House Panel Advances Ban On Use Of ‘1619 Project’ In Iowa Public Schools, Colleges, Universities

Des Moines, Iowa — Republicans on an Iowa House subcommittee have advanced a bill that would pull state funding from public schools if a New York Times series about slavery is used in history classes.

Representative Skyler Wheeler, a Republican from Orange City who is the bill’s sponsor, says the “1619 Project” is projecting a clear viewpoint.

(as said) “It seeks to distort facts, not simply teach them and it does so as leftist political propaganda masquerading as history,” Wheeler said.

Rita Davenport, who spoke at a statehouse subcommittee hearing, says the 1619 project promotes Black victimhood.

(as asid) “In my 57 years, I’ve never felt that I could not achieve anything because of my race,” Davenport says.

The bill would financially penalize public K-through-12 districts, community colleges and the three public universities for each day the 1619 project is used as history curriculum. Pete Hird, a lobbyist for Iowa Federation of Labor, says the bill amounts to censorship of history.

(as said) “I think we should address the real problem,” Hird says. “Racism exists. What are we doing about it?”

Representative Ras Smith, a Democrat from Waterloo, says American history is complex and banning literature like the 1619 Project is a slippery slope.

(as said) “America’s about the opportunity to have diverse thought, rigorous debate about what it means to be an American,” Smith says.

Bills have been introduced in a handful of other states to ban the use of the 1619 Project in public schools. A committee in the Republican-led Arkansas legislature voted down one of those bills Tuesday.

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