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Anti-Mosque Activist Reappointed to Tennessee Textbook Panel

An activist who fought the establishment of a mosque in Tennessee more than a decade ago has been reappointed to the state commission that reviews and recommends books and instructional materials for local school systems to adopt.

House Speaker Cameron Sexton on Tuesday reappointed Laurie Cardoza-Moore to the Tennessee Textbook and Instructional Materials Quality Commission for a three-year term that ends on June 30, 2025.

The extension of her tenure on the panel, following her controversial 2021 appointment to a one-year term, comes as a new law gives the commission authority to overrule local school board decisions and ban certain school library books statewide.

The commission is scheduled to meet on Thursday to discuss its new responsibilities, as well as its review of math textbooks recommended by publishers.

Meanwhile, two national reports released last weekend found that attempts to ban books from U.S. school libraries are on the rise again this year, after reaching a historic high last year.

While most of the panel’s 10 commissioners are licensed educators, Cardoza-Moore is not. With an associate degree from the KD Conservatory College of Film and Dramatic Arts in Dallas, she is one of three members chosen by the governor and two legislative speakers — all Republicans — to represent parents and citizens.

She homeschooled her five children, who are now grown, and in 2005 founded Proclaiming Justice to the Nations, a Franklin, Tenn.-based organization that claims to fight anti-Semitism.

After supporters of President Donald Trump stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, she falsely blamed Antifa, referring to the loose affiliation of anti-fascist activists who have been labeled “terrorists” by Republicans. In 2020, her group was named an anti-Muslim “hate group” by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

In a brief telephone interview with Chalkbeat on Wednesday, Cardoza-Moore denied that she is anti-Muslim and said she has been objective in her review of textbooks and instructional materials in her role on the commission.

“Curriculum has to comply with state [academic] standards,” she said. “I look to make sure that it’s accurate and unbiased and reflects the values of Tennesseans.”

Her reappointment requires a confirmation vote by state lawmakers when they reconvene in January. In 2021, the Republican-controlled legislature voted to approve her appointment along party lines.

Cardoza-Moore’s first term ended June 30 while she was running for the GOP nomination to represent her Williamson County district in the Tennessee House of Representatives. Her narrow defeat in August by Jake McCalmon made her reappointment possible, said Doug Kufner, a spokesman for Sexton.

In his letter to Cardoza-Moore on Tuesday, Sexton said her new term begins immediately.

“I am confident that you will perform the duties of office with the high standard of professionalism, dedication, and integrity that the citizens of Tennessee deserve and expect of their public servants,” the speaker wrote.

Cardoza-Moore came to notoriety in 2010, when she opposed plans to build a mosque in Murfreesboro, south of Nashville.

During her confirmation hearings last year, Democratic Sen. Raumesh Akbari, of Memphis, asked about her comments at that time saying the mosque was being built to serve as a terrorist training camp.

Cardoza-Moore responded that there “absolutely” were terrorists in the group, but Akbari said law enforcement found no proof of her claims.

She testified that she has worked to fight classroom content that she described as historically inaccurate and biased. But she declined to answer questions about her beliefs around teaching students about the nation’s history of colonialism and slavery, since her work on the commission during her initial term would focus on materials for math, based on the state’s textbook adoption cycle.

The scope of the commission’s work will soon widen.

In 2023, the state is to begin reviewing science, fine arts, and wellness books. In 2024, the adoption cycle calls for a review of materials in social studies and world languages. And under a new state law, the panel can start having a say on school library content, based on appeals of local school board decisions over challenged books.

Several who opposed Cardoza-Moore’s appointment last year say their opinions haven’t changed.

Akbari, who chairs the Senate Democratic caucus, said Wednesday that Cardoza-Moore is “unqualified” to serve on a panel that has “an important role in our children’s education.”

Leaders of the nation’s largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization said her reappointment is a distraction from students’ education.

“Laurie Cardoza-Moore, a conspiracy theorist whose anti-Muslim rhetoric has endangered Tennessee families, has no business serving on any government commission, especially one that can influence what students read in their textbooks,” said Edward Ahmed Mitchell, national deputy director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

You can learn more about the commission on the state’s website.

Marta W. Aldrich is a senior correspondent and covers the statehouse for Chalkbeat Tennessee. Contact her at maldrich@chalkbeat.org.

Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.

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Going for It: Memphis Councilman JB Smiley Looks at Run for Governor

Surely it was but a coincidence, not an omen, but on Monday evening, at which time Memphis Councilman JB Smiley Jr.’s gubernatorial ambitions were becoming public, a double rainbow appeared in the western sky.

At the very least, each of these overlapping phenomena constituted solid proof that the unexpected can — and occasionally does — happen.

A first-term city councilman running for governor of Tennessee? Something like that hasn’t happened since — well, since first-term Memphis city Commissioner Bill Farris, a presumed unknown in state government, ran for governor in 1962.

Farris didn’t make it, but he ran a solid race, finishing third to then-former Governor Frank Clement and Chattanooga Mayor Rudy Olgiati and establishing himself as a major player in local, state, and even national politics for a couple of generations to come.

JB Smiley Jr., who hasn’t formally announced yet but has filed preliminary paperwork with the state for a governor’s race, is optimistic, but even he is somewhat dazzled by the uniqueness of it all.

“Is the state ready for a candidate like myself?” he mused out loud Monday night. “I’m Black, I’m unmarried, I’m from West Tennessee. …” Of course, that description, while arguably atypical of a serious statewide candidate, also fit Harold Ford Jr., the Memphis congressman who came within a handful of votes of winning a U.S. Senate race in 2006.

As it happens, Smiley has had conversations about running with Harold Ford Sr., who was in Congress before his son was and was the best-known political broker in these parts since the legendary E.H. Crump. “I’d like to have his support,” Smiley said, stating the obvious.

Like former Mayor A C Wharton, Smiley’s given name consists entirely of his initials, and he shares the name with his father, “an Army guy, a Bronze Star winner,” and a former military-recruitment official from whom, the junior Smiley says, he learned a lot about dedicated effort and about connecting with people.

Smiley has demonstrated his own possession of those traits during his Council term, where he has been a vocal exponent of racial equity and is currently co-sponsor of a preliminary city-county consolidation effort with white Councilman Chase Carlisle.

“I can broker deals and move issues,” says Smiley, who lists among those that he would take statewide the need for improving education and expanding Medicaid and broadband services, as well as easing state control over the prerogatives of local government.

So maybe Smiley’s a long shot. So, for that matter, are two other Democrats who’ve filed papers with the state regarding a gubernatorial race. They are Nashville physician Jason Martin and Memphis activist Carnita Atwater.

They all understand the difficulty of unseating an incumbent, in this case Republican Governor Bill Lee. And they all surely grasp something even more basic: You can’t win if you don’t run.

• Shelby County Democrats elected Gabby Salinas their new party chair via a well-attended Zoom convention on Saturday.

• Meanwhile, wheels are beginning to grind on the redistricting front.

Tennessee House Speaker Cameron Sexton has named three Shelby Countians — State Representatives Karen Camper, Dwayne Thompson, both Democrats, and Kevin Vaughan, a Republican — to the General Assembly’s 16-member redistricting committee.

And the Shelby County Commission, looking to its own imminent reapportionment, voted Monday to hold a series of public meetings on the matter, starting next Wednesday.

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Collierville Parents Protest School Mask Mandate

Collierville residents gathered Monday morning at the Collierville School Administration Building to protest the mask mandate put in place for all Shelby County schools. 

The effort was planned by the group Faces4Freedom, which describes itself as “concerned citizens, parents, teachers, employers, health-care providers, politicians, and everyday workers” who “maintain that all Americans must be afforded choices as to their vaccination status and mask-wearing/face-covering.”

“We hold that no government and no employer has the authority to mandate vaccination and/or mask-wearing,” the group’s “About” section on Facebook reads.

The group billed the Monday event as a peaceful protest against mask mandates, enforced social distancing, and the possibility of a Covid-19 vaccine requirement for students. About 20 protesters showed up toting signs with messages such as “no mask mandate” and “let parents decide.” 

This comes after the Shelby County Health Department (SCHD) announced Friday that masks will be required in all the county’s schools regardless of vaccination status. The decision came as a result of an “alarming increase” in pediatric COVID-19 cases in recent weeks, according to the SCHD’s health directive

Prior to the directive, Collierville school officials said masks would not be required for students. 

Faces4Freedom said the health department “illegally imposed” the mask mandate and plans to protest the measure until the mandate is reversed. 

The group calls for school leadership to “exclusively recognize and respect parental authority on the question of students wearing face coverings, COVID vaccinations, contact tracing, and social distancing on school system property, on school transportation, and during school events.” 

The group plans to protest mask mandates Tuesday, August 10th, at the Shelby County Health Department office at 2 p.m. There will be a “ceremonial trash can for a public display of disposal for those who are so inclined.”

Cameron Sexton (R-Crossville), Speaker of the Tennessee House, has also spoken out against the mandate, tweeting that the issue should be addressed in a special legislative session. 

“No health board should have the authority to tell a private institution what they can and can’t do.” Sexton posted to Twitter. “It’s time to stop unelected bureaucrats from deciding what is best for our children.” 

Republican State Senator Brian Kelsey, who represents parts of the Memphis area, also expressed support for bringing forth the issue in a special session. He calls for legislators to “rein in the power of local health departments.” 

“Our Shelby County Mayor should not be able to force parents and publicly elected schools boards to require their children to wear masks — especially not in private schools either,” Kelsey tweeted.