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President Donald Trump delivers remarks in honor of the U.S. Navy 250th anniversary celebration at the USS Harry S. Truman aircraft carrier on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025, at Naval Station Norfolk in Norfolk, Virginia. (Official White House photo by Daniel Torok)

After President Donald Trump was sworn in for a second term in January, American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten asserted she was “really sad” about the inaugural speech.

“Rather than unifying people and building on America’s best qualities, Trump delivered a speech that was laden with divisiveness, showing that he is the president of only some Americans,” Weingarten said in an inauguration day statement.

“Those of us in the labor movement and in public education are fighting for opportunity and dignity for all Americans.”

Perhaps not surprisingly, the AFT—one of America’s largest public school teachers unions—has participated in a deluge of lawsuits against the Trump administration policies. What’s more interesting is that several of the legal actions are seemingly at most education-adjacent, and in other cases have little or nothing to do with K-12 public education.

The AFT has sued regarding federal employees, immigration, and student loans for college students.

The AFT began as exclusively a teachers union, but has six separate divisions that also represents other public school employees such as teacher aides, custodians, and bus drivers, as well as health care workers and higher education faculty. The union’s website says it also represents public employees that includes federal and state employees.

“The AFT’s lawsuit spree against the Trump administration reveals what we’ve long known: these organizations have strayed far from their mission of representing teachers,” Aaron Withe, president of the Teacher Freedom Alliance, a conservative education group, told The Daily Signal. “This is exactly why so many teachers are choosing to opt out—they want representation focused on their profession, not a political action committee.”

The litigation that is unrelated or only loosely connected to education includes:

The nation’s other large teachers union–the National Education Association–has not shied away from challenging the Trump administration in court either. But the litigation seems to go in fewer directions. The NEA is the lead plaintiff in one case against the Trump administration, this one regarding race-based admissions in higher education. It was also part of a coalition that sued to stop the dismantling of the Education Department, which at least could be related to k-12.

As The Daily Signal previously reported, both the NEA and AFT participated in “No Kings” protests opposed to Trump administration policies.

The AFT did not respond to phone and email inquiries from The Daily Signal for comment.

Withe, of the Teacher Freedom Alliance, said such litigation should give AFT members pause.

“The question every AFT member should be asking is: how does suing over federal employment commission matters or treasury regulations help me as a teacher?” Withe added. “The answer is it doesn’t. It serves the union’s leftist political agenda while diverting resources away from actual teachers.”

[Editor’s note: This story originally was published by The Daily Signal.]