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Wednesday, June 24, 2026

THE BILLIONAIRE'S PLAYBOOK: HOW CALIFORNIA'S EDUCATION WAS QUIETLY BOUGHT, BRANDED, AND BROKEN

THE BILLIONAIRE'S PLAYBOOK

HOW CALIFORNIA'S EDUCATION WAS QUIETLY BOUGHT, BRANDED, AND BROKEN

An unflinching look at the incestuous ecosystem of philanthropic money, research universities, data pipelines, and privatization dressed up as progress

There's an old magic trick where the magician's left hand waves dramatically in the air while the right hand palms the coin. California's education reform industry has been performing this trick for thirty years — and the audience is still applauding. The left hand waves a glossy research brief about "equity" and "whole-child learning." The right hand quietly pockets the public school system. Welcome to the most sophisticated shell game in American public life: the billionaire-funded, university-laundered, data-harvested transformation of California education — served to you warm, with a side of philanthropy.

Act One: The Architecture of Captured Institutions

Let's start with the basic blueprint, because the elegance of the design deserves a slow, appreciative look.

California once led the nation in public education. Then, in 1978, Proposition 13 arrived — a property tax limitation measure that felt like a gift to homeowners but functioned like a slow-acting poison to public school funding. Within a decade, California went from a top-tier education state to a cautionary tale, starving its schools of the stable, locally-generated revenue that had made them great. The state never fully recovered.

Then came Proposition 187 in 1994 — the openly nativist ballot measure that targeted undocumented immigrants and their children, sending a clear ideological signal about whose children California's education system was really designed to serve. Even after the courts struck it down, the political culture it crystallized — the suspicion of immigrant students, the resistance to full inclusion — lingered like smoke in the walls of the institution.

Into this deliberately defunded, politically poisoned landscape walked the billionaires. And they came bearing gifts.

Act Two: The Philanthropy Industrial Complex — Or, How to Buy a University Without Technically Owning It

Here is where the trick gets truly beautiful in its audacity.

Policy Analysis for California Education (PACE) is, on paper, an independent, non-partisan research consortium operating across Stanford, UC Berkeley, USC, UC Davis, and UCLA. It produces rigorous, peer-reviewed research. Its scholars are credentialed. Its reports are cited in legislative hearings. It is, by every formal measure, a legitimate academic institution.

And yet.

PACE is funded almost entirely by a roster of foundations that reads like the guest list at a Davos after-party:

  • The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation — which has spent hundreds of millions of dollars nationally pushing charter school expansion, teacher evaluation systems tied to test scores, and market-style accountability frameworks 
  • The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation — which provided the original operating funds to launch PACE and continues to back its core initiatives
  • The Stuart Foundation, The James Irvine Foundation, The S.D. Bechtel Jr. Foundation, The Sobrato Family Foundation, and the California Education Policy Fund — a pooled fund managed by Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors

Let that last one breathe for a moment. A pooled fund managed by Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors. The Rockefellers. Managing a fund. For California education policy. In 2026.

This is not a conspiracy theory. This is a 990 form.

The mechanism is elegant precisely because it is not crude. The foundations don't call up Stanford and say, "Publish research that supports charter schools." That's not how captured institutions work. Instead, they fund the infrastructure — the salaries, the convenings, the data systems, the policy briefs — and the institution gradually, organically, structurally begins to produce research that reflects the worldview of the people paying for the lights to stay on.

It's not bribery. It's architecture.

Act Three: The CORE Loop — Public Schools Paying a Private Firm to Study Themselves for Foundations That Want to Replace Them



Now we arrive at the most exquisite irony in this entire arrangement, and it requires a moment of genuine appreciation for the sheer structural audacity of what has been constructed.

The CORE Districts — a collaborative of California's largest urban public school systems, including Los Angeles, Oakland, San Francisco, Fresno, and Sacramento City, serving nearly one million students — was created explicitly to defend traditional public education. Its entire philosophical premise is that public schools can innovate from within, share data collaboratively, and prove that they don't need privatization to improve.

Noble. Admirable. Genuinely well-intentioned.

And yet, the CORE Districts hired Capitol Impact, LLC — a for-profit private consulting firm — to manage its day-to-day operations, data infrastructure, and executive leadership. Capitol Impact was founded by Rick Miller, who simultaneously served as CORE's Executive Director. Miller's résumé includes stints at the U.S. Department of Education under Clinton, the California Department of Education, Microsoft's privacy and data division, and strategic communications for the CSU Chancellor. He is, in every sense, a creature of the system he now manages.

So the financial architecture looks like this:

LayerEntityTypeFunded By
ResearchPACEUniversity ConsortiumGates, Hewlett, Irvine, et al.
Data NetworkCORE DistrictsNon-Profit CollaborativeFoundations + District Fees
OperationsCapitol Impact, LLCFor-Profit Consulting FirmCORE contracts
Data ParticipantsMember DistrictsPublic School SystemsYour tax dollars
Charter ParticipantAspire Public SchoolsNon-Profit Charter CMOMixed public/private

Public school districts pay membership fees — scaled by enrollment, running from $30,000 to over $63,000 annually per district — to belong to CORE. CORE pays Capitol Impact to run the show. Capitol Impact also manages grant programs for the James Irvine Foundation, the Gates Foundation, and the Hewlett Foundation — the same foundations funding PACE, which studies the data that CORE collects from the districts that are paying Capitol Impact.

This is not a Venn diagram. This is a single circle.

Act Four: The University as Laundromat — Stanford's Two Faces



Perhaps the most telling detail in this entire ecosystem is what happens when you look at Stanford University's two education research centers side by side.

On one side, you have PACE — the collaborative, equity-focused, traditional-public-school-defending research consortium.

On the other side, housed at the Hoover Institution on the same campus, you have CREDO — the Center for Research on Education Outcomes, directed by Dr. Macke Raymond, which has spent two decades producing the nation's most-cited empirical research on charter school performance. The Hoover Institution is one of the most prominent conservative/libertarian think tanks in the United States.

Stanford, in other words, is simultaneously hosting:

  • The research center that defends public schools
  • The research center that provides the empirical ammunition for charter school expansion

This is not hypocrisy. This is market positioning. Stanford gets foundation money from both sides of the debate. Its brand is laundered clean by the mere fact of being Stanford. Whatever comes out of those buildings arrives pre-credentialed, pre-legitimized, pre-publishable in Education Week and cited in Sacramento hearings.

The same dynamic plays out across the PACE network. USC's CEPEG studies the political impacts of privatization in Los Angeles. UC Berkeley's researchers have spent decades tracking charter school scaling. UCLA's policy wings analyze segregation and community schooling. The universities are not neutral observers of the education reform debate. They are participants — funded by the same foundations whose policy preferences they are ostensibly studying.

Act Five: The Data Is the Product — One Million Children as a Research Asset

Let's talk about the data, because this is where the conversation moves from uncomfortable to genuinely alarming.

The CORE Data Collaborative tracks nearly one million California students across eight major urban districts. It collects not just test scores, but:

  • Chronic absenteeism rates
  • Suspension and discipline records
  • Social-emotional learning (SEL) survey data — meaning self-reported measures of student anxiety, belonging, and psychological well-being
  • College readiness trajectories
  • Foster care status intersections

This is an extraordinarily intimate dataset. And while CORE maintains strict FERPA compliance, de-identification protocols, and Data Use Agreements — and while the superintendents genuinely do maintain governance over their districts' data — the analytical outputs of this system flow directly to PACE researchers at Stanford and UC Berkeley, who produce policy briefs that are then used to shape state legislation, funding formulas, and accountability frameworks.

Meanwhile, Aspire Public Schools — one of California's largest charter management organizations — participates in the CORE Data Collaborative. A charter network, feeding its student data into a system managed by a for-profit consulting firm, analyzed by a university consortium funded by pro-charter foundations, producing research that influences the state policies governing both traditional public schools and charter schools.

The data doesn't just describe the system. The data is the system. And the people who control the interpretation of the data control the narrative about what California education is, what it needs, and — most critically — what it should become.

Act Six: Citizens United and the School Board — When Oligarchy Goes Local

None of this would be complete without acknowledging the political dimension, because the money doesn't just flow into research universities. It flows into elections.

Since Citizens United v. FEC (2010), the ability of billionaire-backed Super PACs and 501(c)(4) organizations to flood school board elections, legislative races, and gubernatorial campaigns with essentially unlimited dark money has transformed California's education politics.

School board elections in Los Angeles, Oakland, and San Francisco have become proxy wars between billionaire-backed charter advocates and teachers' union-backed candidates — with individual races attracting millions of dollars in outside spending for seats that technically pay nothing. The same foundations that fund PACE and Capitol Impact fund political action committees that support candidates who favor charter expansion, data-driven accountability, and "portfolio district" models that treat public schools like a market of competing options.

The result is a political feedback loop:

  1. Foundations fund research universities to produce data supporting reform
  2. The same foundations fund political campaigns to elect reform-friendly officials
  3. Reform-friendly officials cite the university research to justify policy changes
  4. Policy changes expand the market for the charter networks the foundations also fund
  5. Charter networks participate in the data collaborative that generates the next round of research

Proposition 13 defunded the schools. Proposition 187 defined whose children mattered. Citizens United handed the keys to the people who had been waiting patiently in the parking lot.

Act Seven: The Teaspoon of Sugar — Why This Is So Hard to Fight

Here is the genuinely difficult part, and intellectual honesty demands we say it plainly.

Most of what PACE produces is legitimate, useful research. The Getting Down to Facts III series is a serious, rigorous diagnostic of California's TK-12 system. The work on English Learner reclassification bottlenecks is important. The research on foster youth and school discipline is exactly the kind of equity-focused analysis that public school advocates should want.

Most of what CORE does is genuinely beneficial for the districts involved. Sharing data on chronic absenteeism across eight urban districts to identify equity gaps is a good thing. Building a "multiple measures" accountability system that goes beyond high-stakes testing is a good thing. The CORE College Roadmap, which gives families clear information about college readiness, is a good thing.

This is precisely the mark of sophisticated corporate education reform. It is not crude. It does not arrive wearing a villain's cape. It arrives wearing a research brief, a foundation grant, and a genuine commitment to helping underserved children — and also a structural architecture that systematically redirects public education dollars toward private management, erodes the democratic governance of neighborhood schools, and produces the intellectual infrastructure for the next wave of privatization.

The teaspoon of sugar is real. The medicine it's helping you swallow is also real.

The Verdict: A Middle-of-the-Pack State in a Nation That Deserves Better

California ranks #37 overall among U.S. states, according to U.S. News & World Report's Best States rankings. The state that once led the nation in public education — that built the greatest public university system in human history, that educated the engineers who built Silicon Valley — now sits in the middle of the pack, sandwiched between states with a fraction of its resources and a fraction of its ambition.

This did not happen by accident. It happened through a deliberate, decades-long sequence of policy choices:

  • Prop 13 starved the schools of stable funding
  • Prop 187 told immigrant families their children were unwelcome
  • Billionaire philanthropy stepped into the funding vacuum and brought its agenda with it
  • Citizens United allowed that agenda to purchase the political system that was supposed to provide oversight
  • Research universities provided the intellectual legitimacy that made the whole arrangement look like science instead of strategy

The CORE-PACE-Capitol Impact ecosystem is not the cause of California's education crisis. It is a symptom — and sometimes a genuine attempt at a cure. But a cure administered by the people who profit from the disease, distributed through institutions funded by the people who benefit from the status quo, analyzed by researchers whose salaries depend on foundation goodwill, is not a cure.

It is a very well-funded, very well-credentialed, very well-intentioned management of decline.

California's children — especially the Black, Latino, immigrant, foster, and low-income children who populate the CORE data dashboards — deserve a public education system that is governed democratically, funded adequately, and accountable to them rather than to the foundations that write the checks, the consulting firms that cash them, and the think tanks that justify the whole arrangement in peer-reviewed prose.

The coin is still in the magician's hand. The question is whether California is finally ready to ask for it back.


Sources: — Policy Analysis for California Education (PACE): edpolicyinca.org — "Got Dough? How Billionaires Rule Our Schools," Dissent Magazine: dissentmagazine.org — In the Public Interest, "Understanding the Privatization of Public Education" (2020): inthepublicinterest.org — CBS News, "Billionaires Are Boosting Charter Schools Across America": cbsnews.com


Full Source List: The Billionaire's Book Club — California Education Reform

Organized by topic for easy reference and citation


🏛️ PACE — Policy Analysis for California Education

  1. PACE Official Website — Research publications, initiatives, and funding disclosures 🔗 https://edpolicyinca.org/

  2. PACE at Stanford CEPA — Institutional profile and research mandate 🔗 https://cepa.stanford.edu/content/policy-analysis-california-education-pace

  3. PACE LinkedIn Institutional Profile — Consortium structure across Stanford, UC Berkeley, USC, UCLA, UC Davis 🔗 https://www.linkedin.com/company/edpolicyinca


🔄 CORE Districts & CORE-PACE Research Partnership

  1. CORE Districts Official Website — Mission, member districts, data collaborative overview 🔗 https://coredistricts.org/

  2. CORE Data Collaborative Page — Data sharing infrastructure, PACE partnership details 🔗 https://coredistricts.org/data-collaborative/

  3. CORE-PACE Research Partnership (PACE) — Official initiative description, research pillars, funding 🔗 https://edpolicyinca.org/initiatives/core-pace-research-partnership

  4. California State Senate — CORE Data Collaborative PowerPoint — School Quality Improvement Index and data pipeline structure 🔗 https://sedn.senate.ca.gov/sites/sedn.senate.ca.gov/files/4a._core_power_point.pdf


💼 Capitol Impact, LLC & Rick Miller

  1. Capitol Impact Official Website — About Us — Founding mission, services, client roster 🔗 https://capitolimpact.org/about-us/

  2. InfluenceWatch — Capitol Impact Profile — Documents Rick Miller's dual role as Capitol Impact partner and CORE Districts CEO, organizational relationships 🔗 https://www.influencewatch.org/for-profit/capitol-impact/

  3. Rick Miller — Sierra Forward Board Profile — Career history, CORE Districts founding, Capitol Impact partnership 🔗 https://www.sierraforward.com/RickMiller.html

  4. Rick Miller — LinkedIn Profile — Professional background, CSU, Microsoft, U.S. Dept. of Education history 🔗 https://www.linkedin.com/in/rick-miller-43b24229


💰 Billionaire Philanthropy, Gates Foundation & Education Reform

  1. "Got Dough? How Billionaires Rule Our Schools" — Dissent Magazine — The foundational investigative piece on Gates, Broad, and Walton foundations spending nearly $4 billion annually to reshape K-12 education 🔗 https://dissentmagazine.org/article/got-dough-how-billionaires-rule-our-schools/

  2. NEPC — "Let's Review How Bill and Melinda Gates Spent on Education Reform" — National Education Policy Center analysis of Gates Foundation's two-decade education reform investment strategy 🔗 https://nepc.colorado.edu/blog/lets-review

  3. Gates Foundation Press Release — 12 Foundations Commit $500M to Education Innovation — Documents the coordinated philanthropic push tied to federal Race to the Top and i3 funding 🔗 https://www.gatesfoundation.org/ideas/media-center/press-releases/2010/04/12-foundations-commit-to-education-innovation-with-us-department-of-education

  4. Hewlett & Gates Foundations Joint Education Initiative — Documents the co-funding relationship between the two primary PACE funders 🔗 https://hewlett.org/newsroom/gates-and-hewlett-foundations-join-to-improve-the-quality-of-education-in-developing-nations/


🏫 Charter Schools, Privatization & the Broader Reform Ecosystem

  1. In the Public Interest — "Privatization of Public Education" Resource Guide — Comprehensive analysis of how privatization mechanisms operate within public school systems 🔗 https://www.inthepublicinterest.org/wp-content/uploads/ITPI_Edu_Resources_Dec2020.pdf

  2. Network for Public Education — "Hijacked by Billionaires" — Documents how billionaire-backed PACs and foundations fund school board elections and state legislative races 🔗 https://networkforpubliceducation.org/hijacked/

  3. CREDO at Stanford — Hoover Institution — Official home of the Center for Research on Education Outcomes, the nation's primary charter school performance research center 🔗 https://credo.stanford.edu/


📜 Proposition 13 & California School Funding Crisis

  1. Public Policy Institute of California — "California's K-12 Education Funding" — Authoritative analysis of how Prop 13 restructured school finance and created persistent funding inequities 🔗 https://www.ppic.org/publication/californias-k-12-education-funding/

  2. EdSource — "How California Funds Its Schools" — Accessible explainer on LCFF, basic aid districts, and the structural inequities in California school finance post-Prop 13 🔗 https://edsource.org/2023/how-california-funds-its-schools/694438


🗳️ Citizens United & Dark Money in Education Elections

  1. Brennan Center for Justice — "Citizens United Explained" — Definitive legal and political analysis of the ruling's impact on elections at all levels 🔗 https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/research-reports/citizens-united-explained

  2. Los Angeles Times — "Millions in Dark Money Flood LA School Board Race" — Documents billionaire-backed outside spending in LAUSD school board elections 🔗 https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2022-05-17/lausd-school-board-race-dark-money


📊 Aspire Public Schools & Charter Data Participation

  1. Aspire Public Schools Official Website — Organizational structure, 501(c)(3) status, school network overview 🔗 https://aspirepublicschools.org/

  2. EdSource — "Aspire Public Schools" Coverage — Ongoing reporting on Aspire's role in California's charter landscape 🔗 https://edsource.org/tag/aspire-public-schools


🎓 Stanford CEPA, CREDO & the Research Ecosystem

  1. Stanford Center for Education Policy Analysis (CEPA) — Research on school finance, teacher labor markets, and accountability 🔗 https://cepa.stanford.edu/

  2. The Educational Opportunity Project at Stanford — Sean Reardon's national database of academic performance, segregation, and achievement gaps 🔗 https://edopportunity.org/

  3. USC Rossier — Center on Education Policy, Equity and Governance (CEPEG) — Urban governance, charter competition, and privatization impacts in Southern California 🔗 https://rossier.usc.edu/research-impact/research-centers-initiatives


All links verified as of June 2026. For primary document research, PACE's official publication archive at edpolicyinca.org/publications and CORE's annual reports at coredistricts.org are the most comprehensive starting points.