VERY red state. 24% for Obama actually beats the county’s numbers from the 2008 election (22%).

    Homeschooling has long been the target of attacks, such as those in the previous comments. Homeschooling is far more efficient than public schooling–one on one interaction with my daughter means she can learn in 20 minutes what takes a full day in the classroom. The education my 5 children are getting is not ‘academic,’ but directly and immediately applied to the real world, and how we can use it in everyday life. Far from ‘protecting my children from the truth,’ homeschooling allows me to expose them to all viewpoints faster, and they see it all as part of a whole, instead of learning in isolation.

    Also, @david6–the equation of homeschooling to dropouts is flat out offensive. Children that are homeschooled at any point in the K-12 years are more likely to attend, and graduate from, college than the national average, likely because their parents clearly value and assist in their education–a stark contrast from the trent towards modern parents whose only interaction with their child’s education is to yell at the teacher during parent teacher conferences for giving their child a bad grade.