NYT's Gail Collins: The State of the 4-Year-Olds
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/14/opinion/collins-the-state-of-the-4-year-olds.html
In 1971, when he was a senator, Mondale led the Congressional drive to make quality preschool education available to every family in the United States that wanted it. Everybody. The federal government would set standards and provide backup services like meals and medical and dental checkups. Tuition would depend on the familys ability to pay.
And it passed! Then Richard Nixon vetoed it, claiming Congress was proposing communal approaches to child rearing. Now, 42 years later, working parents of every economic level scramble madly to find quality programs for their preschoolers, while the waiting lines for poor families looking for subsidized programs stretch on into infinity.
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After Gerald Ford became president, the early childhood education bills supporters tried to resurrect the plan. They had hardly done anything besides agree that they probably ought to wait until after the 1976 election, when they were hit with a political tsunami. Members of Congress started getting hundreds and hundreds sometimes thousands and thousands of hysterical letters accusing them of plotting to destroy the American family.
This was before constituent e-mail, when that kind of outpouring was shocking, particularly since a number of the writers seemed to believe that Congress was plotting to allow children to organize labor unions and sue their parents for making them do chores. That was really the beginning of the Tea Party. The right wing started to turn on this thing viciously, said Mondale. They said it was a socialist scheme. They were really pounding the members of Congress and a lot of people got cold feet.