NEWNow you can listen to Pak Gazette articles!
The Secretary of the United States Department of Education, Linda McMahon, went to a Pak Gazette digital report that the Maine Commissioner of Education undermined the executive orders of President Donald Trump in emails to schools to schools.
McMahon shared the report on a publication on X Tuesday, referring to the Trump administration’s demand against the State for challenging Title IX.
“Deliberately challenging federal law is exactly why [the Department of Education] He found Maine in violation of Title IX- and why the DOJ continues his lawsuit against the State. If you ignore the Federal Law, there will be consequences, “McMahon wrote.
CLICK HERE for more sports coverage at Foxnews.com
The emails obtained by Pak Gazette Digital Show of the Department of Education of Maine, Pender Makin, drafted multiple notes for schools that suggested that schools follow Maine’s state law and do not comply with Trump’s executive orders in January who addressed public education.
“Last week, we advise schools to adhere to the Maine Human Rights Law and the local school policies related to non -discrimination. We encourage you Email of January 28.
“Most executive orders belong to federal agencies and federal laws on which Maine Doe has no authority.”
Makin corresponded to the attached attorney general of Maine Sarah Forster, with a draft of a memorandum to schools. The memorandum included orders to avoid complying with the “Radical Trump radical drive in K-12 Schooling”, executive order, in an email on January 30.
“… This Eo does not change anything for Maine’s schools,” he wrote part of an email discussed by the memorandum. Memorandum draft said that “Maine’s schools should continue to follow the laws of our State and the provisions within their local policies.”
Maine’s adolescents fighting state democrats in the Girls Sports Law project after supporting trans athlete chaos in high school
Then, in an email of January 31, Makin wrote another memorandum to Superintendents and School Leaders who are addressed to the Executive Order.
“The Executive Order does not alter the obligations of schools under state law, including Maine’s Human Rights Law, and does not require any immediate change to the policies of the school board adopted locally,” reads the memorandum.
The representative of the state of Maine, Laurel Libby, went to the report in an interview with “Fox & Friends” on Tuesday morning.
“I am not surprised at all,” Libby said, then and then added: “It is an agenda aroused with which most of the main ones do not agree. They do not agree that biological men should participate in girls’ sports. They do not agree that the approach should be in Dei and emotional social learning.”
Maine and Governor Janet Mills have been in a dispute with the Trump administration since February after the State became one of the first to openly challenge Trump’s men “keeping men in women’s sports.” The challenge turned out that an athlete Trans win a female pole jump competition in February, and then a verbal dispute in person between Trump and Mills at a meeting of Governors of the White House on February 21.
The United States Department of Justice has launched a lawsuit against Mills and the State for challenging Title IX, which will go to trial in January 2026.
TO survey The coalition of American parents discovered that about 600 registered voters of Maine, 63% said that school sports participation should be based on biological sex, and 66% agreed that it is “just restricting women’s sports to biological women.”
The survey also found that 60% of residents would admit a voting measure that limits participation in Women and girls sports for biological females. This included 64% of independents and 66% of parents with children under 18.