California gubernatorial candidate Faulconer slams SF for renaming schools before returning kids to classrooms

Kevin Faulconer officially launched his bid on Feb. 2 to replace California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who is facing a recall threat over his pandemic response

Former San Diego mayor and California gubernatorial candidate Kevin Faulconer railed against San Francisco’s school board on Wednesday for being more concerned with changing the names of the city’s public schools rather than reopening them.  

Faulconer, 54, gave a press conference outside Abraham Lincoln High School, one of 44 San Francisco schools targeted for renaming in recent months because of supposed links to white supremacy. Schools named after Presidents George Washington, William McKinley, James Garfield, James Monroe and Herbert Hoover, also made the chopping block."

FILE: Former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer speaks during a news conference in the San Pedro section of Los Angeles. 

"San Francisco’s school board has prioritized removing the name outside this school, over the education that should be happening inside this school. President Lincoln should be celebrated, not canceled. Getting rid of Lincoln’s and Washington’s name is outrageous," Faulconer said.

"Misleading students, into thinking that the leaders who expanded freedom and opportunity are bad people isn’t good for our children. It isn’t good for our state. And it isn’t good for our country. We need to stop playing political games and get our kids back in school now."

Faulconer, a Republican, officially launched his bid on Feb. 2 to replace California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who is facing a recall threat over his response to the COVID-19 pandemic. California’s public schools have largely remained shut down since the beginning of the pandemic, with students confined to at-home learning.

Faulconer’s press conference comes the day after the San Francisco Unified School District (SFUSD) postponed Tuesday’s scheduled talks on how to safely reopen classrooms, despite an ongoing lawsuit from the city attorney’s office, opting instead to work on renaming 44 of the city’s public schools.

City Attorney Dennis Herrera sued the San Francisco Board of Education and the SFUSD earlier this month for failing to devise a plan to get San Francisco’s 54,000 public school children back in the classroom.

Faulconer said the school board ought to use their vote to reopen schools rather than renaming them. He blamed the failure of the board to reopen schools on Newsom’s policies.

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Asked what he would do differently, particularly in regard to the teachers unions that have been blamed for prolonging the issue, Faulconer said it was a matter of failed leadership.

"It’s about not rolling up your sleeves and saying, ‘This is important.’ How on earth are private schools open where teachers are teaching safely, kids are safely learning, yet it’s not happening at public schools. It’s unacceptable," Faulconer said.

Gov. Newsom’s favorability as plummeted in recent months amid outrage over the economic and social impact of his response to the pandemic. Last weekend, Recall Gavin 2020, the group organizing a recall against the governor, said they have gathered enough signatures to qualify for a ballot.

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Randy Economy, the campaign’s senior adviser, told Fox News the campaign plans to collect upwards of 2 million signatures to compensate for invalid signatures.

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