|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Fundamentalist anti-evolution candidates defeated in Kansas
state election
By Patrick Martin
3 August 2000
Use
this version to print
In a sharp blow to the extreme-right Christian fundamentalist
groups, voters in the August 1 Republican primary for the Kansas
Board of Education defeated three of the four candidates who supported
restrictions on the teaching of evolution in the state's public
schools.
On August 11, 1999 the Board of Education rejected by a 6-4
vote the proposed science teaching guidelines drawn up by a committee
of 27 teachers and administrators, and adopted instead a plan
drafted in secret by the right-wing majority, under the influence
of a fundamentalist group called the Creation Science Association
of Mid-America (CSAMA).
The new rules did not explicitly outlaw the teaching of evolution,
but made it optional, at the discretion of each local school board.
More importantly, the rules prohibited including questions on
tests about either evolution or the big-bang theory of cosmology.
This tactic is favored by fundamentalist and creation science
advocates so as to evade Supreme Court decisions that have overturned
outright bans on the teaching of evolution as well as so-called
equal time provisions that require giving equal emphasis to evolution
and religion-based creationism.
In the year since the Kansas decision, which was widely denounced
by science and education groups, measures limiting the teaching
of evolution have been taken in Oklahoma, Kentucky and Alabama,
but rejected in New Hampshire, Ohio, Tennessee, Texas, Washington
and other states. New Mexico education authorities banned the
teaching of creationism and explicitly endorsed evolution.
In the highest-profile Republican primary contest, board chairwoman
Linda Holloway, who played a leading role in imposing the anti-evolution
policy, was defeated by a margin of 60 percent to 40 percent,
despite outspending her opponent three to one. Sue Gamble, a local
school board member in the Kansas City suburb of Shawnee Mission,
won 24,590 votes compared to Holloway's 16,215. Holloway spent
nearly $90,000, including $35,000 on television advertising, an
unprecedented amount for a state board of education primary contest.
In the other contests, another right-wing incumbent, Mary Douglass
Brown of Wichita, who voted for the anti-evolution standards,
was defeated by former Wichita school board member Carol Rupe,
by a margin of 52 percent to 48 percent. The evolution decision
was the only issue in the race.
A third right-wing board member who voted for the anti-evolution
standards, Scott Hill of Abilene, moved out of state and did not
run for reelection. Attorney Bruce Wyatt won the Republican nomination
to succeed Hill over a fundamentalist anti-evolution candidate,
Brad Angell, receiving 18,420 votes to Angell's 13,602.
In the fourth contest, board vice-chairman Steve Abrams, a
religious conservative who voted to limit the teaching of evolution,
won renomination with 62 percent of the vote.
While all those nominated face contests in the general election
in November, the primary vote was widely publicized and viewed
as a major political event. Many voters changed their registration
from Democratic or independent in order to vote in the primary.
The state Republican Party leadership was split, with Governor
Bill Graves backing the pro-evolution candidates and Senator Sam
Brownback supporting the fundamentalists.
In the weeks before the August 1 vote, the issue of evolution
dominated public discussion in Kansas. Supporters of the scientific
theory staged a week-long series of events July 9-15 to commemorate
the seventy-fifth anniversary of the infamous Scopes Monkey
Trial in Dayton, Tennessee, when a high school biology teacher
was prosecuted for teaching Darwinism.
The right-wing board of education members openly appealed to
religious prejudice and backwardness, and displayed their own
abysmal ignorance of the science they have sought to suppress.
Mary Douglass Brown, the board member from Wichita who was defeated
for renomination, declared in one interview, I don't believe
that humans descended from apes, no. How come there's still apes
running around loose and there are humans? Why did some of them
decide to evolve and some did not?
The repudiation of these views by voters, not even in a general
election, but in a Republican primary, is a clear indication that
the fundamentalists lack any broad base of popular support. Their
advances in recent years have been due to the rightward shift
of the bourgeois political establishment, and what amounts to
the disenfranchisment of the majority of the population by a political
system controlled by big business.
See Also:
Kansas Board of Education
removes evolution from science curriculum
[13 August 1999]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |