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Rick Santorum's Secret Army: Home-Schoolers

Santorum Home Schooling

First Posted: 03/ 5/2012 7:41 pm Updated: 03/ 5/2012 8:02 pm

By Daniel Burke
Religion News Service

(RNS) 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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By Daniel Burke Religion News Service (RNS) Strapped for cash and paid staff, Rick Santorum has enlisted a ragtag but politically potent army to keep his campaign afloat: home-schoolers. Headin...
By Daniel Burke Religion News Service (RNS) Strapped for cash and paid staff, Rick Santorum has enlisted a ragtag but politically potent army to keep his campaign afloat: home-schoolers. Headin...
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07:07 AM on 03/09/2012
It's sad but true that home schooling is stereo typed as mind numbed, socially inept, close minded, and just plain strange. We home schooled our oldest for several years and have now placed him in a private school where he is learning advanced math, reading great classic literature, and learning to speak and read Latin. Probably the most dangerous thing he is learning now is how to think freely for himself, which is why I'm proud to say that as a 15 yr old he wishes he could vote for Ron Paul.
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Rachel Snowling
I'm a peacock, you gotta let me fly!
02:55 AM on 03/09/2012
I was home schooled my last two years of high school, I would have never EVER helped this man. My parents taught me better.
09:36 PM on 03/08/2012
Great, his support is an army of 5 - 21 year olds who were taught education was a waste of time because the end is near. Yep, that makes me feel all warm inside about Frothy 2012.
09:35 PM on 03/08/2012
I've been blaming these little go it alone bigots from day one. They are an army of ignorant parrots who regurgitate creationist talking points incessantly but cannot add 2+2. Rick can keep 'em, he was a lame horse from the start of the race.
08:16 PM on 03/08/2012
"They're great at door knocking, stuffing mailers and phone calling. They are really the feet on the ground.".........And they're home-schoolers ?....And here I thought they were Jehovah's Witnesses knocking on my door !
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George From NYC
Warren in 2016
01:28 AM on 03/08/2012
I never thought I would live to see the day where evil was personified in a sweater vest.
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Dadzilla
Breathing radioactive fire for admusement
01:18 AM on 03/08/2012
Just when I thought to myself, it can't get any freakier...
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11:06 PM on 03/07/2012
Let us hope that Pr*ck Saintborem overestimates the size of his 'army'.
been2there
Facts have a liberal bias.
10:53 PM on 03/07/2012
Not all home-schoolers! This former home-schooling mom wants nothing to do with that anti-woman, extremist idiot.
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12:02 AM on 03/08/2012
some men see women as possessions and not all of those men are in the mideast
12:15 AM on 03/08/2012
We will have a great victory in Alabama! After all this is my kind of state,not so many of those uppity college educated goons like in the Northeast.
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GoodwithWood
Dis eas all yoooour fault
10:42 PM on 03/07/2012
A zombie hord of Santorum........RUN!
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11:05 PM on 03/07/2012
good one
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ocrmom59
10:40 PM on 03/07/2012
I have nothing against home schooling but what I am against are these parents thininking that their children are better than the children that go to public schools or come from one parent home s. They are not. They are more confuse then anything and when they haveto really face the real world they get lost and don't know how to handle it. Homeschool children get into just as much trouble as other trouble because they have to prove to other children they are not different and don't want to be treated different. They also committ just as much crimes as other children too so coming from a two parent really don't help them that much when things are not going on great at home but a lot of pretending. People living together for the sake of money don't help the children but really make the children want to kill the parent for the money because they won't die fast enough. So the rich need to come down to earth with the rest of us and get a life because the air up there isn;t that great either.
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xenubarb
Nebulon V
02:50 PM on 03/07/2012
Yeah, nothing like sending out a horde of socially stunted home schoolers to convince mainstream voters you deserve their support!

LOL. Can you imagine?
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carmenalex
STR8 AGAINST H8
12:11 PM on 03/07/2012
It is possible to home school and not be a religious bible thumper, and to teach facts, evolution and good science..facts and not fairy tails, to be a critical thinker and not a blind sheep following some myth...just saying.
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06:42 PM on 03/07/2012
I wonder how home schoolers teach things like chemistry or biology. How can they be competitive in science education with nothing to disect or make chemically react?
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carmenalex
STR8 AGAINST H8
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GoodwithWood
Dis eas all yoooour fault
10:39 PM on 03/07/2012
Carmenalex
I have an atheist cousin who homeschools his children.
Ironically he grew up home schooled in a fundamentalist Mormon home.
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11:07 PM on 03/07/2012
glad to hear he overcame indoctrination
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carmenalex
STR8 AGAINST H8
02:15 PM on 03/08/2012
poetic
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carburetor
Because money isn't everything!
08:15 AM on 03/07/2012
The trouble with home schooling is that education becomes a matter of opinion rather than fact. By teaching the bible as historical fact for example, another generation carries the mistaken notions that the bible is right and scientific evidence is wrong. Education should be based on facts, not the stories found in a 2,000 year old book of fiction. Sure, you can teach faith and use the bible as a teaching tool. It should never be used as a textbook however, unless it is in the context of creative writing. It's a good read for sure and many have read it.
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carmenalex
STR8 AGAINST H8
12:10 PM on 03/07/2012
Urgh
Not all homeschoolers are bible thumpers. I taught evolution, facts, the sciences,...not an inch of creationism claptrap, or that the world is 6,000 years old...
Just because one homeschools, does not mean the home schooler is in this perceived religious bubble.
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06:44 PM on 03/07/2012
How do you teach the sciences like chemistry and biology?
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carburetor
Because money isn't everything!
08:33 PM on 03/07/2012
As you have stated, not all homeschoolers are "bible thumpers" and that's a good point to make. As long as the education is on par with, or better than conventional education, it may have a useful place, particularly if there are few other choices available. It does possibly fail to provide socialization skills with peers that are needed later in life. The absence of a "bible thumper's" church reduces social exposure and creates even more isolation. Children raised in such homes will most likely be unprepared to deal with broader ideas or other people, in general. They may be just fine academically, however.
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nadohawk
Let's bring love back to liberalism
01:23 AM on 03/07/2012
The more you all make comments, the more I see home schooling as a better alternative than public education to ensure the education of our youth. Maybe one day our school system will provide an level of education necessary to compete with the other industrialized nations, but not right now.
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11:16 PM on 03/07/2012
Public schools, when managed well, have the potential to teach social skills home-schooling cannot. Serious failure to manage public schools well makes it understandable for any parent to want to remove their child from public schools. Whenever possible, it is better to become involved in your child's local public school and work toward improving it rather than abandoning it. Remember, even if that failing school is not educating your child it is likely educating a future neighbor and/or co-worker.

Whether a child attends public or private school, it is always better for these children to have parents that aid and encourage and further their children's education at home -- giving children the best of both worlds.