You remember the story, right? All of the nation’s governors were at the White House for a meeting with Donald Trump on February 22nd, and Maine’s Janet Mills stole the show, as it were.
Trump, a couple weeks earlier, had signed an executive order to ban biological males from competing in women’s sports, and threatened to pull education funding to districts, states, and colleges/universities that did not comply. Enter Governor Mills.
She had no intention of complying. Even after the President called her out in front of other other state’s governor, she wasn’t going to budge. This was the hill on which she was willing to consume the arsenic. I wrote about this pretty extensively at the end of the week, including the immediate Finding Out Governor Mills experienced after F’ing Around.
Her reaction? Priceless. She said her antiquated state law trumped Trump’s EO and Title IX of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Trump said he’d see her in court, and that she’d lose.
Maine Governor Janet Mills decided that women’s sports was the hill she wanted to die on. She refused to comply with Trumps EO and told him she would see him in court.
Several hours later, the Office of Civil Rights announced they were investigating Maine for Title IX… pic.twitter.com/G8cPARuZpF
— Sassafrass84 (@Sassafrass_84) February 22, 2025
Multiple investigations by the Department of Education and Department of Agriculture, a menacing follow-up from Pam Bondi’s Department of Justice, along with an announcement that up to $250 million dollars in educational dollars, seemed to have done the trick. Mills, and University of Maine, discovered that that much money not finding its way to the Pinetree State unless compliance happens would cause some consternation among Mainers with kids. The Department of Agriculture alone allots up to $100 million to the University of Maine System of campuses alone. […]
— Read More: hotair.com
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