Republicans court home-school advocates in Iowa

By Mike Glover

Associated Press

Published: Wednesday, March 23 2011 3:31 p.m. MDT

U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., right, greets U.S. Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, right, after speaking at a rally by home school advocates, Wednesday, March 23, 2011, at the Statehouse in Des Moines, Iowa. More than 1,000 home school advocates rallied on the steps of the Iowa Statehouse, cheered on by three potential Republican presidential candidates who joined their cause.

Charlie Neibergall, Associated Press

DES MOINES, Iowa — Three potential Republican presidential candidates courted home-school advocates in Iowa on Wednesday, saying the government was a threat and may have "trampled" on the rights of parents to educate their children.

U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, U.S. Rep. Ron Paul of Texas and Georgia businessman Herman Cain spoke before about 1,000 people outside the Iowa Statehouse at an annual rally in support of home-schooling. All had harsh words for government's role in education.

"The family has a level of authority that the government may have trampled on," said Bachmann. "We need to make sure that families enjoy their untrammeled right without state interference."

Bachmann, who noted she had home-schooled her five children for a number of years before enrolling them in a Christian school, said parents have an absolute right to decide how their children are educated.

"It's about freedom. It's about liberty. It's about knowing our children better than the state knows our children," said Bachmann. "I was part of starting the very first home-school class in my community. If you have the expertise and the ability, why not do that?"

Bachmann told reporters before the rally that she likely would decide by summer whether to seek the GOP presidential nomination.

She has drawn heavy attention in Iowa, where precinct caucuses launch the presidential nominating process. The Republican caucuses are dominated by social conservatives, many of whom are strong advocates of home-schooling.

Paul told the crowd that public schools have changed since he was young, and that those changes led to the home-schooling movement. Among those changes, he claimed, was an effort to keep discussion of religious issues out of the classroom.

"The government will always be a threat," said Paul. "The government doesn't like competition, be it education or medicine. They want to have control."

Paul argued that people are ahead of the government on the issue of home-schooling.

"There's a revolution going on in the country," said Paul. "It just hasn't gotten to Washington yet."

Cain, a former executive at the Godfather's Pizza chain, took a similar stand.

"Get government out of the way of our education so we can educate ourselves and our children," said Cain. "There are some people in our government who aren't interested in the same things that you and I are interested in. They are trying to create some kind of world order."

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