Pubdate: Sat, 9 Jan 1999 Source: The Washington Post Copyright: 1999 The Washington Post Company Page: A03 Contact: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://washingtonpost.com/ Author: David S. Broder and Kari Lydersen, Washington Post Staff Writers Note: Broder reported from Washington; Lydersen, from Chicago. HASTERT SEEKS TO MAKE EDUCATION A HILL PRIORITY 'Not a New Passion' for Teacher-Turned-Speaker The new House speaker, J. Dennis Hastert, yesterday signaled a radically different Republican approach to education, an issue Democrats have successfully used in recent years to batter the GOP. Hastert (R-Ill.), in his first public appearance since taking over Wednesday from Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.), used school events in Chicago and suburban Elgin and Aurora to announce a $2.5 million grant to expand public school drug and safety programs. A former high school history teacher and coach, Hastert vowed to make education a priority on the congressional agenda -- and to do it on a bipartisan basis. "This is a time when we need to come together to get results," the speaker told students at the Crawford First Alternative High School in Chicago. "This is not a new passion for me." As a negotiator in last year's end-of-the-session budget deal, Hastert helped protect the school safety and drug money, aides said. As speaker, he is determined to put Republicans aggressively onto the education issue, a major concern for voters, by pushing programs to help both public and private schools, give states more flexibility in the use of federal aid, create new savings vehicles for education expenses and reform the major federal school assistance program. Hastert also plans to meet as soon as next week with Chicago Roman Catholic Cardinal Francis George to explore ways to ease the financial crisis that threatens a shutdown of some parochial schools. Four years ago, when Gingrich led the first Republican majority in the House in 40 years, the GOP unsuccessfully pushed a bill to abolish the Education Department -- a stand the Democrats never have let the voters forget. Last year, President Clinton scored more political points off the GOP by making money for a start on hiring 100,000 new teachers his bottom-line demand in bargaining over the budget. Exit polls in last November's elections showed one-fifth of the voters named education the most important issue; no other subject was mentioned that often. Among those voters, 66 percent said they voted for Democratic congressional candidates; only 32 percent said they voted for Republicans. Neil Newhouse, a Republican pollster, said yesterday that many GOP governors and gubernatorial candidates "either won on the education issue or played it to a draw" with their Democratic opponents. "But on the federal level, we're still trying to overcome the backlash for trying to abolish the Department of Education." Clinton, who has championed school programs since his first election as governor of Arkansas 20 years ago, will push again this year to expand the hiring of new teachers and provide federal aid for school construction and modernization. But Hastert, according to aides, is determined to match him step for step, if not dollar for dollar. On Thursday, Clinton was joined by Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley and the chief executive officer of Chicago schools, Paul Vallas, at a White House ceremony announcing that his new budget will call for tripling aid to after-school programs, to $600 million. Yesterday, Daley and Vallas were at Hastert's side as he delivered the grant money. Daley, a Democrat who is friendly with the new speaker, praised Hastert's assistance and Vallas said, "He's been there for us consistently." On Capitol Hill, aides said Hastert and Rep. William F. Goodling (R-Pa.), chairman of the Education and the Workforce Committee, plan to launch the year with an "ed-flex" bill easing regulatory requirements on federal aid programs, backed by governors of both parties, as a way of demonstrating that education measures can attract bipartisan majorities. Hastert, in his Wednesday speech accepting the speaker's gavel, threw his support behind a bill that would consolidate 31 categories of grant programs into a $2.7 billion block grant, with the goal of "getting more dollars into the classroom." It passed the House last September but never came to a vote in the Senate. Republicans also plan to push initiatives creating tax-deferred education savings accounts and voucher programs for low-income families to use in sending youngsters to private and parochial schools. Both were strongly opposed by the White House and most congressional Democrats in the last Congress. While Hastert emphasized education as "a bridge issue" between the parties in his remarks yesterday, Republican political strategists said they are also mindful of the political stakes in 2000 for the GOP. Mike McKeon, Hastert's pollster, said after-school programs that provide alternatives to street gangs are increasingly important to parents whose working hours often do not coincide with the normal school day -- the same point Clinton stressed at the White House on Wednesday. Republican strategists also said the voucher proposal -- ardently opposed by teachers unions allied with the Democratic Party -- gives the GOP a way to reach Catholic voters, Latinos and middle-class African American families who use -- or would like to use -- parochial schools. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake