It Is Right and Proper to Laugh at the Suffering of Journalists
For Epstein Victims and Members of Congress, It’s Time to Put Up or...
Axios Is Having a Tough Go of Things This Week, and Media Are...
The Brilliant 'Reasoning' of the Left
The Decline of the Washington Post
Ingrates R’ Us
Jeffries and Schumer Denounce Trump's 'Racist' Video — but Who Are They to...
NYC Needs School Choice—Not ‘Green Schools’
Housing Affordability Is About Politics, Not Economics
Is It Cool to Be Unpatriotic? Perhaps — but It’s Also Ungrateful
A Chance Meeting With Richard Pryor — and Its Lasting Impact
What’s Next After That $2 million Detransitioner Lawsuit Win?
Focus Iran’s Future on Democracy, Not Dynasty
California Campaign Adviser Sentenced to 48 Months in PRC Agent Case
19 New York City Residents Reportedly Freeze to Death After Mamdani Changes Homeless...
Tipsheet

Weingarten Attempts to Do Damage Control After Outrage Over Her Comments About School Choice Supporters

AP Photo/Paul Sancya

American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten is denying that she compared 1950s segregationists to school choice advocates after comments she made during an interview with the “Power at Work Blogcast” sparked outrage.

Advertisement

Referencing school choice supporters who have used “the same words” as those who opposed the Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court ruling, Weingarten told host Seth Harris, a senior fellow at the Burnes Center for Social Change at Northeastern University, that “those same words you hear today.” 

"I was kind of gobsmacked when I was talking to the Southern Poverty Law Center, and they showed me the same words, ‘choice,’ ‘parental rights,’ and attempt to divide parents versus teachers,” Weingarten continued. "At that point it was white parents versus other parents, but it’s the same kind of words."

The comparison prompted outrage, including from GOP Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina.

“I’m sick of liberals crying racism every time they’re losing an argument," he said. "I can't think of anything more racist than teachers’ unions trapping poor Black kids in failing schools in big blue cities. Randi Weingarten, you’ve done enough damage."

Advertisement

But in a statement to Fox News Digital, Weingarten claims she wasn’t comparing the two groups.

"I never made the comparison. I said I was gobsmacked that the same language was used. I was shocked by it precisely because I don’t see today’s parents that way," she argued. "I believe that parents and teachers are each others partners."

But that wasn't the first time she appeared to draw a connection. As the National Review pointed out in 2017 about her speech to the union's convention, she argued "the real pioneers of private school choice were the white politicians who resisted school integration" and called school-choice programs the “only slightly more polite cousins of segregation.”

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement