‘Very homophobic’: Teachers’ union leader Randi Weingarten says of her House hearing exchange with Marjorie Taylor-Greene!

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, testifies during a House subcommittee hearing.

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers. (Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters)

Dear Commons Community,

Last week, a Congressional House hearing on pandemic-related school closures descended into a personal attack from Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., against teachers’ union leader Randi Weingarten .

Passions were expressed in a “very homophobic” way by the outspoken congresswoman, Weingarten told Yahoo News last Friday. The hearing had taken place two days before, but she was still plainly rattled by the exchange.

During the hearing, Greene repeatedly noted that Weingarten is not a “biological mother,” a seeming reference to the fact that the 65-year-old American Federation of Teachers president is married to a woman, Sharon Kleinbaum, a rabbi at the world’s largest LGBTQ synagogue. She sat behind Weingarten during the hearing.

“She was just attempting to dehumanize me,” Weingarten said of Greene.

Weingarten told Yahoo News that she has been forced to travel with a security guard since November of last year, when former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called her “the most dangerous person in the world.”

And she said the exchange with Greene has resulted in a flood of “vile” emails, many of them homophobic or antisemitic.

Weingarten was the sole witness at the hearing, which was conducted by a subcommittee of the Republican-controlled House Oversight Committee that is tasked with investigating the nation’s response to the coronavirus pandemic.

The subcommittee’s chairman, Rep. Brad Wenstrup, R-Ohio, had opened the hearing by pleading with members of both parties to focus on the topic at hand, which was whether the AFT unduly influenced Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines on school reopenings.

Emails previously made public showed Weingarten asking for amendments in the guidance, a request the influential union leader said was not out of bounds and one of many inputs that the CDC considered.

Republicans disagreed, but none with more vehemence than Greene, a hard-right congresswoman with a penchant for controversy.

Greene said Weingarten should not have had any say in the reopening guidelines because she’s “not a medical doctor, not a biological mother and, really, not a teacher, either.”

Kleinbaum has two daughters from a previous marriage, as Weingarten noted, but that did not appear to satisfy Greene, who has made gender and race issues a centerpiece of her legislative career.

“Let me tell you, I am a mother, and all three of my children were directly affected by the school closures — by your recommendations — which is something that you can’t understand,” Greene said. (Her insistence on “biological” motherhood appeared to invalidate not only the experiences of LGBTQ parents but also of those who become parents through adoption or remarriage after divorce.)

“Somewhere, Ronald Reagan, an adoptive parent who gave conservatism a friendly face, is shaking his head,” former White House speechwriter David Kusnet wrote on Twitter of Greene’s assertion.

The congresswoman’s office did not return a request for comment.

Democrats unsuccessfully attempted to have her attacks on Weingarten stricken from the Congressional Record, but Wenstrup said House rules would not permit him to do so.

Greene doesn’t care that she continues to devolve to the lowest depths of indignity

Tony

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