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Critics said Trump’s order is in conflict with the promise to return education in schools and states.
A federal judge in New Hampshire restricted The ability of US President Donald Trump’s administration to reduce the financing of public schools that engage in diversity, equity and inclusion efforts.
The District Landya McCaffey of Concord District Judge published a preliminary injunction preventing the United States Ministry of Education on Thursday to enforce its policy against the members of three groups, including the National Education Association, the largest teachers’ union.
The NEA, its local affiliate of New Hampshire and the Center for Black Educator Development continued after the Department of Education in February threatened with funding reductions for education establishments that have engaged in Dei’s efforts.
In a letter, he declared that federal law prevented schools from considering the race as a factor in fields such as admission, hiring and promotion, remuneration, financial aid, scholarships and prices, housing and graduation ceremonies.
McCafferty, appointed by Democratic President Barack Obama, refused to issue an injunction blocking the application of policy on a national level, but she declared that an order was justified to be implemented with the complainants, their members or any entity which employs or contracts their members.
In early April, the Trump administration ordered Schools from kindergarten to the 12th year (kindergarten to the 12th year) on a national level to certify within 10 days that they follow federal laws on civil rights and ending the discriminatory practices of the DEI, as a condition for receiving federal money.
He followed a memo of February 14 where the Trump administration said that it gave us schools and universities 14 days to eliminate diversity initiatives or risk losing federal money.
In the memo, the education department also gave an ultimatum to stop using “racial preferences” as a factor of admission, financial aid, hiring or other areas.
Since then, schools Through the United States, the United States has rushed to determine what practices could be up to anti-dei orders.
April’s certification letter, however, attracted the return of criticism that said it was confronted with Trump’s promise to return education in schools and states.
“Is that what the Trump administration calls local control? You cannot say that you make control to the States and that you dictate how they lead their schools,” said Keri Rodrigues, president of the National Parent Union, to the Associated Press news agency earlier this month.
The American teachers’ federation, a national teacher union, also said that it was pursuing the memo note on February 14, saying that it violates the first and fifth amendments.
The president of the union, Randi Weingarten, said in early April that the requirement of certification was illegal and added that the federal law prohibits the White House from telling schools and colleges what to teach, and that federal money cannot be retained without regular procedure.
“It exploits a cake of billions of federal aid to tens of millions of children, all races and ethnic groups, to force educators to go to its policy and its ideology.”