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Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Saturday, November 22, 2025

The party recruited and invested in school board races to oust Republicans. It worked.

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Two of Tuesday's school board elections were in Bucks County, Pa. This is where the far-right group Moms for Liberty took hold 2021, as part of its anti-LGBTQ+ takeover of school boards Dems flipped control of both boards in 2023. On Tuesday, they ousted every GOPer but one.

-- Jen Bendery (@jbendery.bsky.social) Nov 6, 2025 at 10:04 AM

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... In Cypress, Texas, a Houston-area suburb that lures families with its high-quality education, Republicans used their two years of control on the school board to ban textbook chapters on climate change, diversity and vaccines.

This month, Democrats took over the majority, picking up three seats on the school board and ending the conservative reign.

From Texas to Pennsylvania to Ohio, Democrat-backed candidates ran successful campaigns in some of the nation's largest school systems and in political battlegrounds. They emphasized test scores and bus safety over debates about which bathrooms transgender students use and banning books from school libraries.

The result was a set of election results at the local level that accentuated the punishment meted out against Republicans by swing voters earlier this month. Those results were accentuated by Democrats' strong showing across the nation, as Americans issued a stinging repudiation of the party in power.

In Pennsylvania, Democrats flipped at least two dozen school board seats, per an ongoing tally from progressive recruitment group Pipeline Fund. The under-the-radar trend was enabled by voters' increasing weariness with the culture wars that helped the MAGA movement engineer school board takeovers and generate hyper-local interest in politics as the Covid-19 pandemic raged.

In addition to Texas, Republicans lost seats in the suburbs of Columbus, Ohio, and the national battleground of Pennsylvania " the result of well-funded campaigns orchestrated by local leaders. School board races are typically nonpartisan, but candidates receive endorsements and financial backing from partisan groups.

"Folks just want their school boards to be boring again," said Lesley Guilmart, one of the newly elected members in Cypress-Fairbanks.

"They want normalcy. Once the board was taken over by a super partisan extremist majority, folks across the political spectrum were dismayed." ...



#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-11-21 10:14 PM | Reply

'Sweep' isn't quite correct. School Boards in the two counties closest to me went more conservative. But the regressives around here tend to lag. Perhaps it will reverse here in another 5-10 years... probably too late to save the education of a generation. I'm really glad that I no longer have kids/grandkids in schools, locally.

#2 | Posted by Whatsleft at 2025-11-22 03:17 PM | Reply

They'll immediately start the LGBTard brainwashing schemes that will sweep them right back out of there because parents will never stand for that ----.

#3 | Posted by THEBULL at 2025-11-22 05:18 PM | Reply

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