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The secretary of the American education department, Linda McMahon, addressed a digital report by PK Press Club that the Maine’s education commissioner has undermined the executive orders of President Donald Trump in e-mails to schools.
McMahon shared the report in an article on X Tuesday, referring to the trial of the Trump administration against the State for challenging title IX.
“Deliberately defying the federal law [the Department of Education] Found Maine in violation of the title IX- and why the doj continues his trial against the state. If you ignore federal law, there will be consequences, “wrote McMahon.
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The emails obtained by PK Press Club Digital Show of Maine Department of Education Commissioner, Pender Makin, have written several memos for schools which suggested that schools followed the law of the Maine State and do not comply with the executive decrees of Trump who addressed public education.
“Last week, we advised schools to respect the Maine Human Rights Act and your local policies of school boards linked to non-discrimination. We encourage you to continue to ensure the safety of all people and we reiterate the fact that, at present, neither our state law nor your local policies are decreased by the emails of executive orders.
“Most executive orders concern federal agencies and federal laws on which Maine Doe has no authority.”
Makin corresponded to the deputy general prosecutor of Maine Sarah Forster, with a memo project in schools. The memo included orders to avoid complying with “the end of the radical indoctrination of Trump in kindergarten in the 12th year”, the executive decree, in an email on January 30.
“… This EO does not change anything for the schools of Maine”, part of an email chatting of the memo wrote. The memo project said that “Maine’s schools should continue to follow the laws of our state and the provisions within their local policies”.
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Then, in an email of January 31, Makin wrote another memo note to the superintendents and the heads of schools addressing the decree.
“The decree does not modify the obligations of schools under state law, including the maine’s human rights law, and requires no immediate change for locally adopted school board policies,” said the memo.
The representative of the state of Maine, Laurel Libby, addressed the report in an interview with “Fox & Friends” on Tuesday morning.
“I am not surprised at all,” said Libby, adding later, “it is an awakened program with which most of the mainers do not agree. They do not agree that biological men should participate in the sports of girls. They do not agree that the accent should be on dei and social emotional learning.”
Maine and Governor Janet Mills have been in a quarrel with the administration of Trump since February after the State became one of the first to openly challenge the executive decree of “keeping female sports men”. The challenge brought a trans athlete to win a pole jump competition for girls in February, then to a verbal spit in person between Trump and Mills at a meeting of the Governors of the White House on February 21.
The United States Ministry of Justice has launched legal action against Mills and the State for challenging title IX, which should be tried in January 2026.
A survey on The American Parents Coalition noted that out of approximately 600 registered voters from Maine, 63% said that the participation of school sports should be based on organic sex, and 66% agreed that it was “fair to restrict the sports of women to organic women”.
The survey also revealed that 60% of residents would support a voting measure limiting participation In Sports for women and girls at Biological women. This included 64% of the self -employed and 66% of parents with children under the age of 18.