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Tag: ryan walters

  • Video Shows GOP Education Official Bolt From Reporter After Announcing His Resignation

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    Ryan Walters seems to have little interest in clarifying to his constituents his headline-making decision to resign as Oklahoma’s state superintendent of schools.

    Walters, who frequently attacked teachers unions and accused educators of being child abusers during his three-year tenure, announced his resignation Wednesday on KOKH, an Oklahoma City-based Fox News affiliate.

    His next gig, he said, will be leading the Teacher Freedom Alliance, a right-wing nonprofit organization aimed at assisting “educators in their mission to develop free, moral, and upright American citizens,” according to its website.

    Walters’ announcement was broadcast to a national cable audience via Fox News. But when KOKH journalist Wendy Suares attempted to ask Walters questions in the moments after his segment wrapped, he gave her the silent treatment and opted instead to bolt out of the studio.

    In a Thursday post on X, formerly Twitter, Suares said KOKH had agreed to let Walters film his announcement from the studio on the condition that the station would secure him for an interview afterward.

    Watch a clip of Suares attempting to interview Walters below.

    “We had several questions for [Walters] as he left our studio. We still do,” she wrote in a follow-up post.

    As of Friday afternoon, Suares’ footage had been viewed more than 400,000 times on X. Many viewers praised Suares for her journalistic skills while blasting Walters as a “skunk” and a “coward.”

    “First, much respect for your toughness and persistence. Second, that man is gutless,” one person wrote.

    Added another: “I’ve been saying this for years, Ryan Walters was after himself. Never about Oklahoma schools. Now everyone can see that!”

    As such comments suggest, news of Walters’ departure was applauded by Oklahomans across the political spectrum.

    Ryan Walters is set to lead the Teacher Freedom Alliance, a right-wing nonprofit organization aimed at assisting “educators in their mission to develop free, moral, and upright American citizens.”

    Attorney General Gentner Drummond, a Republican who is running for Oklahoma governor in 2026, called out Walters for inciting “a stream of never-ending scandal and political drama” since entering office.

    “Even worse, test scores and reading proficiency are at historic lows,” he wrote in a statement. “It’s time for a State Superintendent of Public Instruction who will actually focus on quality instruction in our public schools. … Our families, our students and our teachers deserve so much more.”

    Oklahoma Democratic Party Chair John Waldron shared those sentiments, telling local CBS affiliate News 9 he’s happy to see Walters go.

    “Under his watch, we’ve fallen to 50th in education,” he said. “I’ve watched Superintendent Walters use his office as a bully pulpit for his own personal ambition.”

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  • Who is Ryan Walters? Look back on five of his biggest actions as Oklahoma’s top educator

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    Over the last two years, Oklahoma state schools Superintendent Ryan Walters has attracted national attention to the state several times while serving as the state’s top education official.

    Since his election in late 2022, Walters has launched initiatives like enabling the Bible to be in Oklahoma classrooms in Oklahoma public schools, or his most recent effort to establish Turning Point USA chapters in every high school in Oklahoma.

    During much of Walters’ tenure, many people formed polarized opinions on his actions. The same programs he pushed sparked discourse on all sides of the political spectrum.

    Now, the superintendent has announced plans to leave the role and accept a job as CEO of the Teacher Freedom Alliance, a new professional organization that touts itself as “an alternative to union membership” for teachers. It is a part of the Freedom Foundation, a far-right anti-labor union think tank.

    Here’s a rundown of some of his most notable moments since he entered the office in January 2023.

    Tulsa school district accreditation, August 2023

    State School Superintendent Ryan Walters entered a dispute with former Superintendent of Tulsa Public Schools Deborah Gist.

    In a July meeting, Walters, alongside Gov. Kevin Stitt, said that the district “has failed the students,” criticizing the district’s closing during the COVID-19 panic and Walters noting the school faced “significant and severe issues” and was “plagued by scandal.”

    “They’ve been one of the worst performing schools in the state of Oklahoma,” Walters said at a state Board of Education meeting in 2023 after threatening to remove the district’s accreditation.

    Ryan Walters, Oklahoma State Superintendent of Public Instruction, and Tulsa Public Schools Superintendent Deborah Gist. Photos by The Oklahoman and Tulsa World

    Lawmakers alleged that the targeting was due to the system having the “most African American kids” as well as the fact that OKCPS was led by a man while TPS was led by a woman.

    “Look at the district leadership of Oklahoma City and Tulsa, what’s different? I don’t think you can ignore that either,” Tulsa mayor Monroe Nichols said while serving as a representative for the city.

    When Gist resigned in August 2023, there were mixed reactions of outrage and optimism that the schools would improve.

    In 2025, a 60-page audit report was released by Oklahoma Auditor and Inspector Cindy Byrd that reviewed financial irregularities in Tulsa schools. Auditors investigated financial records from 2015 to 2023, and found $25 million was spent without proper bidding, and $824,503 in fraud by a former administrator.

    Banned books in Oklahoma, February 2024

    Walters attempted to remove “The Kite Runner” by Khaled Hosseini and “The Glass Castle” by Jeannette Walls from the school library in Edmond. Walters, himself, called both books pornographic in nature and criticized the district for choosing to “peddle porn.”

    State schools Superintendent Ryan Walters at the February meeting of the Oklahoma state school board, Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024.

    State schools Superintendent Ryan Walters at the February meeting of the Oklahoma state school board, Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024.

    The books, both award-winning best-sellers, were adapted into movies yet still received criticism for their depictions of sexual violence, addiction and profanity.

    When Walters asked the school to remove the books, citing a review from OSBE’s Library Media Advisory Committee, the district pushed back, filing a lawsuit against the state with the Oklahoma Supreme Court.

    Though Walters attempted to pull rank, saying his election allowed him to “go in and clean up schools,” the Oklahoma Supreme Court ultimately ruled that neither Walters nor the board and department of education has the authority to establish policies concerning books. Instead, it is to be decided on a district level by their board systems.

    Bibles in public schools, May 2024

    In May 2024, a request was issued by the Oklahoma state Department of Education to purchase 55,000 Bibles with the intention of being in all classrooms in Oklahoma public schools.

    A stack of books, including bibles is placed near State schools Superintendent Ryan Walters’ seat during an Oklahoma school board meeting at the Oklahoma Capitol in Oklahoma City, on Thursday, June 27, 2024.

    A stack of books, including bibles is placed near State schools Superintendent Ryan Walters’ seat during an Oklahoma school board meeting at the Oklahoma Capitol in Oklahoma City, on Thursday, June 27, 2024.

    Walters said the proposal came after Oklahomans told him they believe the book should be in the schools as part of American history.

    “That is absolutely something that I will continue to fight, till every kid understands that the history of America includes the Bible, includes biblical principles,” Walters said in 2024. “I mean, my goodness, you would have to walk around with a blindfold throughout American history to not see that.”

    After making bids for the Bibles, vendors had to meet a few qualifications, which ended up only leading to the God Bless the U.S.A. Bible, which was often referred to as the Trump Bible. With a $60 price tag, this would equal $3.3 million expended on all the Bibles.

    In the end, just more than 500 Bibles were purchased for AP Government classes across the state.

    “We have the Bible, the Constitution, the Declaration of Independence, the Bill of Rights — these are foundational documents in our nation’s history,” he said in 2024. Each of those documents is also reprinted in the “God Bless the U.S.A.” Bible.

    New social studies standards, Dec. 2024

    Swiftly after proposing that the Bible be in schools, Walters promised to overhaul social studies teaching standards for classrooms.

    State schools Superintendent Ryan Walters speaks during a press conference following a State Board of Education meeting in Oklahoma City, Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024.

    State schools Superintendent Ryan Walters speaks during a press conference following a State Board of Education meeting in Oklahoma City, Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024.

    The standards were touted as “among the strongest in the country: pro-America, pro-American exceptionalism, and strengthen civics and constitutional studies across every grade.”

    The new standards, Walters said at the time, would be developed by a new “Executive Review Committee” to ensure “that social studies reflect accuracy and not political slanted viewpoints.”

    Now, 9 months later, recent developments state the overhaul has been put on pause by the Oklahoma Supreme Court as the court considers a lawsuit challenging the social studies standards.

    Thus, the standards, which took effect for the current school year, cannot be taught, and no money can be spent to implement them in Oklahoma schools, effectively stopping that process.

    ‘Anti-woke test’ for teachers, July 2025

    Ryan Walter's wants teaching applicants to take "woke" test.

    Ryan Walter’s wants teaching applicants to take “woke” test.

    Since July, Walters has been on a mission to ensure that “radical leftist ideology” from states like California and New York remains out of Oklahoma by threatening to hold their teaching certificate if they are unable to pass the new assessment.

    To do so, he worked alongside PragerU to formulate a “woke test,” which was later rebranded to “Teacher Qualification Test” on PragerU’s website. The test was published in an ad in the New York Times.

    Beneath the questions, the ad addresses PragerU’s support for the test:

    “How would you assess a teacher who took this test and failed it? Would you want that person teaching your children? The answer for Oklahoma is no. We suspect (or, at least, hope) your answer would be the same. Oklahoma will require teachers from New York and California to pass this test before being hired. Oklahoma, it seems to us, has the right to expect its teacher to be both competent and consonant with its values.”

    William C. Wertz, Alexia Aston, Molly Young, Murray Evans, The Oklahoman contributed to this report.

    This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: Who is Ryan Walters? Look back on his years as Oklahoma Superintendent

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  • Oklahoma advocates & educators celebrate state superintendent Ryan Walters’s resignation as ‘pivotal moment’

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    Ryan Walters, Oklahoma’s embattled state superintendent of public instruction, announced his resignation on Wednesday evening after a tenure defined by political theater, culture war mandates, and hostility toward marginalized students. His departure was made public not in Oklahoma City but on Fox News, where Walters declared he would become CEO of the Teacher Freedom Alliance, a conservative nonprofit dedicated to fighting teachers’ unions nationwide.

    Related: Oklahoma superintendent and Libs of TikTok celebrate bullying gay principal out of job for drag persona

    “We’re going to destroy the teachers’ unions,” Walters said on air. “We have seen the teachers’ unions use money and power to corrupt our schools, to undermine our schools. We will build an army of teachers to defeat the teachers’ unions once and for all.”

    For many in Oklahoma, the news marked both relief and exasperation. Walters leaves behind a state education system that slid further down national rankings, faced lawsuits over unconstitutional directives, and endured a steady stream of scandals. But he also carries his divisive agenda to a broader stage, raising alarms among advocates who warn his politics could further inflame national debates over public education.

    Advocates: “A pivotal moment”

    For many advocacy groups, Walters’ resignation was a watershed.

    “Oklahomans for Equality recognizes the resignation of State Superintendent Ryan Walters as a pivotal moment for our state,” Hailey Briggs, the group’s executive director, told The Advocate. “Under his tenure, many of Oklahoma’s most marginalized students, including 2SLGBTQIA+ youth, and the educators who support them faced harmful rhetoric and policies that threatened safe and affirming learning environments.”

    Related: Ryan Walters wants Turning Point chapters in Oklahoma high schools — or will he resign before it happens?

    GLAAD was equally blunt. “Ryan Walters’s record shows profound failure for Oklahoma’s public school students, faculty, and families, including failing to keep students safe,” a spokesperson told The Advocate. “2SLGBTQIA+ students in Oklahoma deserve leaders who will recognize them and their basic needs to be themselves and be safe, which are essential to everyone’s ability to learn and thrive. The Walters era will be defined by his failures, a permanent record that will follow him wherever he goes.”

    The Human Rights Campaign echoed the criticism and cheered the extreme politician’s exit. “I’m excited for Oklahoma’s parents, who no longer have to deal with Walters’s gross politicization of their children’s education,” HRC communications director Laurel Powell told The Advocate. “I sincerely hope their next superintendent is more focused on educational outcomes than culture wars.”

    Teachers’ unions respond

    Walters’ new role — leading a group aimed squarely at weakening teachers’ unions — drew fierce reaction from labor leaders.

    “Today is a good day for Oklahoma’s kids,” Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, told The Advocate. “It’s no surprise that Mr. Walters, after failing on the job, is leaving the state. Any educator worth their salt understands it’s impossible to educate students if you don’t support teachers. Walters didn’t do that in Oklahoma and now, at a time we need to bring the country together, he’s trying to export his divisive rhetoric nationally.”

    Related: Outrage after Oklahoma education superintendent reframes Nex Benedict’s death without naming the teen

    Weingarten, a frequent target of those on the right, including Walters, dismissed his new allies, including the Freedom Foundation, which she said has “nothing to do with either education or freedom.” “Teachers are more unionized than any other profession, and the Freedom Foundation’s post-Janus campaign to convince teachers to drop their union has been a dismal failure,” she said. “Schools are about helping kids develop the passion and purpose to pave pathways to a better life — and that means working together, not going to war, a lesson Walters appears not to have learned.”

    A tenure of extremes

    Elected in 2022 after serving as the appointed state education secretary, Walters quickly emerged as one of the country’s most polarizing figures. He aligned himself closely with Donald Trump, lauded Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, and openly sought to use Oklahoma schools as a proving ground for his far-right vision.

    Related: Education Secretary Linda McMahon snubs Oklahoma’s extremist superintendent of schools

    In June 2024, Walters ordered that every Oklahoma public school teach the Bible and the Ten Commandments, a directive that critics said trampled constitutional limits on religion in public institutions. He later pushed social studies standards that echoed Trump’s false claims of mass voter fraud in the 2020 election, and this week, he announced that every Oklahoma high school would be required to host a Turning Point USA chapter, after Kirk’s assassination.

    Walters sought to require out-of-state teachers from places like California and New York to pass ideological screening tests against “woke indoctrination.” He harassed educators who defended LGBTQ+ students, promoted book bans, and appeared with far-right anti-government extremist group Moms for Liberty at state expense.

    Perhaps most controversially, Walters appointed Chaya Raichik, the Brooklyn-based creator of the Libs of TikTok social media account dedicated to harassing liberals and LGBTQ+ people, to Oklahoma’s Library Media Advisory Committee. Raichik had no educational background, no ties to Oklahoma, and no children in the state’s schools. Her online campaigns have been linked to threats against schools and libraries across the country, which experts describe as examples of stochastic terrorism. Critics said Walters had effectively invited a professional provocateur into the official policymaking process.

    Walters was briefly floated as a potential second Trump term cabinet pick for secretary of education and considered running for governor, but his polarizing record earned him condemnation from both Democrats and Republicans.

    Fallout from Nex Benedict’s death

    Walters’ policies became especially explosive after the death of 16-year-old Nex Benedict in February 2024. Benedict, a transgender and Two Spirit teenager of Choctaw heritage, was beaten in a high school bathroom and later died by suicide. The tragedy drew national attention, with advocates linking Benedict’s vulnerability to the hostile climate Walters fostered.

    Related: After Nex Benedict’s death, Oklahoma’s Ryan Walters: Just two genders, as God intended

    In the aftermath, Walters denied the existence and history of Two Spirit people, even though they are a well-documented part of Indigenous traditions in Oklahoma. Tribal leaders and LGBTQ+ advocates viewed his denial as erasure that compounded the harm facing Native youth.

    GLAAD notes that 35 percent of transgender students nationwide report being assaulted in bathrooms that do not align with their gender identity — a statistic worsened, they argued, by Walters’ rhetoric portraying transgender youth as threats rather than children needing protection.

    A record of scandal

    Investigations and lawsuits plagued Walters’ office. He clashed with school boards over censorship and television broadcasts, was accused of mishandling pandemic relief funds, some of which were spent on appliances and video game consoles, and presided over plummeting reading proficiency scores.

    Walters was unpopular within his own party. Attorney General Gentner Drummond, a Republican now running for governor in 2026, said Walters’ tenure had been “an embarrassment to our state.” “Ever since Gov. Stitt appointed Ryan Walters to serve as Secretary of Education, we have witnessed a stream of never-ending scandal and political drama,” Drummond said in a statement. “Even worse, test scores and reading proficiency are at historic lows. It’s time for a State Superintendent of Public Instruction who will actually focus on quality instruction in our public schools.”

    What comes next

    Walters’ resignation spares him what was expected to be a bruising re-election campaign in 2026.

    Related: Ryan Walters’s latest gambit fails as critics outnumber supporters at Oklahoma education meeting

    For Oklahoma, though, the immediate question is who will replace him — and whether the state can begin to recover from the tumult. “This change in leadership is an opportunity to recommit to inclusion, respect, and quality education,” Briggs said. “We urge state leaders to listen to educators, families, and young people, and to build classrooms where every child feels safe and supported and where educators are trusted and equipped to do their work.”

    This article originally appeared on Advocate: Oklahoma advocates & educators celebrate state superintendent Ryan Walters’s resignation as ‘pivotal moment’

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  • GOP Education Official Quits After Years Of Scandals And Controversies

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    Ryan Walters, the Oklahoma superintendent of public instruction, is resigning after three controversial years in the role to lead a right-wing group he said will “destroy the teachers unions.”

    Walters, who was elected in November 2022 and began serving the following January, spent his entire tenure making headlines for his attacks on teachers unions, including baselessly smearing educators as child abusers.

    It appears Walters is ready to take his grudge against teachers to a national stage by becoming CEO of the Teacher Freedom Alliance, which bills itself as an “alternative” to teachers unions.

    “We’re going to destroy the teachers unions,” Walters said Wednesday night on Fox News, as he announced his resignation and new role. “We’ve seen [them] use money and power to corrupt our schools.”

    He did not mention his resignation at the Oklahoma State Department of Education’s monthly meeting on Thursday. Instead, he used his opening remarks to speak about Charlie Kirk, the CEO of Turning Point USA who was fatally shot in Utah earlier this month, and gave the floor over to a TPUSA employee.

    Walters announced on Tuesday that every high school in Oklahoma would have a TPUSA chapter on campus. Kirk toured college campuses through his work with the organization, and often spread racist and misogynistic rhetoric to his young audiences.

    When a local reporter asked on Tuesday what would happen to schools that decline to establish a chapter, he threatened to revoke their accreditation. “They would be in danger of not being a school district if they decided to reject a club that is here to promote civic engagement,” he said.

    It’s unclear whether the plan to establish Turning Point USA chapters at high schools will move forward after Walters leaves office.

    The Oklahoma schools chief has been embroiled in a string of controversies and scandals.

    Walters has spent the past three years claiming without evidence that Oklahoma public schools are awash in sexually explicit material. He appointed right-wing influencer Chaya Raichik to a library advisory committee in January 2024, despite her lack of experience. Raichik gained notoriety through her Libs of Tik Tok account on X (formerly Twitter), where she posts videos of teachers who advocate for LGBTQ+ rights.

    After Donald Trump won the 2024 election, Walters proposed a rule for Oklahoma schools that would require districts to collect citizenship data, a measure that could have caused immigrant parents to pull their children from school. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1982 that all children, regardless of immigration status, are entitled to enroll in a public school, but Walters’ proposal was in line with Trump’s hard-line immigration policies.

    The Christian right has been attempting to inject religion into the public school system, and Walters has been at the forefront of the movement. In June 2024, Walters ordered Oklahoma public schools to use the Bible in instruction, even though the U.S. Constitution prohibits the government from favoring one religion over another. He also attempted to purchase Bibles for schools that would enrich Trump ally Lee Greenwood, but was subsequently sued and blocked from implementing the policy.

    Some organizations are celebrating his departure from Oklahoma schools.

    “This is a win for Oklahomans. They’re better off without Walters,” Rachel Laser, the CEO of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, a nonprofit legal organization dedicated to keeping the government secular, said in a statement. “At every turn Ryan Walters abused the power of his government office as he attempted to impose his personal religious beliefs on Oklahoma school children.”

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  • GOP Education Official Warns Schools Will Be ‘In Danger’ If They Refuse Chapter Of Charlie Kirk Org

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    Oklahoma State Superintendent of Schools Ryan Walters announced plans on Tuesday to establish chapters of conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s right-wing organization, Turning Point USA, in every high school in his state, threatening to revoke school credentials if they don’t comply.

    “Radical leftist teachers’ unions have dominated classrooms for far too long, and we are taking them back,” Walters wrote on X, announcing a partnership with the conservative activist group.

    I am very excited to announce a partnership with @TPUSA to establish chapters in ALL Oklahoma high schools. Radical leftist teachers’ unions have dominated classrooms for far too long, and we are taking them back. pic.twitter.com/3sihJX3sUv

    — Ryan Walters (@RyanWalters_) September 23, 2025

    Walters’ announcement comes after Kirk’s widow, Erika Kirk, took over the organization following his fatal shooting at Utah Valley University. It’s unclear if the widowed Kirk will continue to echo her husband’s thinking against immigrants, Muslims and the LGBTQ+ community or will move the organization further to the right.

    “We have seen the outpouring from parents, teachers, and students that want to be engaged in a meaningful work going on at Turning Point,” Walters said. “They want their young people to be engaged in a process that understands free speech, open engagement, dialog about American greatness, a dialog around American values.”

    As of this afternoon, in the past 6 days, TPUSA has received 54,000+ requests from high school and college students nationwide to start a chapter or get involved with an existing chapter.

    This is just the beginning. @tpusastudents

    — Turning Point USA (@TPUSA) September 16, 2025

    In an interview with local Fox affiliate KOKH-TV, he warns there will be repercussions for schools that refuse to have a Turning Point USA chapter.

    “I mean, we would go after their accreditation. We would go after their certificates. So yeah, they would be in danger of not being a school district if they decided to reject a club that is here to promote civic engagement,” Walters said. “Absolutely, they would be violating the law. They would be violating the rules set forth to them by our agency. So yeah, everything would be on the table in that scenario.”

    This is not the first move Walters has made to push the Oklahoma school system to the right. Last year, he appointed Chaya Raichik, the creator of the right-wing social media account Libs of TikTok, to the state’s library media advisory board.

    “Chaya is on the front lines showing the world exactly what the radical left is all about — lowering standards, porn in schools, and pushing woke indoctrination on our kids,” Walters said at the time.

    The GOP school official was recently investigated by the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office after two members of the state’s board of education claimed they saw images of naked women on a TV screen in his office. No charges were filed, and Walters called the accusations a “witch hunt.”

    During his tenure, Walters pushed a more right-wing agenda for the school systems, saying he would allow ICE into public schools and mandate them to incorporate the Bible into their lesson plans for grades five through 12.

    Ryan Walters, Oklahoma State Superintendent announced plans to establish Charlie Kirk’s Turning Point USA chapters in high schools.

    “What we’re going to continue to do is make sure that our kids understand American greatness, engage in civic dialog and have that open discussion,” Walters said Tuesday. “We will continue to do all that we can to make sure Oklahoma students have the best education possible.”

    Oklahoma ranks close to last in public education nationwide, according to an analysis from the U.S. News and World Report, and scored below average in reading, writing and math on the Nation’s Report Card.

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  • Purdue and Northwestern try to get seasons back on track heading into Big Ten home stretch

    Purdue and Northwestern try to get seasons back on track heading into Big Ten home stretch

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    Northwestern (3-5, 1-4 Big Ten) at Purdue (1-6, 0-4), Saturday, 12 p.m. ET (BTN)

    BetMGM College Football Odds: Purdue by 1 1/2.

    Series record: Purdue leads 53-34-1.

    WHAT’S AT STAKE?

    With Purdue sitting in the Big Ten basement and Northwestern among a group of four teams just one game in front of the Boilermakers, both teams want to turn things around. The Wildcats have lost two straight and four of five while seeking their first win at Ross-Ade Stadium since 2020. Purdue is still looking for its first win over an FBS team this year — and desperately needs something, anything to go right after a bye week.

    KEY MATCHUP

    Northwestern QB Jack Lausch vs. Purdue’s run defense. Lausch’s legs have kept defenses off-balance this season even though it hasn’t resulted in many yards or many points. But Purdue’s defense is allowing 214.9 yards rushing per game and against a team, and a quarterback, who can exploit that deficiency, it could be a game-changer.

    PLAYERS TO WATCH

    Northwestern: A.J. Henning. Following a slow start, the fifth-year receiver who transferred from Michigan, has gotten his season on track. He’s caught 32 passes for 296 yards and three TDs over the last five games. He needs 10 catches, 40 yards and two TDs to set new single-season career highs.

    Purdue: Ryan Browne and Hudson Card. Coach Ryan Walters announced Monday he will play both quarterbacks this weekend, though it’s unclear how the rotation will work. Browne provides a stronger dual-threat presence. Card was the guy Walters wanted after he took the Purdue job in December 2022.

    FACTS & FIGURES

    Northwestern’s only home win this season came against Eastern Illinois, an FCS foe. Its only road win came at Maryland. … The Boilermakers have not played a Saturday home game since Sept. 28 against Nebraska. … The Wildcats are averaging 110.9 yards rushing per game, the second-lowest total in the Big Ten (Minnesota, 108.0). … Purdue rushed for 303 yards in last season’s victory over Northwestern. … The Wildcats have a plus-three turnover margin and is tied for 40th nationally at plus-0.38 per game. … Purdue has blocked a league-high three kicks (two field goals, one punt) this season.

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  • Purdue hoping fast start against Indiana State puts it on road to defy last-place projections

    Purdue hoping fast start against Indiana State puts it on road to defy last-place projections

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    Indiana State at Purdue, Saturday, 12 p.m. ET (BTN)

    BetMGM College Football Odds: Purdue by 33 1/2.

    Series record: Purdue 6-0.

    WHAT’S AT STAKE?

    With six losses in their last eight season-openers, slow starts have become the norm at Purdue. The Boilermakers have gotten through their first four games with only one winning record over the last seven seasons. And if they want to prove the prognosticators’ last-place predictions wrong, they need to keep their perfect record intact against an in-state, FCS foe. The Sycamores, meanwhile, have won fewer games in three successive seasons since going 5-6 in 2021. A win at Purdue could change everything for the program.

    KEY MATCHUP

    Indiana State QB Elijah Owens vs. Purdue’s secondary. Owens appeared in just four games last season, successfully preserving his redshirt year while showing enough promise to become the projected starter this year. But poor quarterback play last season doomed Indiana State to a 1-10 record. And they’ll need to be better against a Purdue defense that features preseason All-American S Dillon Thieneman but lost 2023 Big Ten sacks champ Nic Scourton in the transfer portal.

    PLAYERS TO WATCH

    Indiana State: DB Maddix Blackwell. What Thieneman does for Purdue, Blackwell does for the Sycamores. He’s coming off a season in which he led the Sycamores in tackles (107), fumble recoveries (three), interceptions (two) and forced fumbles (two). Now the first-team preseason all-conference honoree will get to test himself against a Big Ten foe.

    Purdue: QB Hudson Card. While Thieneman is always worth watching, the Boilermakers need Card to improve. Last year, he completed just 58.9% of his throws with 15 TDs and eight interceptions in his most extensive college action. His completion percentage needs to be closer to 70% and he needs to protect the ball better, too.

    FACTS & FIGURES

    A Purdue victory would give Purdue the seventh 7-0 series start against a team, six of those being Indiana schools. … Indiana State has been outscored 253-76 in the first six contests in West Lafayette, including a 56-0 loss in 2022. … The Boilermakers led the Big Ten with 184.6 yards rushing in conference games last season. … Sycamores coach Curt Mallory has deep coaching roots in the state, with his late father, Bill, still holding the title of winningest coach in Indiana Hoosiers history. … Thieneman broke Purdue’s freshman record with 74 solo tackles last year, becoming the Boilermakers fourth All-American in three seasons. … Indiana State is one of three in-state Purdue faces this season. No. 7 Notre Dame visits Ross-Ade Stadium on Sept. 14, and the Boilermakers will close the regular season at rival Indiana.

    ___

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  • Top GOP School Official Appoints Woman Behind ‘Libs Of TikTok’ To Key Position

    Top GOP School Official Appoints Woman Behind ‘Libs Of TikTok’ To Key Position

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    Chaya Raichik is primarily known for her popular Twitter account, where she often smears LGBTQ+ educators.

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  • Woman Lets Her Middle Finger Do The Talking As Republican Official Rants

    Woman Lets Her Middle Finger Do The Talking As Republican Official Rants

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    A woman in Oklahoma clearly had enough of Ryan Walters, the state’s far-right school superintendent, as he went off on an extended tangent against trans rights.

    Walters tried to get in all the right-wing trigger words at once as he slammed a “radical, woke, activist judge” who he said is “pressuring” school districts to change birth certificates of trans students to match their gender identity.

    “We see a lot of this coming from the Biden administration trying to force dictates onto our states and onto our individual schools,” Walters said.

    The woman sitting in view of the camera ― who had been shaking her head and using other body language as Walters spoke ― let her middle finger do the talking:

    The state’s board of education later voted to block districts from changing students’ gender on school records without permission from the board, KOCO News reported.

    The full video was posted on Facebook by KWTV, the CBS affiliate in Oklahoma City.

    The woman eventually spoke out during public comments, calling on the board to give teachers the support and resources needed to educate students.

    Walters made headlines last year for claiming ― falsely ― that there was “a legitimate faculty meeting” where administrators had to decide if they should provide kitty litter to students who identify as cats, a popular urban myth in conservative circles.

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  • Oklahoma Schools To Teach Students That Tulsa Massacre Was Crime Of Passion From Loving Black People Too Much

    Oklahoma Schools To Teach Students That Tulsa Massacre Was Crime Of Passion From Loving Black People Too Much

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    NORMAN, OK—Claiming that statewide curricula should no longer ignore this violent historical event, Oklahoma school officials announced plans Friday to begin teaching students that the Tulsa Race Massacre was a crime of passion that resulted from loving Black people too much. “It’s important that students are educated on how this horrifying event—which resulted in hundreds of deaths and the destruction of Black Wall Street—only happened because of how electric and wild the love was between white people and Black people at the time,” said Oklahoma state superintendent Ryan Walters, explaining that historical documentation showed white people had been getting jealous because their African American counterparts were doing too well economically and couldn’t hang out as much as they used to. “We often end up hurting the people we love the most, and this was definitely true with what happened back in 1921. Sometimes burning down more than 35 city blocks and 1,250 homes is the only way to express the fiery passion of your love for someone. It’s not right, but feeling that deeply can make you snap. Love can make you do crazy things.” At press time, Walters explained that the Tulsa Race Massacre had been left out of history books out of respect for Black people’s privacy.

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  • Bizarre Tweet About Girls’ Bathrooms Backfires On Oklahoma Education Czar

    Bizarre Tweet About Girls’ Bathrooms Backfires On Oklahoma Education Czar

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    Ryan Walters ― the Republican Oklahoma education official who made headlines during his campaign by falsely claiming there were students in U.S. schools identifying as cats ― has again become the center of controversy, this time for a bizarre tweet.

    Early Saturday night, Walters, Oklahoma’s secretary of education and the state superintendent of public instruction, posted a tweet from his campaign account with a black-and-white image of a female high school student washing her hands in a bathroom, while two other girls watch her suspiciously in the mirror.

    The image included the words “Student Safety Over Liberal Agenda.” In the tweet itself, Walters wrote: “I will always fight for students.”

    The ambiguity of the tweet left it wide open to interpretation — particularly since the girl at the sink is white, while both of the girls watching her appear to be people of color.

    Walters’ post provoked an editorial Tuesday in The Oklahoman, the state’s largest newspaper, that called on him to either cool his rhetoric or step down.

    “There’s nothing exemplary about Walters’ implications in Saturday’s tweet. It’s time for Oklahomans to take a stand for leadership that exudes decency and competence from the superintendent and demand that either he end his disparaging rhetoric, or resign,” the editorial said. “That would be the best antidote for this metastasizing poison, a good place to start.”

    The state’s Education Department did not respond to a request for comment.

    Many people on Twitter saw Walters’ post as racist.

    “Saving white girls from non-white girls, just the hero we need,” said one user sarcastically.

    “So, no mixed race bathrooms?” another wrote. “Are you saying the quiet part out loud again?”

    Others, pointing to a “Did you wash your hands?” sign visible in the picture, jokingly speculated that Walters was inveighing against basic hygiene. “Rights or not, people should wash their hands,” one user replied.

    “It’s time for Oklahomans to take a stand for leadership that exudes decency and competence from the superintendent and demand that either he end his disparaging rhetoric, or resign.”

    – Editorial in The Oklahoman newspaper

    As of Wednesday afternoon, the tweet had generated more than 1,300 comments and 175 likes, and had been viewed more than 1 million times.

    It’s not Walters’ first brush with controversy. He has been an outspoken proponent of school vouchers, which rural school advocates in the state hate, and he has often spoken out against “critical race theory,” an academic term that conservatives have adopted as an umbrella phrase for virtually any instance where an educator acknowledges the existence of systemic inequality.

    Walters barely won the Republican nomination for the superintendent post, but handily won the general election in the deeply culturally conservative state.

    In his general campaign, he said he had been told by a former colleague that there’d been a meeting about students at the colleague’s school who allegedly identified as cats and asked to use litter boxes. The superintendent of Walters’ former school district in McAlester said no such meeting ever occurred.

    Walters and his rhetoric were even cited by Democrats in the wake of Oklahoma’s two recent failed attempts to land a battery manufacturing plant. In one instance, a Panasonic plant ultimately went to neighboring Kansas, and only days ago, Volkswagen said it would build in Ontario, Canada, instead of Oklahoma.

    Oklahoma officials tried unsuccessfully to lure two different battery manufacturing plants to the state recently, as part of an effort to ease the state’s dependence on oil and natural gas production.

    State Rep. Cyndi Munson (Oklahoma City), the Democratic leader in Oklahoma’s House of Representatives, said: “If we want big companies like Volkswagen to choose Oklahoma over other states and countries like Canada, we need more than just tax incentives,” referring to the $700 million in tax breaks that Oklahoma offered for the Volkswagen plant.

    “We need lawmakers to stop making laws that limit access to health care for women and transgender Oklahomans,” Munson said. “We need the governor and the state superintendent of public instruction to stop working to defund and denounce our public schools.”

    Whatever Walters’ tweet was actually intended to convey, some Twitter commenters simply remained in awe of its poor execution.

    As one person put it: “High five to the design intern who clearly hates you.”

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