Virginia teachers get USPIE’s Millstone Award for telling kids to ‘stop Donald Trump at all costs’

These teachers have weaponized their classrooms and are clearly inflicting ideological indoctrination on their students

At least two civic teachers in Fairfax County, Virginia, advised their students to go home and tell their parents to vote “yes” on a controversial referendum question that would leave the congressional delegation with 10 Democrats and only one Republican.

 The gerrymandering measure barely passed on April 21 on a 51 percent to 49 percent vote in the state, which currently has six Democrats and five Republicans in the House, and which gave President Donald Trump 46 percent of the vote in 2024.

“These teachers have weaponized their classrooms and are clearly inflicting ideological indoctrination on their students,” said Sheri Few, founder and president of United States Parents Involved in Education (USPIE). “Teachers are saying, ‘Stop Donald Trump at all costs.’

“Whether these kids went home and told their parents to vote ‘yes’ is beside the point. Their teachers are pushing an ideological view (rather than actual teaching) that will shape the children for years to come. For this, they richly deserve the Millstone of the Month award.”

USPIE’s Millstone of the Month award is given to the person involved in government schools who has committed the most egregious acts against children.

Kelly Sadler, the Commentary editor for The Washington Times, wrote in a column that her twin 14-year-old boys had badgered her about how she would vote as soon as she picked them up from school.

“In both of their civics classes that day, taught by two different teachers in Fairfax County Public Schools, they were urged to go home and persuade their parents to vote yes on the measure to make Virginia’s maps ‘as fair as they can be’ to ‘stop Donald Trump at all costs,’” she wrote.

“They used the same talking points being spewed by endless Democratic campaigns in the commonwealth to make Virginia come under one-party Democratic rule.”

She added, “I would yank my kids out of the public school system, as many are doing, if I had the means to do so.”

Days later, an alleged shooter was apprehended at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner attended by President Donald Trump and most of his Cabinet. The suspect is Cole Allen, 31, from Torrance, California. A computer game developer and part-time teacher, Allen wrote a manifesto full of Left-wing talking points.

“We don’t know all the facts yet about the incident at the White House Correspondents’ dinner, but teachers using this kind of rhetoric with children is extremely harmful,” Few said.

We tell our children to be respectful of teachers. Teachers claim authority over children. Their extreme phrasing could easily turn a child into a lone gunman, believing they are doing a good thing.

“Parents must take their kids out of government schools to protect them from teachers like these.”

To hear more from USPIE’s Founder and President, Sheri Few, tune in to the latest episode of USPIE’s podcast, “Unmasking Government Schools with Sheri Few,” on Tuesday, May 5, where Few is joined by Anne Manusky, national director of the Connecticut Republican Assembly (a chartered chapter of the National Federation of Republican Assemblies), and president of USPIE’s Connecticut chapter. Listen to “Unmasking Government Schools with Sheri Few” on YouTube, Facebook, Spotify and X.

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