Fox News anchor Martha MacCallum found herself admitting on Tuesday that it was a âlittle bit of a misnomerâ to claim critical race theory was being taught to young Virginia children after one parent called out such misinformation on Foxâs airwaves.
Hours before the polls closed in the closely watched Virginia gubernatorial race, MacCallum sat down with two Loudoun County mothersâa Democrat and a Republicanâwho had already cast their ballots, asking them about the issues they found most important in this election.
Naturally, since much of the national media conversation about the Virginia race has centered around education and curriculumâspecifically in Loudoun Countyâboth women brought up schools.
Brooke Corbett, a mother of three who voted for Republican candidate Glenn Youngkin, said she âgot a window into our childrenâs educationâ during the pandemic, adding that there were âsome concerning thingsâ she saw. Specifically, the mother claimed she âstarted hearing about critical race theory,â which she had ânever heard aboutâ before.
âAfter some investigation, some FOIA requests that Iâve started seeing on the news, a lot of taxpayer money, my taxpayer money, our taxpayer money, had been invested in some teacher training and that would be rolled into the student curriculum that I didnât agree with,â Corbett continued. âA lot of it looked not only off, but it looked likeâit bothered me. It was controversial. Thereâs aspects that look racist. So I had a hard time with that.â
MacCallum, who has helped push Foxâs year-long obsession with so-called critical race theory in schools, agreed with Corbett while also bemoaning that schools are âwatering down the standardsâ for students.
Thatâs when Mara Stengler, a mother of two who voted for Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe, jumped in to offer some pushback.
âI donât think people truly understand what critical race theory is,â Stengler stated. âYounger children are not being taught critical race theory. They canât understand critical race theory. Theyâre being taught history.â
Using as an example how one Loudoun County parent expressed anger that their child was taught that Christopher Columbus killed many indigenous people, Stengler noted such information was merely history.
âThatâs what Christopher Columbus did,â she added. âSo I have a hard timeâI think kids have to learn history; the good, the bad, the ugly.â
After saying she âwould have to do a fact-checkâ on Stenglerâs Columbus remarks, MacCallum then conceded that perhaps Fox News has taken some liberties with its portrayal of critical race theory in K-12 schools.
âCritical race theory sometimes is a little bit of a misnomer because what is happening is thereâs sort of a reformed thinking and approach to history that teaches that the country was founded in racism,â the Fox News anchor said. âYou can say critical race theory is like a legal theory that is found more in colleges.â
She added: âSo maybe giving it that label has thrown some people off. But it doesnât mean that thereâs not things being taught that theyâre teaching kids things that they are inherently victims or oppressors.â
Stengler, for her part, told MacCallum that theyâd âhave to agree to disagreeâ as she had âdifferent thoughts and feelings on that.â
Virginia schools, meanwhile, say that critical race theory does not appear in any educational or training material for students. PolitiFact found in August that while CRTâa broad set of ideas about systemic racism largely constrained to legal and graduate studiesâhas been widely discussed by educators in the state, there is âno evidence that critical race theory is being taughtâ in the stateâs schools.
Furthermore, critical race theory is not mentioned in the stateâs standard of learning and a number of local school boards have specifically said they do not teach it.