Troubled Student, Teen Mom, Teacher of the Year: Is Connecticut Congressional Candidate Jahana Hayes the New Face of the Democratic Party?
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Updated 8/15/2017: In the August 14 Democratic primary, Jahana Hayes prevailed against Mary Glassman.
The congressional candidacy of Jahana Hayes, the acclaimed educator running as a Democrat in Connecticut鈥檚 5th District, puts an unusual emphasis on her biography.
That鈥檚 no surprise, since it鈥檚 the stuff of Hollywood. Raised in public housing in a tough corner of western Connecticut, Hayes grew up amid the wreckage of American urban policy, sporadically unhoused and stalked by addiction. After giving birth at 17, she switched high schools and considered dropping out before ultimately completing an alternative program. Though she鈥檇 hoped to become a teacher, she took a job after graduation instead and focused on raising her daughter.
That was 1990. By 2007, after a decade spent collecting degrees 鈥 an associate鈥檚 at Naugatuck Valley Community College, a bachelor鈥檚 at at Southern Connecticut State, a master鈥檚 at the University of Saint Joseph 鈥 she had returned to her hometown of Waterbury to work as a history teacher. In 2016, she was named the National Teacher of the Year. And last year, while working on a Habitat for Humanity project with her students, she decided to run for office.
Hayes willingly shares the details with anyone who asks, including on . 鈥淚鈥檓 a person who was a high school dropout, who was a teenage mom, who was homeless, who struggled,鈥 she told her hosts. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what I taught my students, 鈥榊ou can be better. Hope is a strategy.鈥欌
As a young mother, she might never have dared hope that she would someday hold her current job as a talent specialist at Waterbury Public Schools; that she would share her work with her child, now 28 and a social studies teacher in West Hartford; that she would ever stand on a stage next to President Barack Obama and former U.S. Secretary of Education John King, two other black educators who grew up poor and credit schools as saving influences; or that she would come within striking distance of a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives.
But in 2018, her most unhoped-for hopes realized, Hayes is still telling and retelling the story of her girlhood. Burton Saxon, her professional mentor and a former Connecticut Teacher of the Year himself, told 社区黑料 that the hardships she overcame are now some of her greatest assets.
鈥淗er background is a little bit unconventional, but I think she鈥檚 in touch with quite a few Americans of all ages and backgrounds who feel that a lot of people in the political system don鈥檛 pay much attention to their needs,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd I think she would represent them effectively.鈥
That possibility 鈥 that a product of one of America鈥檚 broken communities will end up representing its citizens in Congress 鈥 is becoming less fantastic by the day. But before she can move on to the next happy ending, Hayes will have to do some serious politicking.
Tough Race
Hayes isn鈥檛 the only Democrat vying to succeed incumbent U.S. Rep. Elizabeth Esty, who declined to run for re-election after in her D.C. office. In the Aug. 14 primary, she鈥檒l face Mary Glassman, an established local officeholder and former nominee for lieutenant governor. Glassman鈥檚 connections to the state鈥檚 Democratic gatekeepers, along with their fundraising networks, marked her as an early favorite to win the nomination.
As the summer wore on, though, she found herself locked in a surprisingly tight race. Though Hayes only declared her candidacy in May, just a few weeks before the party鈥檚 nominating convention, she did so of U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy. (Murphy, who previously occupied the seat and to more closely resemble its base, has not endorsed a candidate in the primary.) Local news coverage caught on quickly, and volunteers and donations followed.
鈥淪he hadn鈥檛 declared her candidacy that far in advance, and then to come in and be able to present herself as a viable candidate against someone who is clearly more experienced as a politician came as a surprise to many people,鈥 Bilal Sekou, a professor of political science at the University of Hartford, told 社区黑料.
The true surprise came at the Democratic convention. Instead of watching Glassman鈥檚 coronation as party favorite, Hayes narrowly 鈥 and temporarily, it turned out 鈥 won the necessary 171 votes for the party鈥檚 unofficial endorsement. , as several members of the New Britain delegation switched their votes and backed Glassman instead. The move raised eyebrows around the state, and to review the voting process.
Since then, the campaign has been one of the most publicized and closely fought Democratic primaries of the cycle. Hayes鈥檚 name has lately been mentioned in the same breath as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the unknown community organizer who outmaneuvered longtime incumbent Rep. Joe Crowley in New York鈥檚 14th Congressional District. Yet again, it seemed, a fresh (brown) face was challenging a (white) party hand 鈥 in other words, a classic insider-outsider clash for the future of Democratic politics.
The comparison might send shivers down the spines of party strategists. According to partisan voting indices, NY-14 is 29 percentage points more Democratic than the nation as a whole; CT-05 is just two points more Democratic. Nicknamed the 鈥淔ightin鈥 Fifth,鈥 it is the only district in the state , and Esty was seen as a GOP target before announcing her retirement. Though the national climate has turned against them, the three potential Republican challengers 鈥 psychologist Ruby Corby O鈥橬eill, businessman Rich DuPont, and former Meriden, Connecticut, mayor Manny Santos 鈥 would love nothing more than for the Democratic nominee to emerge from her primary branded as a leftist caricature.
In fact, the two races aren鈥檛 as similar as they appear. Ocasio-Cortez cast herself as a socialist firebrand punishing an incumbent for his ideological timidity, but there鈥檚 little separating Hayes and Glassman in terms of public policy. On issues like health care, gun control, and even education, . Both are progressive women in a campaign season when progressive women .
The major point of contrast, race, is one that Democrats have grown comfortable discussing openly. Like Ocasio-Cortez in the Bronx, or Georgia鈥檚 Democratic nominee for governor, Stacey Abrams, Hayes is a candidate of color. Typically the Democrats鈥 most reliable voters, women like Hayes are now pushing to see themselves more represented in the party they support. And the party is taking notice.
鈥淐onnecticut has a situation where the Democratic Party increasingly depends on the votes and the support of people of color, and yet the congressional delegation is all white, and much of the leadership of the party … does not reflect that diversity,鈥 Sekou said. 鈥淪o her candidacy, I think, offers an interesting window into some of the challenges that the party has with regard to access to opportunity for people of color.鈥
Whatever it may seem, Hayes isn鈥檛 on the outside looking in. Even after the bizarre outcome of the nominating convention, she won , perhaps the strongest organizing force in Democratic politics. Even better, she now counts among her supporters , whom most observers expect to contend for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2020. And despite launching her campaign a month after Glassman, in the fundraising totals.
It鈥檚 almost unheard of for a novice politician to attract those kinds of resources. But voters in the district are more impressed by the ease with which Hayes has transitioned from the classroom to the campaign trail. Observers expecting to cringe through freshman gaffes have instead been impressed by her cool performance in public appearances.
Her biggest electoral liability 鈥 a lack of experience in public office 鈥 has proven almost a non-issue. When asked about her qualifications for government service, Hayes cites her years spent in the classroom solving problems on a limited budget. More than that, she has endlessly recounted the experiences that shaped her years in Waterbury.
鈥淚 know what it鈥檚 like to go to bed to gunshots outside, I know what it鈥檚 like to wake up in the morning to a dead body in the hallway,鈥 she told an audience at . 鈥淣o job gives you that kind of experience. Life gives you that kind of experience.鈥
Sekou says that, more than flash or even policy substance, that鈥檚 the kind of argument that could push Hayes ahead of her opponent. While being named National Teacher of the Year is among the rarest of laurels, her early-life challenges could carry her further than her career accomplishments.
鈥淐learly her life story is one that resonates with a lot of women of color 鈥 particularly in the state, but also a lot of women in general who have been single parents or had to really struggle through life to achieve the heights she鈥檚 been able to achieve.鈥
The Natural
With her national profile still growing, Hayes is easily the most famous educator running for office this fall. But she鈥檚 far from the only one. In the wake of mass teacher walkouts over school funding this spring, her bid represents only the crest of a wave.
Education Week has identified who have filed to run for a state legislative seat this year, including 25 who have already won their primaries. Rutgers University鈥檚 Center for American Women and Politics tallies no fewer than 26 female educators, like Hayes, who have filed to run for either Congress or statewide offices like governor in 2018. Such is the volume of positions up for election at the municipal, county, state, and federal levels that it鈥檚 hard to maintain an accurate count (the American Federation of Teachers claims that are running for office somewhere), but election watchers agree that the from America鈥檚 schools is undeniable.
According to Debbie Walsh, director of the Rutgers center, that makes perfect sense. Women in politics are often drawn from the ranks of current and former teachers, she says, and their vocation even offers certain advantages.
鈥淭hey seem like, in some ways, the perfect people to think about running,鈥 she told 社区黑料. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e engaged and connected with their communities, and they鈥檙e well known in the local area at least. Teachers get kicked around a lot. But I think the reality is, people respect and like teachers, so you come to running for office with a certain kind of gravitas.鈥
For teachers, gravitas is earned in the classroom. According to Burt Saxon, in New Haven鈥檚 James Hillhouse High School, that presented no difficulty. She formed an 鈥渋nstantaneous鈥 bond with students, he recalls, taking to the work as instinctively as she now connects with voters.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 believe there鈥檚 such a thing as a 鈥榥atural鈥 teacher,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 some skills that you need to learn. But boy, she picked them up so fast it was almost frightening.鈥
Over a decade later, one particular story stands out to Saxon from Hayes鈥檚 days as a trainee.
While they worked together, Saxon was named Connecticut Teacher of the Year 鈥 a ceremonial post akin to state ambassador for public education. His duties were time-consuming, if largely ceremonial, so after approving Hayes鈥檚 lesson plan one Friday afternoon, he said that he could only drop in to observe the end of the class period.
The lesson that day centered on Madam C.J. Walker, a destitute single mother and former laundress who built a massive cosmetics company at the turn of the 20th century, becoming the wealthiest black woman in America. When Saxon arrived midway through, he found the students rapt; many were sharing stories of mothers and aunts who had encountered obstacles in their own careers.
鈥淚 came in to watch the end of the class, and one of my students said, very politely and respectfully, 鈥楧r. Saxon, we all think you鈥檙e a great teacher, but could you come back Monday? We鈥檙e having this really heavy discussion,鈥欌 he told 社区黑料. 鈥淚 said, 鈥楴ow, this is kind of intriguing. I鈥檝e just been named to represent the teachers of the entire state, and my own students are asking me to come back Monday.鈥 The first week, she was a superstar.鈥
Superstar charisma will only take you so far, either as an educator or an office seeker. Like the hundreds of other teachers turning to politics this year, Hayes is venturing outside the professional realm she was trained for; more than most, she faces seasoned and resourceful opponents. Perhaps one or two of this year鈥檚 first-time candidates, if any, will enjoy a lengthy stay at the top, as former teachers Elizabeth Warren, Patty Murray, and Jon Tester have.
But if any of them do, Saxon thinks it鈥檒l be his former student.
鈥淚 wish her all the best,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 hope she wins the primary and then beats the Republican, but I can say this: Whether she wins the primary or doesn鈥檛 win the primary, you haven鈥檛 heard the last of her.鈥
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