Texas is acting like California

Abby McCloskey, Dallas Morning News, January 21, 2024

I recently had coffee with a colleague. He said he was concerned about what’s happening in Austin. I didn’t know him well, but having lived in Texas for a decade, I immediately translated his comment to mean the problem with “the blueberry in the tomato soup” and the progressive ways of our wayward little sister who we love to rag on but may be secretly jealous of her ability to hike and chill.

But my colleague was not talking about city politics. He was talking about our state government. And I couldn’t agree more.

Let me back up. In my experience, Texas can get an unfair rap from the coastal types. When my husband and I left Washington, D.C., for Dallas in 2014, we were given a nice bottle of red wine and forlorn claps on the back, as if we were on our way to big box housing, strip malls, and megachurches, leaving the finer life behind. When I tell my Washington colleagues that our house is more than 50 years old, we are within walking distance from Whole Foods and a lake, we go to a tiny Anglican church downtown, and that at least one of my children is more fluent in Spanish than English according to state testing, they are, in a word, dumbfounded.

This perception isn’t just on the American coasts. Just days after I filed the first draft of this story, I jetted off to London for my husband to launch his newest spy novel. Nearly every day of the week we were there, the Financial Times included some mention of Texas Republicans, always about red meat issues like abortion or immigration. Never about our state’s highly diverse, growth-oriented, pro-family constituency, which provides unmatched opportunity and a model for economies worldwide. . . .

Our culture is confused over the most basic things about mothers, fathers and children

Abby McCloskey, Dallas Morning News, Janjuary 13, 2024

I am not a royal watcher. I admired Queen Elizabeth II from a distance, I occasionally watch The Crown and I remember when Princess Diana died and my parents’ TV played nonstop. But that’s about it. Harry happenings and palace intrigue, no thanks.

Which is why I am late in applauding Kate Middleton’s public campaign to raise awareness of the importance of early childhood. The campaign is called “Shaping Us.” Kate gave a knockout speech at the launch. But it is the short, charming clay animation video accompanying the campaign that has captured my attention.

It is a beautiful short. But after more than a decade professionally immersed in family policy, studying topics such as paid leave, child care, and maternal health — and in particular, in settings across political and ideological differences — I cannot help but think that such a video would not fly in America.

Waiting for normal politics? Go ahead, pull up a chair

Abby McCloskey, Dallas News, December 17, 2023

When will politics return to normal? If you’re like me, you’ve asked this a lot. Take a swig of your eggnog because you might not like what’s coming next. What we are living through is normal, at least when it comes to the Republican Party and our country’s history of polarization.



The Women Shaking Up Economics

Abby McCloskey, Dallas Morning News, December 10, 2023

“Economics is male-dominated and colloquially known as the dismal science, which is why it’s delightful that two women — both quick to smile — made the biggest splash in the discipline in 2023.

Even better, they’ve applied their academic prowess to the taboos of marriage, work and gender. Why women study “women’s issues” is a question for the ages. But there’s certainly been a vacuum of information that these economists have begun to fill, to the benefit of all of us.”


VIDEO: Spotlight on Poverty Event in the Senate

December 5, 2023

Sens. Maggie Hassan and Bill Cassidy captivated a Capitol Hill audience on Tuesday and reassured them that bipartisan cooperation is alive and well in Congress when it comes to issues impacting the lives of working families. Hassan (D-N.H.) and Cassidy (R-LA) took part in an event hosted by Spotlight and American Policy Ventures, with support from the Doris Duke Foundation, that explored bipartisan pathways to support pro-family policies.

The give-and-take between the two senators was followed by a panel discussion moderated by Adrienne Schweer of the Bipartisan Policy Center and featuring Luke Shaefer of the University of Michigan; Ja’Ron Smith, former senior domestic policy advisor during the Trump administration; conservative consultant and policy analyst Abby McCloskey, and Indivar Dutta-Gupta, president, and executive director at CLASP.

All the panelists agreed that finding a path to re-instituting some kind of additional child tax credit is a key discussion at the moment. McCloskey said that “an additional wrinkle or opportunity in there that I would add is increasing the flexibility of the existing credit. That if a family can claim the full credit, which is a subject of good debate, that’s $34,000 when their child is between the ages of zero and 17. That’s a lot of money.”

Full video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oeeLMkFTG2o

War Disillusions with Israel and Hamas

Abby McCloskey, Dallas Morning News, November 20, 2023

“I’ve been thinking more about wartime and life therein. News of the attack, concurrent with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the looming threat of increased Chinese aggression against Taiwan, suggest to even the casual news reader that we are entering a period of significant global instability. What do wise people have to say about living in such periods?

On that question, there are few better places to begin than with C.S. Lewis’ addresses “Learning in War-Time.” This is a lecture he gave in 1939 to university students who were questioning why they should go about studying science or history or art in the midst of a looming world war.

Lewis began by channeling the students: “What is the use of beginning a task which we have so little chance of finishing? How can we continue to take an interest in these placid occupations when the lives of our friends and the liberties of Europe are in the balance? Is it not like fiddling while Rome burns?”

What if Biden Chose a New Running Mate?

Abby McCloskey, Dallas Morning News, November 9, 2023

“You don’t have to be inside the closed-door Democrat meetings to hear the party leaders’ increasing concern about Biden. A new Times/Siena poll shows Biden trailing former President Donald Trump in five of six battleground states for 2024. This has Biden supporters, like The Washington Post’s David Ignatius, congratulating the president on a successful first term and publicly asking that he step aside lest his biggest legacy of stopping Trump be moot. . . .”

Our Economic Puzzle

Abby McCloskey, Dallas News, October 29, 2023

“There was always going to be significant inflation after COVID-19, but Democrat policies made it worse. The federal government spent nearly $6 trillion on relief during the COVID-19 pandemic. First, the spending took the form of bipartisan bills. That was necessary to prevent further catastrophe; the whole economy had shut down. But after the 2020 election, it was purely Democratic bills pumping more money into an economy that had limits placed on how much it could produce, due to lingering challenges from the pandemic. That’s a textbook recipe for inflation, which hit a 40-year high last summer.

The 18% rise in prices during the Biden administration (from 2021 to 2023) is the equivalent to consumers losing nearly one-fifth of their purchasing power; unacceptable outside of banana republics. The Federal Reserve started to pull money out by raising interest rates. Normally, this might trigger a recession, but the savings accumulated during the pandemic kept consumers spending more or less like normal. This, along with other factors, allowed the Federal Reserve to execute what for all practical purposes is a “soft landing.” Thank goodness.

This is how inflation has been reduced on the Biden administration’s watch, while it still gets the lion’s share of public blame for it being high in the first place. Importantly, a Democrat by the name of Joe Manchin is to thank for blocking expensive bills that would have made inflation even worse.”

DISD should leave politics out of schools

Abby McCloskey, October 18, 2023

I love politics. I’ve devoted my career to public policy change, especially changes to benefit children and families (and yes, I believe this requires more public funding for kids, full stop). But this note made me sad and, as a parent, yet again frustrated.

Here’s why: DISD is the second-largest school district in Texas. The families it serves are an incredibly diverse population, ethnically, racially, financially and, one presumes, politically. I disagree with many things Gov. Greg Abbott does and says. But the partisan undertones in this email are alienating to families who aren’t lockstep progressives. So too is the tone. “They’ve scheduled this special session during the school year in hopes that we’ll be too busy teaching children to speak up for them.”

Math is hard; let’s not make it harder

Abby McCloskey, Dallas Morning News, September 28, 2023

“I’ve learned that this is part of a new districtwide curriculum called Eureka. It was built off multiple pilot programs in nearby schools and in other states. In the news stories I’ve read about it, teachers from the pilot programs are on the record that it has helped their kids learn math. Some teachers qualify their support, saying there’s a learning curve, but they get the hang of it. But that’s not how it’s been working around here.

At least in this household dataset of one, but also in colorful school mom text threads, this new approach has hampered parents’ ability to support their kids, and it has teachers confused. That, at least on its face, would seem to make later forms of math more challenging and kids more frustrated.”

What Republicans’ ‘Family Feud’ Gets Wrong About Parenting in America

Abby McCloskey, Politico Magazine, September 5, 2023

“One year ago, I wrote in these pages about how as a millennial mother of three I don’t have a home in either political party. I wrote that the Republican Party — where I’ve spent most of my political life — had been particularly disappointing given its “pro-family” and “pro-life” rhetoric and yet failing to support vulnerable mothers and children. That, unfortunately, hasn’t changed much, even in the contentious and politically challenging aftermath of the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.

But over the past year, schisms have emerged within the GOP about family policy, including a debate over problem itself. That gives me some hope that the party is — finally — grappling with this problem. Sometimes this discussion is framed in terms of economics and family affordability, other times as a cultural phenomenon of declining marriage and birthrates, or something more amorphous but arguably more on point — declining hope and generalized anxiety among parents with young children.

These debates represent progress, however incremental, that family policy has gone from something that the GOP doesn’t really focus on to something that party leaders are beginning to chew on and test out various approaches.

To get there, Republicans will have to start asking the right questions, and that will be harder to do if more people like me leave the party. But that’s not happening yet. Here’s what they’re getting wrong.”

Finally, we're protecting our kids

Abby McCloskey, Dallas Morning News, September 25

“It's a bit early for end-of-year reflections, but everything seems to happen earlier these days, so here I go: We'll remember 2023 as a gangbuster year for protecting kids from tech, in Texas and across the country . . . .

Cultural change is hard. It’s uphill. Sometimes it takes a long time to see things that retroactively are quite simple and obvious. That was the case with child labor laws, and it’s the case now with Big Tech.”

Too Close for Comfort

Abby McCloskey, September 3, 2023, Dallas Morning News

How the church interacts with the state says a lot about how both value power

“How should Christians engage in modern American politics? This is not a question that I’d recommend opening a cocktail hour with. It’s a subject likely to call forward radically diverse and hotly held opinions even from among otherwise like-minded folk…"

Getting Kids Back to School Safely

Abby McCloskey, Dallas Morning News, August 14, 2023

“My purpose here is not about efficacy or recommending a policy change. It’s to express, as many parents have before and will continue to after me, the deep weight and heavy sadness of raising children in a generation with historic gun violence. 

In simpler times, my parents drilled hiding under desks for Soviet atomic bombs (another questionable strategy), but thankfully, they never fell. Our kids know gun violence happens in real life. My 8-year-old and 5-year-old, whom I adore, will ask why they have these backpacks as I'm moving over their Lego, cactus, and shark keychains. I’ll say something that’s true but not the whole truth. But kids talk. 

Something about the clear backpacks is an everyday reminder that the threat could be anywhere. It’s not those Cold War soldiers; it’s us, it’s each other. That is heavy and dark in a new way for our country and those raising families in it.  

This year, Pew Research did a survey about Parenting in America. Mental health topped the list of concerns, affecting all but a small sliver of parents. Nearly half of parents were extremely to somewhat worried about their child being shot.”

Here's My Advice for the GOP

Abby McCloskey, Dallas Morning News, July 2023


”The GOP presidential field is shaping up. The first debate will be at the end of summer. As a retired campaign hand, I thought I’d share a few thoughts.

First, we need messaging based in reality. There seems to be bifurcation in the GOP field between those running on darkness — the end of America as we know it if we have a second Biden term — versus those happy warriors saying it’s a new day, a great day in America, and the only thing that’s wrong is our attitude and some woke stuff. Having hung around Republican campaigns over the last two decades, I can promise you that nearly all consultants paid big bucks argue for the latter approach.

But a smiley optimism risks ringing hollow in today’s environment. Patriotism is at an all-time low. Only 38% are “extremely proud” to be Americans, according to Gallup. Confidence in institutions has plummeted, with the largest declines in the presidency and Supreme Court. Congress ranks dead last with just 7% of respondents expressing a great deal or quite a lot of confidence in Capitol Hill. And few people believe that their children will be better off than they are, according to Wall Street Journal Polling. 

Dare I venture to posit that the cowboy hat, swagger and tax cuts of Ronald Reagan would have trouble sweeping these dust bunnies under the rug.”

The Wrong Place to Draw a Red Line

Abby McCloskey, Politico, June 23, 2023

“I have been disappointed that the rollback of abortion rights in red states — like mine, Texas — hasn’t been met with more robust financial support and protection for mothers and children. I understand that more government support is a turnoff for conservatives, especially in our fiscal environment. But in this case, I believe it’s the wrong place to draw a red line. As someone who values life and believes in the importance of strong families, it is a logical extension of the pro-life argument to protect and value life at all of its stages, but especially in the unmatched vulnerability of infants.”

Is Pro-Life Whole Life?

Abby McCloskey, Dallas Morning News, June 24, 2023

“Who’s marching for them? Who’s advocating for their families’ protection and support post-birth, the needs of which surpass what is currently given philanthropically and extend to public policy issues like job protection and our social safety net more broadly? For those familiar with the pro-life movement both in the early church and the movement’s American founding in the early 20th century, it was rooted in a broad whole-life ethic.”

The GOP's Moment of Truth on Immigration

Abby McCloskey, The Dallas Morning News, June 3, 2023

“Border security is exactly the kind of thing that has normal, “exhausted majority” people so frustrated with government, and in this case, the massive oversight of the Democratic Party failing to acknowledge a real and obvious problem. And it’s the kind of thing that could help push Republicans over the line in 2024, despite the party’s own egregious mistakes on the issue (more on that shortly). GOP strategist Karl Rove recently wrote about a South Texas poll that showed Hispanics leaning Republican largely because of surges of illegal immigration. But before Republicans go assuming that immigration is their issue to win, I present three things to keep in mind.”

School choice may be part of the solution. Reading definitely is

Abby McCloskey, Dallas Morning News, May 22, 2023

My husband recently taught a class in a local high school on spy thriller writing. If you haven’t felt old lately, you’re about to. No one in the class had watched Homeland, which was basically as current as I Love Lucy. No one had heard of the spycraft master John Le Carré (RIP) or read modern thriller writers like Brad Thor. But here’s the kicker: When my husband asked if anyone had read a book — any book — in the last year, only one or two hands went up. And this was at a well-to-do local high school; other schools likely fare worse.

What does it mean for kids’ attention spans, ability to learn, ability to engage in the world around them in all its beauty, pain and complexity, if they are not reading books? And lest adults feel off the hook, nearly a quarter of American adults report not reading a book in any format in the past 12 months either, according to Pew Research.

Now, the point of this piece is less to bemoan books or spy fiction, although the McCloskey family has a bit of a vested interest here. But something is amiss in our education system where books and high schoolers are fish and air, and it points to something bigger: For all of our education policy conversations from before kindergarten (child care, universal preschool) to after high school graduation (student loan debt, college access); for all of our conversations about critical race theory, “woke” history lessons, screen time and offensive library books; for all of the debate about teacher pay and school funding, the heart of the issue is that in our education system our kids in K-12 are struggling to learn the basics — how to read, write and do math.”