Rev. Al Sharpton, National Action Network (NAN) founder and MSNBC host, led a march to the Florida Capitol on Wednesday to protest Gov. Ron DeSantisā rejection of a high school African American history course, accusing the Republican of censoring a fundamental chapter of the nationās past.
The civil rights leader walked through Tallahassee to the Statehouse with dozens of supporters who criticized the stateās blocking of the Advanced Placement pilot course.
āOur children need to know the whole story. Not to not only know how bad you were, but to know how strong they are,ā Sharpton told the crowd, adding, āIf you would study history, governor, you would have known to mess with us and education always ends in your defeat.ā
Ahead of anĀ expected White House run,Ā DeSantis has continued to focus on eliminating what he calls āwokeā ideology in education, seizing onĀ national flashpointsĀ aroundĀ what children learn aboutĀ race, gender identity and history.
Sharptonās appearance in Tallahassee signaled an elevation of the national scrutiny that has followed DeSantis during his time as governor and that has increased as he stakes out his position as a firebrand willing to lean into cultural divides.
The disputeĀ began last month when Florida announced itĀ was rejecting the College Boardās course, saying it violated state law and was historically inaccurate.
The state argued that it promotes the idea that modern American society oppresses Black people, other minorities and women; includes a chapter on Black Queer Studies that the administration finds inappropriate; and uses articles by critics of capitalism.
The College Board released a revised curriculum downplaying some components that had drawn criticism, a move that drew the ire of scholars and advocates on the left. The organization has since maintained that the changes were substantially complete before DeSantis made his objections.
The spat continued when the board issued a set of statements days apart that heavily criticized the DeSantis administration and apologized for not taking a stronger stance. The board has also said it is still awaiting clarification on exactly how the course violates Florida law.
āWe deeply regret not immediately denouncing the Florida Department of Educationās slander, magnified by the DeSantis administrationās subsequent comments, that African American Studies ālacks educational value.ā Our failure to raise our voice betrayed Black scholars everywhere and those who have long toiled to build this remarkable field,āĀ the board said in a statement.
A spokeswoman for the Florida Department of Education said Wednesday that the College Board had not yet submitted the official course framework for additional review.
DeSantis has begun suggesting this week that the state break away from the College Board and its Advanced Placement courses and instead contract with other educational organizations that maintain programs for high schoolers to gain college credit.
āFlorida students are going to have that ability that is not going to be diminished, in fact weāre going to continue to work to expand it,ā DeSantis said, ābut itās not clear to me that this particular operator is the one thatās going to need to be used in the future.ā
The rejection of the course has drawn national attention and led Democratic New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy to announce that his stateĀ wouldĀ expand the pilot courseĀ from one school to 26.
Like other Republicans and potential presidential candidates, DeSantis has taken an aggressive stance on education policy and moved to increase government control over what is taught in the classroom.
Over the last year, he has signed a law critics call āDonāt Say Gay,ā which bars lessons on sexual orientation or gender identity through the third grade as well as instruction deemed inappropriate, and also has approved what is known as the Stop WOKE Act, to restrict certain race-based conversations and analysis in schools and businesses.
More recently the governor announced plans to block state colleges from having programs on diversity, equity and inclusion, and critical race theory.
He has also moved to reshape the once progressiveĀ New College of Florida, appointing six new trustees who are tasked with transforming it into a classical liberal arts school modeled after conservative favorite Hillsdale College in Michigan.
Florida is weeks away from its regular legislative session, in which a Republican supermajority stands ready to deliver on the governorās conservative agenda. DeSantis is expected to use the session to stack up political victories that will form the platform for his potential 2024 presidential bid.