A heated battle in Virginia’s largest school district tests the strength of ‘parent rights’ activism

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Youngkin, who didn’t respond to a request for comment, spoke at a Coalition for TJ meeting and ran advertising asserting that the selective school had lowered its academic standards.

By fall 2021, activists involved with the Coalition for TJ had turned their attention toward lessons and teacher trainings about race. Fox News featured the district extensively on air. Then, at the Sept. 23 Fairfax County school board meeting, conservative mother Stacy Langton raised a new issue that soon became part of a heated nationwide battle: graphic passages in LGBTQ-themed books.

“Pornography is offensive to all people; it is offensive to common decency,” Langton declared at the meeting, holding up printouts from the books “Gender Queer” and “Lawn Boy.”

Less than a week later, Youngkin cited Langton’s complaints about the books at a gubernatorial debate to make the point that schools should listen to parents’ concerns. Terry McAuliffe, his Democratic opponent and a former governor, responded, “I’m not going to let parents come into schools and take books out.”

McAuliffe’s retort is widely considered to have tanked his candidacy; Youngkin won by 2 percentage points in a state that had been trending blue.

One Youngkin ad featured Langton’s remarks at the school board meeting. Coalition for TJ members, including Fairfax County father Harry Jackson, campaigned for Youngkin. Saundra Davis, a local mother and military spouse who said she’d long voted for Democrats, appeared in an ad for him. Both Jackson and Davis are now running as GOP-backed school board candidates. 

Literature with Glenn Youngkin on the cover.
The Republican Women of Clifton’s booth passed out souvenirs along with candidate information. Shuran Huang for NBC News

Davis said she was pushed to the right by the Democrats’ resistance to reopening classrooms during Covid. 

“The Democrats wouldn’t have anything to do with parents who wanted to reopen schools, but the Republicans would let you stand near them,” Davis said. “Their proverbial tent is bigger than the local Democrat Party’s.”

Davis, who is running for one of three at-large seats on the board, advertises herself as a “moderate” on purple flyers. She wants some restrictions on explicit books, and she wants the district to get approval from parents before staff members call students by different pronouns. But if elected, she said, she’d be more focused on addressing a dip in reading scores. She has raised over $91,000, more than any other GOP-backed candidate. 

GOP-backed candidates Saundra Davis and Debra Tisler criticize the Fairfax County School Board for breaking with the Youngkin administration's policies.
GOP-backed candidates Saundra Davis and Debra Tisler criticize the Fairfax County School Board for breaking with the Youngkin administration’s policies. Shuran Huang for NBC News

What’s on voters’ minds

Chris McCormick, the mother of two transgender boys in the district, said her sons’ schools were welcoming. She wants the school board to continue pushing back against Youngkin’s policies on LGBTQ students — but she also doesn’t want the board to focus on politics. 

“I’m not interested in the politicalization surrounding school — it’s school,” McCormick said. “Let the school board and the school district do what they’re meant to do, which is provide an education for our kids, keep them safe and prepare them for a good future.”

Many voters agree. When NBC News observed Democratic incumbents canvassing neighborhoods, knocking on dozens of doors, no one confronted them over graphic or upsetting books or accommodations for transgender students. Instead, parents shared their concerns about traffic near bus stops and whether the schools were too big or asked whether the district would consider a four-day week to attract more teachers. 

Much of the campaigning on the ground involves trying to explain to voters which candidates are affiliated with which party, because that designation won’t be on the ballot for school board. At the recent Clifton Day Festival, an annual fall event set on the pumpkin-and-hay-bale-lined main street of a small town in the county, Republicans and Democrats handed out flyers showing their candidate slates.

Brian Carr walked away from the school board candidates’ tents at the festival unsure who would get his vote. 

As the father of a middle schooler with an anxiety disorder, he said his primary concern was special education services. But Carr said he’d have a hard time voting for a candidate who supported banning books.

“My wife and I can choose what we read or not read for our kid,” he said. “I don’t need a school board or a state to tell me what my kid can’t read. It’s something I feel strongly about.”

Debra Tisler, left, chats with a mother at her booth at the Clifton Day Festival in Clifton, Va., on Oct. 8, 2023.
Debra Tisler, left, at her booth at the Clifton Day Festival. Shuran Huang for NBC News

Before Debra Tisler, a former special education teacher, became a GOP-backed school board candidate, she waged a campaign to investigate the district’s spending, which turned into a legal battle she won. She said she’d been frustrated with her own yearslong attempt to get tutoring for her dyslexic son, and special education is the main issue she talks about on the campaign trail, but she also relates to concerns parents have over library books with sexually explicit passages.

“When you have graphic pictures of adults or children engaging in sexual activities, it’s harmful to children,” Tisler said. “And I’m very concerned for our children with autism and intellectual disabilities, as well, because if they see this information — this pictorial form in a cartoon that’s very friendly to them — it could make them vulnerable to think that it’s OK for an adult to want that type of sexual behavior from them.”

Debra Tisler.
Debra Tisler. Shuran Huang for NBC News

Despite the moderate positioning of some of the Republican-backed candidates, Democrats argue the whole GOP slate is tainted by the fringe views and conspiracy theories espoused by others.

“The Republican ticket is a group of folks that are not serious,” said Democratic candidate Kyle McDaniel. “I don’t see Fairfax voters buying what they’re selling.”

One of the Republican candidates, Maureen Brody, attended the Jan. 6, 2021, “Stop the Steal” rally outside the Capitol and has promoted numerous conspiracy theories on Gab, including Pizzagate, the idea that there is a cabal of elite liberals running a sex-trafficking ring. She also praised a video of white nationalist influencer Nick Fuentes as a “good young conservative view.” 

Brody said in an email, “Sharing doesn’t mean endorsement,” adding that she is “extremely concerned” about human trafficking. 

Parents with a variety of political beliefs have also raised concerns about Harry Jackson, the Coalition for TJ member who campaigned for Youngkin and is now running for the school board.

Jackson has been arrested and accused of domestic assault three times. After a previous wife accused him of choking her and pushing her in 2008 and 2010, court records obtained by NBC News show, the charges were dismissed in the first case and he served probation in the second case before charges were dropped in 2012. His current wife accused him of abuse in 2018; he pleaded no contest and was ordered to complete a batterer intervention program, WJLA-TV of Washington reported

Jackson emphasized in an interview that he was never convicted, characterized his ex-wife’s account as “untrue” and said that he was awarded custody of their child. He added that he and his current wife are still married and that he pleaded no contest because it was cheaper and quicker than fighting in court.

“What’s being brought up are personal attacks regarding allegations that were unfounded from over 10 years ago, where I’m bringing up issues that are current today,” Jackson said, adding that if elected, he would scrutinize the district’s spending and work to protect students from drugs and human trafficking. 

The Fairfax County GOP has stood by its endorsement of Jackson, despite protests from some local conservative parent activists. The party didn’t respond to requests for comment. 

Rachna Sizemore Heizer.
Rachna Sizemore Heizer.Shuran Huang for NBC News

Some of the Democrats are leveraging those divisions and trying to tie the whole GOP slate together. While she was knocking on doors on a recent Sunday, Seizmore Heizer, who is seeking re-election, spoke to a man in his driveway about her opponents. 

“The candidates here in Fairfax who are Republican — they’re not the old, moderate Republican,” she told him as he flipped through the campaign materials she’d handed him. “There’s one who was at the Jan. 6 insurrection; another one has been arrested at least three times, I think, over domestic violence,” a reference to Jackson. 

The man’s eyebrows shot up as he exclaimed, “Really?”

“These are the folks that are running,” she added as the man nodded along, “and these are our kids, and that’s our future.”



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