Michigan Republicans allude to dismantling Department of Education in fiery hearing
Michigan Board of Education President Pamela Pugh (left) and Michigan Superintendent of Public Instruction Michael Rice (right) listen to members of the Michigan House Oversight Committee on Tuesday, June 3, 2025 | Photo by Ben Solis
Two top officials with the Michigan Department of Education on Tuesday defended the current state of Michigan schools amid House Republican calls for dismantling the department and allusions to taking public education back to a time when literacy rates were at some of their lowest in modern American history.
Board of Education President Pamela Pugh and Superintendent for Public Instruction Michael Rice appeared Tuesday before the Michigan House Oversight Committee, which included a lengthy presentation on the department's goals, its latest budget requests and some heavy back and forth between Republican lawmakers.
Several Republican members of the committee, including its chair, Rep. Jay DeBoyer (R-Clay), lambasted Pugh and Rice over low literacy rates and flailing math scores. Eventually, the specter of tearing down the department and starting anew with a department controlled closely by the Michigan Legislature materialized from Rep. Jaime Green (R-Richmond).
Before dismantling the department became a topic of conversation, Rice and Pugh attempted to show the committee that schools, students and educators have been making progress in multiple ways to achieve Michigan's Top 10 Strategic Plan, which did include record achievement in several areas.
Part of that forward progress was seen in the passage of new literacy and dyslexia laws, some of which were spearheaded by Greene, who worked closely with Rice to make that reality. Rice and Pugh extolled how much of a difference those laws will make in the screening of all children for dyslexia, for example.
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
The pair also praised the Legislature for increasing funding to public schools over the last few years, but said those budgets did not make up for decades of underinvestment in public schools a decade earlier.
Pugh discussed some of the challenges currently facing schools and the effect disinvestment has had on public schools, not only on student needs and achievement, but also the state's teacher shortage.
'It is critical and crucial to understand that the challenges before us are not new,' Pugh said. 'They are the result of long standing policy decisions that prioritize cost-cutting over sustained investment in our children and our schools. Despite these challenges, the state Board of Education has remained resolute in our mission to reverse those harms and build an educational system that truly serves all Michigan students.'
Pugh said students, as well as teachers, parents and administrators, were doing their best to provide a quality education in the face of crowded classrooms, aging buildings, limited access to mental health and special education services and what she called an alarming shortage of adequately paid teachers.
'These issues are not anecdotal,' Pugh said. 'They are symptoms of systemic neglect.'
Rice added that Michigan's four-year graduation rate had improved to the highest level in state history, growing to about 83% in 2024, which is also the highest that figure has been in the last 10 years. The percentage of adults with a post-secondary certification (51.8%) was on track toward Gov. Gretchen Whitmer's Sixty by 30 goal. The initiative aims to have 60% of Michigan adults between ages 25 and 64 holding some sort of post-secondary credential by 2030.
There were moments of seeming common ground between Rice and the Republicans who control the powerful House Oversight Committee, with Rice praising Public Act 146 and Public Act 147 of 2024 addressing literacy coaching and dyslexia screening assessments and interventions.
Progress was being made, but Rice noted that Language Essentials for Teachers of Reading and Spelling, or LETRS, training was needed for educators to keep up pace and do better on the literacy front. Rice called for mandatory LETRS training for kindergarten through fifth grade classroom teachers, and lower class sizes for kindergarten through third grade classrooms.
Rice said there was also a need for more in-person instructional time, as there had been cases of professional development days being treated as student instruction days in 2019, and 15 virtual days being counted as the same in 2023.
The meeting, however, was not one of the House Education Committee meant to discuss budgetary needs and goals, but rather one designed as a means to grill department officials over failures in public education.
That became clear in lines of questioning from Rep. Brad Paquette (R-Niles), who engaged in a lengthy and at times testy tit-for-tat with Rice and Pugh.
Paquette, a former teacher, said he's seen all the headlines showing the breadth of Michigan's public schools struggles and that he has been on various House committees in the past that dealt with public education and the budget. In that vein, Paquette said he's seen similar presentations from Rice before and, despite additional funding over the last few years, Michigan schools are continuing to struggle.
'We've increased funding yet results are still tracking downward,' Paquette said. 'When does accountability come into play?'
As Paquette became frustrated with Rice and Pugh's answers, Pugh said accountability needed to be based in reality.
From there, Greene, who received a shout out from Rice for her work on the dyslexia screening law, turned the conversation toward the perceived need to dismantle the department, echoing Congressional Republican calls to do the same at the federal level.
Pugh said that studies have shown that states with elected boards like Michigan's, and not under the control of the governor's office or the Legislature, provided critical checks and balances, and correlated with better student outcomes. Those systems were also tied to more equity in funding and policy consistency.
Rep. Josh Schriver (R-Oxford), hailed the fact that the 'Greatest Generation' of the early 20th Century had class sizes of 30, 40 or sometimes 50 children and that they fared fine. He made other meandering comments before being cut off by DeBoyer in the essence of time.
More questions than answers on school vouchers as a legislative oversight committee wraps up
As the meeting wrapped, Rep. Dylan Wegela (D-Garden City), tried to set the record straight on various comments made by his Republican colleagues.
Wegela called out Schriver's point, noting that the early 20th Century was a time of rampant racial segregation, and that literacy rates today were far higher than they were in the 1920s. Schriver at one point brought up vouchers for school choice programs, which Wegela said in Arizona, it was found that parents spent that money on items like toys and other merchandise instead.
He also noted that Michigan cannot talk about its problem with schools without looking at funding adjusted for inflation.
'Record funding is only as good as saying we have record wages today,' Wegela said. 'When you adjust for inflation, we are barely ahead of the year 2000. This has created a classroom size problem, and a teacher shortage.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Upturn
29 minutes ago
- Business Upturn
What are the Epstein files Elon Musk claims Trump is part of?
By Aditya Bhagchandani Published on June 6, 2025, 01:28 IST Elon Musk's latest explosive claim — that US President Donald Trump appears in the Jeffrey Epstein files — has reignited public attention around one of the most controversial and secretive document troves in recent American history. Musk, who did not provide any evidence for his allegation, referred to the so-called 'Epstein files' — a widely-used term for records compiled by the US Department of Justice during investigations into the late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. These files are believed to contain names, testimonies, and other details linking Epstein to a range of high-profile individuals allegedly involved in or aware of his trafficking operations involving underage girls. Time to drop the really big bomb:@realDonaldTrump is in the Epstein files. That is the real reason they have not been made public. Have a nice day, DJT! — Elon Musk (@elonmusk) June 5, 2025 While several names have already been disclosed through court-ordered unsealing of legal documents — including Prince Andrew and Bill Clinton — many parts of the federal files remain sealed. Musk's comment hints that Trump may be among those unrevealed in the classified records, though no concrete evidence has surfaced. Musk, a former close advisor to Trump, had headed the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) — a controversial agency created to reduce government size, resulting in thousands of federal job cuts. He left the administration just last week and has since lashed out at Trump's economic policies, calling his tax-cut and spending bill a 'disgusting abomination.' Trump responded on Truth Social Thursday night, claiming he had personally asked Musk to leave the administration, accusing the billionaire of 'going CRAZY' and saying his behavior was 'wearing thin.' Despite the back-and-forth, Musk's claim has drawn sharp interest — even without proof — due to the sensitive nature of the Epstein files and their long history of implicating elite global figures. Aditya Bhagchandani serves as the Senior Editor and Writer at Business Upturn, where he leads coverage across the Business, Finance, Corporate, and Stock Market segments. With a keen eye for detail and a commitment to journalistic integrity, he not only contributes insightful articles but also oversees editorial direction for the reporting team.
Yahoo
31 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Efforts to deport Columbia grad Mahmoud Khalil likely unconstitutional, judge says
A federal judge has ruled that the Trump administration's attempt to deport Columbia University graduate Mahmoud Khalil for his pro-Palestinian activism or beliefs is likely unconstitutional. In a 106-page opinion, U.S. District Court Judge Michael Farbiarz wrote that Khalil was likely to succeed because the legal provision used to justify his detention was "unconstitutionally vague.' Farbiarz, who presides in the District of New Jersey, issued the opinion on May 28. In the same opinion, the judge denied Khalil's bid for release from an immigration detention center in Louisiana because of the U.S. government's allegations that his residency application contained inaccuracies. Those allegations needed more scrutiny, the judge wrote. Immigration agents arrested Khalil, a green card holder married to an American citizen, on March 8 in the lobby of his student apartment building in Manhattan. A Palestinian born in Syria, Khalil was a spokesman and negotiator for pro-Palestinian protesters at Columbia. Khalil was not accused of any crime. Noncitizens can be deported if the Secretary of State finds that their presence threatens U.S. foreign policy interests, even if their beliefs, statements or associations are "otherwise lawful," the Trump administration argued. They cited a rarely used provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act as the basis. Farbiarz wrote that the U.S. government 'must meet higher standards' when making such determinations. The foreign policy statue, he added, is not clear on what is and is not allowed or on the limits of government power. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Khalil's activities fostered a hostile environment for Jewish students and undermined U.S. policy to combat antisemitism. But the government did not specify how Khalil's actions impacted U.S. relations with other countries, Farbiarz wrote. Background: Who is Mahmoud Khalil? What to know about Columbia graduate Khalil and his attorneys have denied allegations of antisemitism and say U.S. officials have wrongly conflated criticism of Israel with antisemitism. 'This case, at least for now, is not about choosing between competing accounts of what happened at Columbia between 2023 and 2025,' Farbiarz said. 'Or about whether the petitioner's First Amendment rights are being violated. "Rather, the issue now before the court has been this: does the Constitution allow the secretary of state to use Section 1227 [of immigration law], as applied through the determination, to try to remove the petitioner from the United States? 'The court's answer: likely not.' The U.S. government said Khalil had inaccuracies about his employment history and affiliations in his application for lawful permanent residence that warranted his removal. Khalil was not likely to succeed on this, Farbiarz wrote, adding that more information was needed. Khalil, who graduated with a master's from Columbia in December, was the first publicly known case in which the Trump administration attempted to deport a student over pro-Palestinian speech or activism. Civil rights group say it could set a precedent on the civil rights of noncitizens. This article originally appeared on Mahmoud Khalil deportation efforts by US likely violate constitution
Yahoo
31 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Surveilled, detained: Feds pursue Paterson woman a year after Gaza protest
Days after taking office, President Donald Trump declared that he would punish 'leftist, anti-American colleges and universities' and go after 'all the resident aliens who joined in the pro-jihadist protests.' 'We will find you, and we will deport you,' Trump said while announcing an executive order. In the ensuing crackdown on pro-Palestinian activism, Leqaa Kordia of Paterson said she soon found that the Department of Homeland Security was investigating nearly every aspect of her life. They interrogated her mother, uncle, a clothing store owner and tenants of an apartment that she briefly rented. They traced her WhatsApp messaging account and subpoenaed records from MoneyGram. They photographed her mother's home, she said. The scrutiny, described in a federal lawsuit, came nearly a year after her participation at a demonstration on April 30, 2024, outside the gates of Columbia University. New York City police arrested 119 protesters on and off campus that day, including Kordia, a Palestinian who had been in the United States since 2016. Although charges were dropped, the arrest put her on federal authorities' radar, the lawsuit shows. In March, the Department of Homeland Security announced Kordia had been arrested for overstaying her student visa. Kordia's mother had filed a family-based petition for her to become a permanent resident that she mistakenly thought gave her temporary legal status, her attorneys said. Today, she remains in Texas at the Prairieland Detention Facility, 1,500 miles away from her family, held in what her attorneys describe as 'inhumane conditions.' On June 5, she will appear at the U.S. District Court for the District of Northern Texas, where she filed a petition alleging that her detention violates her rights to free speech and due process. Her attorneys will argue a motion for her release. Kordia's case points to a broader and unconstitutional campaign to silence pro-Palestinian advocacy, her attorneys said, with the Trump administration 'weaponizing' immigration law to achieve that goal. 'Immigration authorities targeted and selectively prosecuted her and there is no justification for her continued detention,' said Arthur Ago, at attorney with the South Poverty Law Center, a legal advocacy and civil rights organization representing Kordia. The U.S. government, Ago said, is 'using immigration law as a pretext to target individuals for exercising their freedom of expression.' The Department of Homeland Security wrote in an email that Kordia's student status was terminated for "lack of attendance." They noted, too, that she had been arrested for involvement in what they called 'pro-Hamas protests at Columbia University." They did not address allegations that her detention violated her constitutional rights. The White House reiterated its vow to deport "anti-American radicals" after an Egyptian threw incendiary devices at people gathered at a June 1 demonstration to advocate for the release of Israeli hostages in Gaza in Boulder, Colorado. DHS said Mohamed Sabry Soliman entered the country legally with a B-2 tourist visa in August 2022. The visa expired six months later. Soliman applied for asylum in September 2022. Individuals with pending asylum applications are generally protected from deportation while their cases are pending. The attack escalated fears because it occurred soon after a fatal shooting in Washington D.C. on May 21 by suspect Elias Rodriguez, an American citizen who shouted 'Free Palestine' after he killed two members of the Israeli Embassy in Washington outside a Jewish museum. Born in Jerusalem, Kordia grew up in the West Bank with her father. Her parents divorced when she was a child and, in 2016, she traveled to the United States where her mother lived in Paterson. When she went to the protest outside Columbia's gates, Kordia was mourning the loss of more than 100 family members killed by Israeli forces in Gaza. "Ms. Kordia was moved to join this demonstration and others because of the sense of loss she felt, and still feels, from losing an entire generation of her family in Gaza," the petition states. "This helped her begin to mourn for the family she had lost. The demonstration, at least where Ms. Kordia stood, was peaceful and nonviolent. Ms. Kordia joined in the group's chanting 'ceasefire now!' and end the siege on Gaza!' among other slogans." Police arrested Kordia and others as they ordered the crowd to disperse. She was released the next day, and police dropped a disorderly conduct charge, according to the complaint and to news reports. Then, in March, Homeland Security agents visited her mother's home and got on the phone with Kordia, saying they had questions about her immigration status. She made an appointment with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Newark on March 13, where officers informed her she had overstayed her student visa. Kordia had been enrolled in an English language program and withdrew after her mother filed the application for her residency. It was an error she made based on bad advice, her legal team said. In a standard assessment, ICE "rated her as low risk across all risk factors, including risk to public safety, flight risk, and criminal history," according to the complaint. "Immediately after officers processed Ms. Kordia at the Newark Field Office," the complaint states, "three officers placed her in an unmarked vehicle and transported her to an airport. The officers immediately brought her to a gate to wait for a plane." In the average visa overstay case, people are allowed to fight their immigration case from home, especially where there is no criminal history, said SPLC attorney Sabrine Mohamad. 'Among the legal team, we have decades and decades of immigration experience and none of them have ever seen someone put in detention and flown out of the state simply for an overstayed visa,' Mohamed said. At an April 3 bond hearing, Homeland Security lawyers alleged Kordia was a danger because of her protesting and a $1,000 wire transfer she made to her aunt, according to the complaint. It was an errand for her mother, a routine offer of help to a family member abroad, Mohamad said. "The immigration judge found, in connection with the April 30, 2024 arrest, no evidence that Ms. Kordia had threatened police or engaged in any dangerous activity," the complaint states. "Similarly, the immigration judge rejected DHS's baseless suggestion that Ms. Kordia may have provided support to a terrorist group, noting that the government admitted they do not know any information about the recipient of the single transaction attributed to Ms. Kordia." The immigration judge determined Kordia posed no risk and granted her a bond of $20,000. Homeland Security appealed, so she remains in custody. 'They have yet to provide a shred of evidence of illegal activity. That evidence does not exist,' Mohamed said. Under U.S. law, being in the country without legal permission is a civil violation, not a criminal offense. In Kordia's case, Homeland Security included her sealed arrest record from the New York City Police Department as evidence for her removal. City law bars police from sharing information with federal agencies for immigration purposes. Homeland Security officials told police they were investigating Kordia for money laundering, Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch told reporters. The detention center was overcrowded, so Kordia slept on a concrete floor with a thin mattress and blanket with about 55 women in a room meant for 20, the lawsuit states. Roaches crawled on the floor around them. She remained there for a month. When a bed became available, it was under an industrial air conditioner that blew frigid air. She could not get a bed transfer and asked to be moved back to the concrete floor. Kordia also alleged that she was denied medication for a rash that bled and cough drops for a sore throat. She asked but did not receive medical care for migraine headaches, dizziness and psychological distress, she claimed. A practicing Muslim, Kordia also said she 'has not had a single halal meal' despite repeated requests, even as kosher meals were provided for other detainees, the complaint states. During Ramadan, when Muslims fast from sunrise to sunset, she also could not get meals at appropriate times. In a month, Kordia dropped from 170 to 121 pounds, according to the complaint. In her complaint, Kordia alleged that her treatment violates her religious freedom under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. The GEO Group, the private prison corporation that operates the Prairieland Detention Facility, said in an email that it provides 'around-the-clock access to medical care, in-person and virtual legal and family visitation, general and legal library access, dietician-approved meals, religious and specialty diets, recreational amenities, and opportunities to practice their religious beliefs.' Its services, a spokesperson added, are monitored by ICE, organizations within the Department of Homeland Security and accreditation groups 'to ensure strict compliance with ICE detention standards.' Pro-Palestinian protests swept through college campuses and streets across the United States after Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel and Israel's subsequent military assault. Trump administration officials have alleged that protesters promoted antisemitism and posed national security threats. Student protests have been largely peaceful and included Jewish activists. Organizers say their actions are targeted at the Israeli government, not at Jews. In an array of cases, allegations made against detained students and scholars were not criminal. In at least three cases, they cited a Cold War-era statue allowing the secretary of state to move to deport non-citizens deemed harmful to American foreign policy. The law was cited against Tufts University student Rümeysa Öztürk , scrutinized for writing a 2024 op-ed in a student newspaper critical of Israel, and Badar Khan Suri, who wrote pro-Palestinian comments on social media that officials claim were pro-Hamas, a charge he and his attorneys say is false. It was levied, too, against Mahmoud Khalil, a spokesperson for Columbia University protesters. They also alleged that Khalil had inaccuracies in his green card application, although he is disputing that claim in federal court in New Jersey. 'This administration is not just denying those who are detained the right to live in dignity,' Mohamad said. 'It's also weaponizing their silence as a warning to the rest of us that if you advocate for Palestine or express any form of dissent you will be disappeared and silenced.' A magistrate judge at the June 5 hearing will rule on whether Kordia should be released in a recommendation that will be provided to the U.S. District Court judge. Kordia is also represented by the Texas Civil Rights Project, Muslim Advocates, the CLEAR project and Waters Kraus Paul & Siegel. Rallies are planned June 5 in Dallas and in Newark outside the Delaney Hall detention center at 11 a.m. to call for Kordia's release. This article originally appeared on Leqaa Kordia of Paterson NJ fights for ICE detention release