A handful of states (including Indiana, Alabama, South Dakota and Georgia) are either pulling back or considering it, and
core supporters fear more states will too.
Not exact matches
UKIP's rise post-2004 has made many politicians nervous about seeming too pro-EU for
fear of losing
core supporters.
Trump's embrace of the country's racially charged past has thrown the Republican Party into crisis, dividing his
core supporters who have urged him on from the political leaders who
fear that he is leading them down a perilous and shortsighted path.
I'm told that Tory
core voters are fired up,
fearing a clean sweep by the red menace, while many Labour
supporters are relatively uninterested in local elections.
But their
fears have a common root: a mistrust (and,
supporters of Common
Core say, a misunderstanding) of who wrote the standards and why.
«A quiet, sub-rosa
fear is brewing,» EdWeek assistant editor Steven Sawchuck wrote last May, «among
supporters of the Common
Core State Standards Initiative: that the standards will die the slow death of poor implementation in K - 12 classrooms.»