in

Trump’s Harvard Deal: Patriot Win Against Education Elites

Corey DeAngelis told viewers bluntly that the radical left’s grip on our schools is finally cracking, and he’s right to say conservatives are starting to win the most important fight for America’s future. President Trump’s reported negotiations with Harvard — a deal that would extract real dollars and redirect them toward skill-based training — are proof that pressure works when patriots refuse to back down. This is not about grudges against elites; it’s about rescuing our children from an education cartel that has failed them for decades.

The deal with Harvard reportedly would include a $500 million contribution and commitments to stand up trade and technical schools focused on AI, engineering, and workforce skills, a direct repudiation of the hollow woke priorities universities have been pushing. After months of clashes over campus protests and ideological rot, the administration used leverage to force real concessions that benefit students and taxpayers rather than professors’ politics. That kind of accountability is long overdue in higher education and should be applauded by every parent who wants concrete results.

DeAngelis, a veteran school-choice advocate, has spent years exposing how DEI and leftist curricula lower standards and sap opportunity, and he’s been consistent in saying the parents’ movement is the new majority in education. Conservatives are no longer ceding the narrative about who gets to decide what children learn; we’re organizing, electing leaders, and demanding outcomes rather than ideology. If dismantling federal DEI mandates and empowering families were ever unthinkable to the swamp, those days are ending because patriots showed up to fight.

Meanwhile, the proposals coming out of the left’s municipal playbook make the stakes crystal clear: New York mayoral hopeful Zohran Mamdani floated phasing out kindergarten gifted and talented programs and shifting toward co-governance and restorative justice models that prioritize ideology over rigor. These changes may sound compassionate in a press release, but they amount to denying advanced instruction to the children who need it most and to rewarding mediocrity in the classroom. Parents who want their kids to be challenged and who believe in merit should see these policies for what they are — a step backward.

The hypocrisy is plain: politicians like Mamdani benefited from elite schooling while pushing policies that would strip those same opportunities from working-class families and ambitious kids. Critics from across the political spectrum have rightly warned that eliminating gifted tracks in early grades will push middle-class families out of public schools and leave vulnerable students behind. This isn’t progress; it’s privilege pretending to be virtue while the real losers are the children in overcrowded classrooms.

Conservatives should treat the Harvard negotiations and the pushback against radical city education plans as a roadmap: use leverage, demand accountability, expand school choice, and build career pipelines that actually prepare students for the 21st-century economy. Sunday sermons and academic virtue-signaling won’t fill job openings or teach coding, welding, or engineering — pragmatic schools will. The lesson is simple: when patriotic Americans apply political pressure and stay organized, bureaucrats and elite institutions can be made to put kids first.

This is our moment to reclaim the classroom for hardworking families and to say no to Marxist experiments dressed up as education reform. Stand with parents, support school choice, and back leaders who prioritize excellence over ideology; our children’s future depends on it. Keep the pressure on, hold elites accountable, and never apologize for wanting the best for American kids.

Written by Keith Jacobs

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Chicago Chaos: Feds Clash with Protesters in Brutal Immigration Battle

Political Persuasion Tactics: Why Targeting Demographics Falls Flat