糖心动漫vlog

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Oklahoma Will Cut Funding to Districts That Don鈥檛 Sign Trump鈥檚 Anti-DEI Pledge

By Brooke Schultz 鈥 April 23, 2025 8 min read
Ryan Walters, Republican state superintendent candidate, speaks, June 28, 2022, in Oklahoma City.
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Oklahoma will withhold federal funds from school districts that don鈥檛 certify they aren鈥檛 using diversity, equity, and inclusion programs, the state鈥檚 superintendent announced Tuesday, in what could be the beginning of efforts nationwide to restrict funding for public schools that disobey President Donald Trump鈥檚 orders.

Superintendent Ryan Walters said the state鈥檚 education department will issued by the U.S. Department of Education earlier this month. The withholding would start Friday, April 25, the day after the deadline districts face to sign the federal certification, Walters announced.

The Education Department in early April called on state education chiefs to sign a certification that they鈥檙e complying with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, which prohibits race-based discrimination in federally funded programs, as a condition to continue receiving federal funds. But the certification document makes clear that the department, under Trump and Secretary of Education Linda McMahon, considers DEI programming to be a violation of the anti-discrimination law.

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The department gave state chiefs until April 24 to sign the certification themselves and collect responses from school districts. But the implications of the order have been unclear: Educators don鈥檛 know with certainty what could run afoul of the department鈥檚 orders to eliminate 鈥渋llegal DEI"鈥攚hich the administration so far hasn鈥檛 explicitly defined鈥攁nd don鈥檛 know which funding streams could be terminated.

Title I funding for services for low-income students and Individuals with Disabilities Education Act grants for services for students with disabilities represent the two largest sources of federal funding for schools. Both flow to local districts through state departments of education.

Walters鈥 announcement that he鈥檒l essentially withhold those funds on the Trump administration鈥檚 behalf is 鈥渁n 鈥楢men鈥 for the Trump administration in this area,鈥 said Justin Driver, a professor at Yale Law School and author of The Schoolhouse Gate: Public Education, the Supreme Court, and the Battle for the American Mind.

The Education Department did not respond to a request for comment on its planned enforcement following the April 24 deadline for states and districts to certify they鈥檙e not using 鈥渋llegal DEI practices.鈥

Oklahoma becomes outspoken ally in Trump鈥檚 push to rid schools of DEI

Trump鈥檚 administration has pushed states and districts to sign the DEI letters quickly.

But the speed and the general lack of clarity around the consequences for noncompliance are 鈥渆mblematic of the Trump administration鈥檚 larger efforts to intimidate and coerce local school districts into submitting to the will of the Trump administration,鈥 Driver said.

As Trump has taken major steps to shrink the Education Department鈥axing nearly half its staff and signing an order calling for its closure鈥攖he agency has ramped up enforcement of the president鈥檚 social policy agenda.

鈥淭here is a basic hypocrisy in the Trump administration鈥檚 educational approach,鈥 Driver said. 鈥淭hat is to say, the Trump administration talks the talk of local control, but walks the walk of federal command.鈥

With the DEI certification order, he said, 鈥渢he fundamental aim here is to get school districts concerned and to hit them where they hurt in the pocketbook, even though the legality of the Trump administration鈥檚 actions are highly dubious.鈥

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Walters鈥攁 political firebrand and outspoken Trump supporter who has drawn national attention for attempting to infuse public schools with religion, his anti-LGBTQ+ efforts, and his agreement with Trump that the federal Education Department should be dismantled鈥攕igned the state鈥檚 assurance on April 11 in a broadcast on the social platform X.

鈥淯nder the leadership of President Trump and Secretary McMahon, we鈥檝e set a national standard that protects our children from discriminatory practices under the guise of DEI,鈥 Walters said in a statement announcing that he would withhold districts鈥 federal funds. 鈥淥klahoma is proud to stand firm in our commitment to merit-based education and the values that have made America exceptional.鈥

As of Friday, 446 school districts in the state had signed the certification; 96 had not yet responded, said a spokesperson for Oklahoma鈥檚 education department.

Most federal funding for education flows to states first, which typically reimburse districts after they鈥檝e made purchases or investments they intend to cover with federal grants.

Oklahoma has at least two hypothetical legal pathways to withholding funds, but both would require several time-consuming steps.

The state could cite districts鈥 refusal to sign the DEI certification letter in calling for the Education Department to open a civil rights investigation into those districts that culminates in funding cuts, said Julia Martin, director of policy and government affairs for the Bruman Group, an education law firm that represents states and school districts. Alternatively, the state could update future grant requirements and then penalize districts that fail to comply.

鈥淭here are administrative appeals processes for those responses, but they鈥檙e processes. They take some time,鈥 Martin said. Those processes also depend on follow-through from federal Education Department employees, who may be stretched thin after sweeping staffing cuts.

In Bixby, a suburb of Tulsa, Superintendent Rob Miller signed and submitted the DEI certification on April 10, after hearing from attorneys that there was no legal reason not to sign it.

There wasn鈥檛 anything in it that Miller didn鈥檛 generally support, he said.

Still, the anti-DEI certification request 鈥渋s nothing more than a political exercise trying to gain attention, perpetuate a narrative that schools are running amok and pushing these radical agendas.鈥

Walters鈥 threat to cut funding 鈥減erpetuates a message that school districts are trying to be noncompliant.鈥

But they鈥檙e not, said Miller, who has previously been at odds with the Oklahoma state superintendent. He sued Walters for defamation last August after the state chief called him 鈥渁 clown and a liar鈥 for saying the state department of education had not yet provided districts with projections for Title I funds.

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Ryan Walters speaks at a rally, Nov. 1, 2022, in Oklahoma City. Republican State Superintendent Walters ordered public schools Thursday, June 27, 2024, to incorporate the Bible into lessons for grades 5 through 12, the latest effort by conservatives to incorporate religion into classrooms.
Oklahoma state Superintendent Ryan Walters speaks at a rally on Nov. 1, 2022, in Oklahoma City. Walters is now facing scrutiny from GOP lawmakers, who seek an investigation into his stewardship of education funding and his agency's transparency.
Sue Ogrocki/AP
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Democratic and Republican leaders voice concerns about DEI certification

As of April 23, 19 states and Puerto Rico have said they intend to sign the certification, according to an Education Week tally. Sixteen states have declined to sign it. The remaining states either are still reviewing the certification and haven鈥檛 indicated their intentions or haven鈥檛 yet made public comments on the matter.

States鈥 approaches to addressing the certification order have varied: Some state chiefs have signed it, but are not asking districts to do so. Others are asking districts to sign, but haven鈥檛 yet disclosed whether state leaders will as well.

Though it鈥檚 standard for states and districts to certify compliance with anti-discrimination laws to receive federal funding, experts have said an effort of this magnitude is unusual.

State chiefs from both parties have said their schools already certify compliance as part of plans they file with the Education Department under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, and have argued the request hasn鈥檛 gone through any kind of regulatory or public-comment process. Some have also argued it violates a federal law aimed at minimizing the administrative burden caused by federal agencies鈥 information requests.

to the federal department that accompanied the signed certification, North Carolina State Superintendent Mo Green told McMahon that previous certifications make this one 鈥渞edundant.鈥 He also took issue with the department鈥檚 lack of definition for DEI.

鈥淭his ambiguity raises concerns about providing the requested certification without important clarifications,鈥 Green wrote in his letter. 鈥淪ince the U.S. Department of Education does not have the legal authority to change assurances and impose new requirements on recipients 鈥 it is logical to conclude that the signed certifications can only be enforceable to the extent of the Department鈥檚 lawful authority and the law as it exists at the time the assurances are given.鈥

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Federal Trump Admin. Tells Schools: No Federal Funds If You're Using DEI
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The certification is the latest push from Trump鈥檚 administration to squash DEI in schools. Trump signed an executive order in January seeking to remove any such programming from schools. The Education Department soon after issued a memo and additional document warning districts they鈥檇 risk losing federal funds if they retained DEI programming, though the federal government can鈥檛 legally influence school curriculum. It launched an 鈥淓nd DEI鈥 portal for the public to report the use of DEI in schools.

The efforts have drawn litigation from the nation鈥檚 two largest teachers鈥 unions, a handful of school districts, and the NAACP, and have sparked confusion among 糖心动漫vlog as to what exactly would violate the department鈥檚 orders.

The department has used the 2023 U.S. Supreme Court decision striking down affirmative action as the basis for its maneuvers to eliminate DEI in schools and universities.

It鈥檚 a distortion of the ruling, Driver said.

A rare maneuver to pull funding is becoming more common

Historically, it has been rare for the Education Department to seek the cancellation of funds for school districts. But it鈥檚 becoming commonplace in Trump鈥檚 second term. Trump has issued a number of executive orders that threaten to cut funds from public schools and universities if they disobey him, and has already begun to make good on those threats.

The administration immediately froze grants to Ivy League institutions over allegations of antisemitism on campus and transgender athletes, and is moving to pull funding from Maine over state policies that allow transgender girls to participate in girls鈥 athletics. It鈥檚 deployed full-court presses to enforce Trump鈥檚 orders, with numerous federal agencies teaming up to investigate and stop subsidies to universities and states that cross the president.

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Education Secretary Linda McMahon accompanied by Attorney General Pam Bondi, right, speaks during a news conference at the Department of Justice headquarters in Washington, Wednesday, April 16, 2025.
Education Secretary Linda McMahon, accompanied by Attorney General Pam Bondi, right, speaks during a news conference at the Department of Justice headquarters in Washington, Wednesday, April 16, 2025. The pair were announcing a lawsuit against the state of Maine over state policies that allow transgender athletes to compete in girls' sports.
Jose Luis Magana/AP

Congress withheld funds decades ago from schools that flouted Brown v. Board of Education, the landmark 1954 decision that outlawed racial segregation in schools, but Trump鈥檚 attempts to use funding as a hammer are unprecedented, Driver said.

鈥淭his is just a very different kettle of legal fish than we鈥檝e encountered previously,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat shouldn鈥檛 be especially surprising, because the Trump administration seeks to not just push the legal envelope, but rip up the legal envelope.鈥

Mark Lieberman, Reporter contributed to this article.

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