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The Culture Wars Came to a California Suburb. A Leader Has Been Ousted.

Voters recalled a Southern California school board president after his conservative majority approved policies on critical race theory and transgender issues.

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A crowd of students holding Pride flags of different sizes and clapping outside.
Students walked out of Great Oak High School in September to protest a Temecula Valley Unified School District policy requiring parents to be notified if their child requests to be identified as a different gender at school.Credit...Anjali Sharif-Paul/The Orange County Register, via Associated Press

Reporting from Los Angeles

From the start, the three conservative board members of the Temecula Valley Unified School District made clear where they stood. On the same night in December 2022 that they were sworn in as a majority, they passed a resolution banning critical race theory from classrooms in their Southern California district.

Months later, they abruptly fired the superintendent, saying they believed the district needed someone with new ideas. After that, they passed a rule requiring that parents be notified whenever a student requests to be identified as a different gender at school.

The moves were applauded by conservatives, many of them Christian churchgoers who had helped to install the new board members, hoping that Temecula Valley could remain an island of traditional values in a liberal state.

But this once rural area, about 60 miles northeast of San Diego, had transformed in recent decades into a diverse bedroom community, and many other families grew frustrated by what they considered to be the unwelcome incursion of national culture wars into their prized public schools.

That backlash came to a head this month when voters recalled Joseph Komrosky, a military veteran and community college professor who had been the school board president since that December night. Mr. Komrosky’s ouster was made official on Thursday evening.

“People are moving here so they can put their kids in the school district,” said Jeff Pack, whose One Temecula Valley PAC led the recall effort. “They don’t want all this partisan political warfare, this culture war stuff getting in the way.”


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