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Moms for Liberty Gains Influence in White House Education Policy Discussions

Moms for Liberty, a group focused on parental rights in education, has participated in White House meetings on topics including transgender athletes, artificial intelligence in education, and diversity initiatives. The organization, founded five years ago in Florida, has expanded from local school board efforts to federal policy involvement. Its co-founder and chief executive, Tina Descovich, has

Los Angeles Times
1 source·Apr 14, 10:00 AM(8 hrs ago)·5m read
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Moms for Liberty Gains Influence in White House Education Policy DiscussionsLos Angeles Times
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Moms for Liberty is a nonprofit organization that advocates for parental rights in education. The group was founded five years ago in Florida and has grown to include more than 300 chapters across the United States. It focuses on challenging classroom instruction related to topics such as sex, race, and LGBTQ+ themes, which it considers inappropriate for children.

The organization initially concentrated on local efforts to influence school boards. Funding for the group has increased, with revenue from sources including the Heritage Foundation and donors such as Richard Uihlein.

Expansion to Federal Policy In recent years, Moms for Liberty has extended its activities to national policy discussions.

When an executive order against transgender athletes was signed last year, Tina Descovich, co-founder and chief executive of Moms for Liberty, was thanked. Descovich was back at the White House a few months later, seated alongside CEOs of Google and IBM to weigh in on artificial intelligence and education policy.

Last month, when a global technology summit was hosted in Washington, Descovich was there, too. S. schools. What started as a fringe of far-right mothers has seen its interests collide with a presidential administration that embraces and amplifies their message, launching the group into a new level of influence in public policy.

Descovich said she has a voice in discussions around transgender sports bans, AI in education, the dismantling of the Education Department and a campaign to end diversity, equity and inclusion. “We have a seat at the table in so many policy discussions throughout the administration,” Descovich, who lives in Florida, said during a recent visit to Washington.

” Supporters say the group's trajectory speaks to the power of its “parental rights” agenda, which has become a plank of conservative politics. Critics are alarmed by its presence at the White House, saying the group promotes extreme views and undermines public schools.

Founded five years ago in Florida, the organization became known for challenging classroom instruction it deemed inappropriate for children, often involving sex, race or LGBTQ+ themes. It later turned to state capitols, securing legislation like Florida's “Don't Say Gay” law.

It claims more than 300 chapters, with sharply growing revenue flowing in from groups such as the Heritage Foundation and conservative megadonors, including Richard Uihlein. By some measures, however, its influence had appeared to be waning. School board candidates endorsed by the group struggled in elections, and rival liberal groups rose up to compete for power in America's suburbs.

A series of missteps fueled ridicule among opponents, including an incident in which an Indiana chapter quoted Adolf Hitler in a parent newsletter in 2023. Yet when Trump returned to office, the group's political fortunes swung upward. His administration charges into the same cultural battles Moms for Liberty staked its name on, including a push to keep transgender athletes out of girls' sports.

By her count, Descovich has been to the White House about a dozen times this administration. For the Trump administration, Moms for Liberty appears to be playing a role that's often filled by groups such as the National PTA, said Rick Hess, director of education policy at the conservative American Enterprise Institute think tank.

As those establishment groups shy away from Trump, he said, Moms for Liberty has stepped up. Behind the scenes, Descovich has been a tipster for agencies that investigate schools over transgender sports and bathroom policies. After meeting with Justice Department officials, she delivered more than 250 complaints, she said.

“We really are this grassroots team that’s working hand-in-hand with helping move forward President Trump’s agenda,” she said. Asked about its relationship with Moms for Liberty, the White House declined to offer specifics but said Trump is “the most pro-family President in history,” citing his child tax credit among other initiatives.

The White House “is proud to tout these great accomplishments for American families alongside many leaders,” spokesperson Olivia Wales said in a statement. Moms for Liberty hopes to carry its momentum to Congress, too. On a recent March morning, more than 100 members fanned out across Capitol Hill, delivering homemade cookies to lawmakers and their offices.

Some brought their children, including a boy sporting a suit and red tie like Trump's. Members of the group call themselves “joyful warriors,” a moniker that critics say disguises their anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric and aggressive tactics. ” Descovich dismisses the criticism.

“Our motto has been, from Day One, we’re joyful warriors, because we knew we needed to advocate in a way that was OK for our children to watch,” she said. Yet she doesn't shy away from a fight. ” Late last year, Descovich led a letter urging the federal government to cut ties with the SPLC.

The FBI agreed to do so soon after, echoing language from her letter. The presence that Moms for Liberty has gained at the White House is both unsettling and unsurprising, said Seth Levi, chief program strategy officer for the SPLC. It's “further evidence that they are more interested in platforming extremist voices and policies rather than listening to the American people, who are demanding solutions to make their lives easier and more affordable,” Levi said.

The leap up to federal policy marks a new chapter in the group's evolution, said Maurice Cunningham, a former political science professor at the University of Massachusetts-Boston who tracks the organization and its relationships. He identifies the group as a close cousin to groups like the Heritage Foundation, which has been influential in Trump's second term.

Descovich said the relationship with Trump took root at a 2023 convention where Republican presidential candidates jostled for the group's endorsement. ” Moms for Liberty threw its weight behind Trump, and Descovich said she stayed close with his team.

The organization's latest concern is AI in the classroom, which Moms for Liberty sees as a threat to parental control over education. At a White House meeting, Descovich pushed for guardrails to ensure humans, not algorithms, guide instruction. It's also expanding its national presence with a new online training program called M4L Academy, featuring videos on “critical race theory” and other topics the group sees as taboo.

Binkley writes for the Associated Press.

Story Timeline

5 events
  1. Last month (March 2026)

    Tina Descovich attended a global technology summit hosted by First Lady Melania Trump in Washington.

    1 sourceLos Angeles Times
  2. March 2026

    More than 100 Moms for Liberty members visited Capitol Hill to interact with lawmakers.

    1 sourceLos Angeles Times
  3. A few months after last year

    Descovich joined White House meeting on AI and education with Google and IBM executives.

    1 sourceLos Angeles Times
  4. Last year (2025)

    President Trump signed executive order against transgender athletes and thanked Tina Descovich.

    1 sourceLos Angeles Times
  5. 2023

    An Indiana chapter of Moms for Liberty quoted Adolf Hitler in a parent newsletter.

    1 sourceLos Angeles Times

Potential Impact

  1. 01

    Increased federal scrutiny of school policies on transgender issues may lead to more investigations.

  2. 02

    Group's Capitol Hill visits could affect congressional support for parental rights legislation.

  3. 03

    Expansion of Moms for Liberty's training programs could influence more parents in education advocacy.

  4. 04

    Severed FBI ties with Southern Poverty Law Center may alter monitoring of advocacy groups.

  5. 05

    White House collaborations may shape AI guidelines in educational settings.

Transparency Panel

Sources cross-referenced1
Framing risk28/100 (low)
Confidence score55%
Synthesized bySubstrate AI (grok-4-fast-non-reasoning)
Word count1,120 words
PublishedApr 14, 2026, 10:00 AM
Bias signals removed4 across 2 outlets
Signal Breakdown
Loaded 2Editorializing 1Amplifying 1

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