Latest News and Comment from Education

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

THEY'RE AT IT AGAIN: THE NEVER-ENDING RIGHT-WING CRUSADE AGAINST RANDI WEINGARTEN

 

THEY'RE AT IT AGAIN: THE NEVER-ENDING RIGHT-WING CRUSADE AGAINST RANDI WEINGARTEN

If you've ever Googled "Randi Weingarten," you already know what you're going to find — a cascading avalanche of right-wing hit pieces, Heritage Foundation screeds, Christopher Rufo fever dreams, and Daily Signal op-eds so breathlessly outraged you'd think the woman personally canceled Christmas. Like clockwork, with the reliability of a vending machine that only dispenses culture war panic, the MAGA media machine cranks out another round of "Randi Weingarten is destroying America." She fires back. They reload. Repeat since 2008. It's practically a tradition at this point — like the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, but with more hysteria and fewer balloons.

The Woman They Love to Hate

Here's what the right-wing noise machine doesn't want you to sit with for too long: Randi Weingarten started her career in a classroom. She taught history at Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn from 1991 to 1997. She wasn't parachuted in from a think tank funded by billionaires. She didn't write a manifesto from a marble-floored office. She showed up, graded papers, and dealt with the beautiful, exhausting chaos of actual public school students.

From there, she rose to lead the United Federation of Teachers in New York City in 1998, navigating the political minefields of both Rudy Giuliani and Michael Bloomberg — two mayors who, ideological differences aside, shared a mutual enthusiasm for making a union president's life difficult. She was elected AFT president in 2008, representing 1.8 million members: teachers, nurses, public employees, and higher education faculty.

Since then, she has expanded the AFT's mission from traditional "bread and butter" unionism — wages, benefits, contracts — into what she calls community unionism: the idea that a school is not just a building where math happens, but a hub of democracy, healthcare, nutrition, and civic life. It's a vision that makes perfect sense to anyone who has ever actually been inside an underfunded public school. And it makes the Heritage Foundation absolutely furious.

The Greatest Hits of Right-Wing Outrage

Pull up a chair. The attacks come in predictable flavors, recycled with the enthusiasm of a DJ who only knows three songs.

"She Kept Schools Closed!" (The Pandemic Panic Track)

The most persistent criticism — played on a loop from Fox News to the Freedom Foundation — is that Weingarten is personally responsible for every minute of pandemic-era school closure. The narrative goes: she whispered into the CDC's ear, the CDC complied, and a generation of children was academically ruined while she cackled from her union headquarters.

The reality, as inconvenient as ever, is considerably more textured. Weingarten consistently called for a science-based approach to reopening — one that accounted for ventilation, vaccination timelines, and the fact that teachers are human beings with lungs. The City Journal, never one to let nuance interfere with a good polemic, ran a piece essentially arguing that Weingarten's book tour proves her revisionism about COVID is shameless self-promotion. What they conveniently omit: school districts across the country — run by local boards, not Randi Weingarten — made their own reopening decisions. But why let federalism get in the way of a villain origin story?

"She's a Political Operative!" (The Slush Fund Remix)

The Heritage Foundation, that venerable institution funded by the very billionaires who benefit most from dismantling public education, has declared that Weingarten "turns the teachers union into a political weapon." Their evidence? The AFT directs nearly 100% of its political contributions to Democrats.

This is presented as a scandal. It is, in fact, a logical consequence of one party spending decades trying to defund, privatize, and dismantle public education while the other party — however imperfectly — has not. When one team is actively trying to eliminate your institution, you tend not to donate to their campaign fund. This is not a conspiracy. This is arithmetic.

The Heritage piece also clutches its pearls over Weingarten leveraging teacher pension funds to pressure Target executives over ICE enforcement in Minnesota. The audacity! Using financial leverage to influence corporate behavior — the very mechanism that hedge funds, private equity firms, and Heritage Foundation donors use every single day — is apparently only outrageous when a union does it.

"Why Fascists Fear Teachers" (The Book They Cannot Stop Talking About)

In 2025, Weingarten published Why Fascists Fear Teachers: Public Education and the Future of Democracy. The title alone sent conservative media into a collective fainting spell from which they have not fully recovered.

City Journal dispatched a writer to a Columbia University book event, who returned with a piece dripping with contempt — mocking her appearance, her "self-promotion," and her political analysis. The irony of a right-wing publication dedicating thousands of words to a book they insist nobody should read appears to have escaped them entirely.

Meanwhile, the American Association of University Professors' journal Liberal Education ran a far more substantive interview, in which Weingarten — wearing an American flag pin alongside a Norwegian paperclip (a WWII symbol of resistance) — argued that attacks on teachers, book bans, and assaults on tenure are part of a coordinated campaign to erode democratic institutions. "When you undermine colleges," she said, "you're undermining the very institutions that produce knowledge, train civic leaders, and sustain democracy."

One of these publications engaged her ideas seriously. The other made fun of her face. You can guess which was which.

"She's Killing the Union!" (The Membership Decline Dirge)

The Daily Signal — the Heritage Foundation's in-house content arm — recently published a piece asking whether the AFT is nearing its end, pointing to post-Janus v. AFSCME membership declines and breathlessly promoting the "Teacher Freedom Alliance," a new alternative organization that has attracted 12,000 members.

For context: the AFT has 1.8 million members. Twelve thousand is, statistically speaking, a rounding error. But in the right-wing echo chamber, every defection is a revolution, every poll showing Americans want "less politics in classrooms" is a death knell, and every think-tank-funded alternative organization is the dawn of a new golden age of education.

The Real Pattern Here

Step back from the individual attacks and a clear picture emerges. The assault on Randi Weingarten is not really about Randi Weingarten. It is a coordinated, well-funded, years-long campaign to delegitimize the very concept of organized teacher advocacy — and by extension, public education itself.

The players are familiar: Christopher Rufo, who has openly stated his strategy is to make "critical race theory" a toxic brand regardless of whether it actually appears in any curriculum. The Heritage Foundation, whose Project 2025 blueprint called for dismantling the Department of Education. Moms for Liberty, whose chapters have been linked to book-banning campaigns in dozens of school districts. The Freedom Foundation, whose explicit mission is to defund public sector unions.

They are not critics engaging in good faith with education policy. They are demolition crews with a messaging budget.

Why She Keeps Fighting — and Why It Matters

Here is the thing about Randi Weingarten that the culture warriors cannot quite process: she doesn't stop. She's at a "No Kings" protest in Minnesota one week, presenting at an academic research conference the next, then on MS NOW, then on a picket line with Starbucks workers, then back in a school.

For her critics, this ubiquity is proof of megalomania. For her supporters — the teachers negotiating contracts in underfunded districts, the nurses fighting for safe staffing ratios, the adjunct professors cobbling together a living from three campuses — it looks a lot more like someone who actually believes what she says.

The right-wing echo chamber has been predicting her irrelevance, her downfall, and the AFT's collapse for nearly two decades. She is still here. The union is still here. Public schools — despite everything — are still here.

That, more than any book title or protest sign, is probably what bothers them most.

Sources: City Journal | Heritage Foundation | AACU Liberal Education | The Daily Signal


MORNING NEWS UPDATE: MAY 5, 2026

 

MORNING NEWS UPDATE: MAY 5, 2026


Here's a structured roundup of today's top news stories (Tuesday, May 5, 2026), drawn from major outlets and morning broadcasts. Coverage centers on escalating Middle East tensions, domestic political tests of presidential influence, and ripple effects across sectors. Stories are synthesized from at least three distinct sources per category where available.

📰 U.S. News

Domestic headlines highlight security incidents, presidential behavior, and aviation close calls.

  • A Secret Service agent shot an armed individual near the Washington Monument in Washington, D.C.; the incident is under investigation. 
  • A United Airlines flight came dangerously close to disaster, with its landing gear striking a truck on the New Jersey Turnpike while the plane was only about 20 feet above the roadway. 
  • President Trump's continued "insane posting spree" on social media, including unsubstantiated claims about ongoing wars, remains a dominant topic.  
  • MAGA commentators have controversially blamed late-night host Jimmy Kimmel for Rudy Giuliani's recent health problems 
  • Strait of Hormuz Confrontation: The U.S. Navy and Iranian forces traded fire yesterday. U.S. warships shot down missiles and drones aimed at commercial vessels, while Apache helicopters reportedly sank six Iranian speedboats.  
  • White House Security Incident: The Secret Service confirmed an officer-involved shooting occurred near the White House complex; personnel are currently on the scene and investigations are ongoing.  
  • Strait Transit Operations: Under "Project Freedom," the U.S. military successfully guided two U.S.-flagged merchant ships through the Strait of Hormuz despite the ongoing regional tensions.

🏛️ Politics

Primary elections and Trump's influence dominate, alongside foreign policy fallout.

  • Seven state-level elections today in Ohio and Indiana test whether President Trump's grip on the Republican Party is weakening; he has endorsed challengers to sitting GOP senators, with Vivek Ramaswamy's personality and Trump's revenge politics in focus.  
  • A CNN debate and analysis of Trump's approval rating feature in the day's political calendar, with a crowded Democratic field and new primary rules advancing the top two candidates regardless of party. 
  • Trump's endorsement of seven challengers to Republican state senators puts a national spotlight on down-ballot races. 
  • Ongoing tensions with Iran, including ignored deadlines and Strait of Hormuz hostilities, are shaping foreign policy debates.  
  • California Treasurer Race: With the primary approaching, candidates including Eleni Kounalakis and Anna Caballero are debating the necessary qualifications for managing the state's billions, shifting the role from "clerical" to highly political.
  • U.S.-Brazil Relations: Brazilian President Lula da Silva is scheduled to visit the U.S. this week for high-level meetings with President Trump.  
  • Fed Chair Investigation: The Justice Department is moving to vacate a ruling that previously blocked subpoenas in the investigation involving Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.

🌍 World Affairs

Middle East conflict escalation leads coverage, with ceasefire strains and military impacts.

  • The U.S. and Iran have traded fire in the Strait of Hormuz, with Iran claiming a U.S. warship was struck (denied by the U.S.) and warning that secure shipping is now jeopardized; this tests a fragile ceasefire.   (from prior data)
  • Israel killed 41 people in Lebanon despite an existing ceasefire, adding to regional volatility. 
  • The U.S. military has reported 13 combat deaths and 381 service members wounded in related operations, prompting antiwar protests in Washington, D.C. 
  • Oil prices are fluctuating sharply due to the Middle East tensions. 
  • Ukraine Ceasefire: President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced a ceasefire with Russia scheduled to begin at midnight tonight (May 5–6), citing the value of human life over anniversary celebrations.  
  • Civilian Casualties in Hormuz: Iranian media reports that five civilians were killed during U.S. strikes on small cargo boats; Washington’s account of the military engagement is being disputed by Tehran.  
  • China Industrial Tragedy: A massive explosion at a fireworks factory in central China has left at least 21 people dead and 61 others injured.  
  • EU Trade Warning: The European Commission warned it may take protective measures following new tariff threats from the U.S. administration.

📚 Education

Stories focus on policy changes, technology debates, and routine updates.

  • The Trump administration has finalized new regulations imposing loan limits on postbaccalaureate degree programs, despite significant opposition from higher education groups. 
  • An opinion piece questions whether educational technology does more harm than good in K-12 classrooms, sparking debate on ed-tech implementation. 
  • The U.S. Department of Education highlighted the Presidential 1776 Award Regional Semifinals held over the weekend. 
  • In India (with global echoes), updates on JEE Main 2026 exams, Gujarat RTE lottery results, and paid internship opportunities are circulating in education news. 
  • Title IX Investigation: The U.S. Department of Education has opened a formal investigation into Smith College regarding its policies on admitting biological men into all-women’s spaces.  
  • National Civics Tour: Education officials are continuing the "History Rocks! Trail to Independence Tour," focusing on promoting civics education across various academies.  
  • Grant Competitions: The Departments of Education and Labor have launched the FY 2026 competition for state assessment grants to bolster elementary and secondary education partnerships.

💰 Economy

Direct economic headlines are limited in morning reports but tied heavily to geopolitics.

  • Oil prices are swinging due to U.S.-Iran hostilities in the Strait of Hormuz, raising concerns about energy markets and inflation.  (from world coverage)
  • Broader economic implications from potential shipping disruptions in the Middle East are being monitored by markets. 
  • No major standalone domestic economic releases (such as jobs or inflation data) dominated the early headlines today, though political primaries could influence future fiscal policy debates.
  • Oil Market Volatility: Global oil prices are fluctuating wildly; Brent crude sits around $112.90 per barrel as the market reacts to the escalating conflict in the Middle East.  
  • Corporate Shakeups: GameStop shares fell following a massive $56 billion bid to acquire the online marketplace eBay.  
  • Suez Canal Losses: Egypt reports a $10 billion loss in canal revenue due to continued shipping attacks in the Bab al-Mandab Strait.  
  • Crypto Milestone: Bitcoin broke the $80,000 barrier twice in 24 hours, currently trading around $80,740.

💻 Technology

Tech-related education debates lead, with limited standalone breaking stories.

  • Discussion around classroom technology and whether ed-tech tools may ultimately harm student outcomes more than they help is gaining traction. 
  • Broader tech implications from geopolitical tensions (such as potential impacts on global supply chains or energy for data centers) are being noted but not yet headline-dominant. 
  • Agentic AI Adoption: NV5’s "GeoAgent" AI platform has achieved "Awardable" status with the Chief Digital and Artificial Intelligence Office, signaling a shift toward mission-aware automation in defense.  
  • AI for Nursing: Florida State University launched the nation’s first micro-credential series focused on the responsible use of AI in clinical nursing practice.  
  • Transatlantic Tech Tension: The EU is evaluating its "predictable" tech relationship with the U.S. in light of shifting trade policies.

🏥 Health

Health stories are quieter today, with indirect ties to other news.

  • Rudy Giuliani's ongoing health issues have become politicized, with some MAGA voices attributing them to stress from Jimmy Kimmel's commentary.  
  • No major new public health alerts or medical breakthroughs are leading morning coverage; focus remains on stress-related or conflict-adjacent wellness impacts from geopolitical news.
  • Ethical AI in Care: A new partnership between the Coalition for Health AI (CHAI) and academic institutions is establishing guidelines to ensure AI serves patients first in the frontline of care.
  • Middle East Trauma: Medical facilities in Oman and Lebanon are reporting casualties and injuries following the latest wave of regional drone and missile attacks.

⚽ Sports

International and club competitions provide the bright spots.

  • Arsenal defeated Barcelona 1-0 in the UEFA Women's Champions League final held in Lisbon, securing the title.  (from overnight reports)
  • Hungarian opposition figures and other international sports-political crossovers were noted in some roundups, though not central. 
  • U.S. sports coverage is expected to shift toward MLB, NBA playoffs, or upcoming events later today, but no dominant domestic headline has emerged in early reports.
  • College Baseball Rankings: Mississippi State dropped to No. 11 in the latest D1 Baseball Top 25, while Southern Miss maintained its No. 12 spot following a series sweep.
  • Regional Rivalries: Arkansas and Texas moved up in the rankings (to No. 17 and No. 4 respectively) after key weekend series wins against Ole Miss and Mississippi State.

Key takeaway: Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, particularly the U.S.-Iran exchanges in the Strait of Hormuz, are the unifying thread influencing politics, economy, and world affairs today. Domestic politics remain centered on testing Trump's influence in state races. Sources synthesized include CNN, USA Today, The New York Times, Democracy Now, CBS, ABC, Education Week, and the U.S. Department of Education.


EDUCATION SPECIAL

TOP US EDUCATION NEWS TODAY
TOP WORLD EDUCATION NEWS TODAY

Top US Education News: May 5, 2026

1. Federal Student Loan "RISE" Rules Finalized

The U.S. Department of Education has officially published the final regulations for the Reimagining and Improving Student Education (RISE) program. Implementing changes from the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" (OBBBA) of 2025, these rules introduce strict new limits:

  • Professional Degrees: New loan limits are set at $50,000 per year with a $200,000 aggregate cap.

  • Graduate Degrees: Limits remain at $20,500 per year but now face a $100,000 aggregate cap.

  • Effective Date: These changes take effect July 1, 2026, amidst anticipated legal challenges from higher education coalitions.

2. Carnegie Fellows to Tackle Political Polarization

The Carnegie Corporation of New York announced its 2026 Andrew Carnegie Fellows today. Twenty-four scholars (12 from public and 11 from private US universities) will each receive $200,000 to research the causes of political polarization. This third cohort is part of a high-priority effort to find evidence-based solutions to strengthen national cohesion.

3. The "2026 Shift" in K-12 Classrooms

Education analysts are highlighting a massive transition as we hit the mid-point of 2026. Personalized learning has moved from theory to standard practice in most districts, driven by:

  • AI Integration: Automation of administrative tasks like grading is allowing teachers more time for student mentorship.

  • Competency-Based Assessment: Several states are officially replacing single-day standardized tests with digital portfolios and continuous growth tracking.


Top World Education News: May 5, 2026

1. Egypt-UK Academic Expansion

Egypt’s Minister of Higher Education met today with the CEO of Bournemouth University to discuss establishing a satellite campus in Egypt. This is part of Egypt's broader strategy to become a regional education hub; the country now hosts nine branches of foreign universities, allowing students to earn international degrees without leaving the region.

2. Madagascar’s Post-Cyclone Digital Recovery

Following the devastation of Cyclone Gezani, the World Bank and Madagascar’s Ministry of Digital Development have successfully installed solar-powered digital hubs at the University of Toamasina. These hubs provide high-speed Wi-Fi and power for up to 5,000 students, ensuring that climate-related disasters do not permanently halt higher education in the region.

3. UNESCO Roadmap for Higher Ed

UNESCO continues to roll out its "Transforming Higher Education" roadmap. Global enrollment has more than doubled since 2000, reaching 269 million students. The current focus for May 2026 is on establishing "human-centered" guardrails for AI in classrooms to ensure technological progress doesn't compromise academic integrity or equity.