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Sunday, May 10, 2026

More States Enact New Laws Curbing Teachers Unions

 by Aaron Gifford via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

New organized labor reforms signed into law by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis last week require a majority of members to be present for teachers union certification or recertification votes, increase fines for illegal strikes, and establish merit-based pay for educators.

Students join striking teachers as they demand higher pay and smaller class sizes outside Oakland Technical High School in Oakland, Calif., on Feb. 21, 2019. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

In Idaho, after July 1, teachers unions will be prohibited from collecting dues directly from members’ paychecks, using paid time off for union activities, or recruiting new members during school hours.

A similar law in Arizona, which also bans teacher strikes and prohibits organized labor members from using any school property—even email addresses—for union activities, will be decided on by voters in the November election.

“They can’t consume taxpayer-funded resources during the school day,” said Rusty Brown, special projects director for the Freedom Foundation policy organization, which assisted state legislators with those measures and helps teachers opt out of union membership.

These ideas are expected to gain ground throughout the nation in the months and years ahead, Brown told The Epoch Times.

Individually, the Freedom Foundation’s Teacher Freedom Alliance has so far helped more than 272,535 teachers opt out of union membership, including more than 50,000 in 2025 alone, according to data provided to The Epoch Times. This includes educators in red and blue states.

At the state level, Oklahoma lawmakers have advanced legislation that would allow teachers to withdraw from a union at any time and would terminate “closed shop” provisions that prevent teachers from accessing alternative labor or professional organizations, such as the Teacher Freedom Alliance.

Brown calls this an “equal access and an end to a monopoly and captive audience bill.” Alternative organizations can offer teacher liability insurance and other benefits at a fraction of the price that traditional unions charge, he said.

Brown said he believes that the legislation could pass before Oklahoma’s session ends later this month, but the member withdrawal proposal probably won’t go through this session.

Alabama state lawmakers will consider legislation similar to Oklahoma’s next session, he said.

Maxford Nelsen, Freedom Foundation’s director of research and government affairs, said several factors prompted growing interest in pushing back against teachers unions. Members do not like that dues are automatically deducted from their paychecks. There is increasing animosity toward “zombie unions,” in which a limited number of members are informed or allowed to vote on matters. Labor organizations also engage in practices that create very narrow windows and bureaucratic hurdles for terminating membership.

“That’s the last thing they want to think about during their summer vacation,” Nelsen told The Epoch Times, citing one union’s requirement in which opt-outs were limited to the last 10 days of July.

Perhaps the most contentious issue, Nelson said, is how teachers union dues are spent. A review of the National Education Association and American Federation of Teachers unions’ websites shows that both heavily favor Democrats and promote transgender ideology; diversity, equity, and inclusion practices; special protections for illegal immigrants; anti-school choice measures; and other left-leaning policies.

Hundreds of millions of dollars are flowing into this progressive apparatus,” Nelson said.

A recent report from Defending Education, a conservative policy center, states that teachers unions at the local, state, and national levels have spent more than $1 billion on “far-left political causes” unrelated to collective bargaining since 2015. This includes school board races, political action committees, and campaigns against school choice.

“Given the outsized role that unions have played in the education system over the past 50 years, greater transparency on union spending is absolutely critical so that policymakers and teachers themselves can make informed decisions about the role that these entities should—or should not—play in the future,” Defending Education President Nicole Neily said in an April 27 statement.

The Epoch Times reached out to the National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers unions for comment.

In response to prior Florida legislation that prohibited teachers unions from deducting dues directly from paychecks, the Florida Education Association contracted with a company to withdraw dues from members’ bank accounts after their paychecks are deposited.

“This type of ‘paycheck deception’ legislation is nothing new and has been wielded across the country to weaken unions and roll back working conditions,” the Florida Education Association stated on its website. “It’s no secret that this legislation is designed to diminish our collective voice.”

The Idaho Education Association teachers union implemented a similar system. It also denounced Idaho Gov. Brad Little for refusing to veto the legislation.

Idaho’s students and the dedicated professionals who teach them will be worse off because of his choice,” the union’s president, Layne McInelly, said in an April 10 statement. “They deserve better.”

The Freedom Foundation is scrutinizing public organized labor groups across the nation, not just teachers unions. In Oregon, it recently submitted a complaint to the state employment relations board on behalf of a union member who said dues were deducted from his paycheck without his authorization. He asked for a refund and requested to opt out of the union, only to be told that the window to do so is Aug. 8 through Sept. 9, according to documentation provided to The Epoch Times.

Nelsen did not work on that case but said this type of practice by unions is common in an era of direct deposits and withdrawals and digital forms.

“There are no mechanisms in place to verify that the individual workers have authorized the form, let alone understand it,” he said.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/more-states-enact-new-laws-curbing-teachers-unions

US Firm Unveils Ground Bot With Enough Power To Fire Laser Guns

 Utah-based defense tech firm Hypercraft has unveiled a 300 hp diesel-hybrid-electric unmanned ground vehicle (UGV) that can power directed-energy weapons, charge drones, and sustain a forward command post, all autonomously.

Defense Blog’s Dylan Malyasov reports that Hypercraft’s Razorback UGV can travel 280 miles on a single charge, reach speeds of 60 mph, and export 38 kilowatts of power, which is enough to power laser weapons and recharge drones.

Razorback is being positioned as a critical energy source for forward operating units that need power for drones, electronic warfare, ISR, counter-UAS systems, and communications. The UGV is also designed to move supplies and support infrastructure on the modern battlefield.

The role of UGVs on the battlefield is still being shaped in real time by the Russia-Ukraine war, where robots, whether ground bots or drones, are increasingly removing infantrymen from harm's way as the grinding fight evolves into a war of attrition fought by machines.

The wars across Eurasia, from Ukraine-Russia to the U.S.-Iran conflict, have validated a new style of warfare in which cheap ground robots and drones increasingly operate in ‘no man's land’ (front lines). The next phase is already coming: humanoid systems entering the battlespace as militaries look to push more machines, not infantrymen, into the kill zone.

https://www.zerohedge.com/military/us-firm-unveils-ground-bot-enough-power-fire-laser-guns

'Trump, Xi likely to discuss China support for Iran - Reuters'

 

US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are likely to discuss Beijing’s support for Iran and Russia, Reuters reported on Sunday, citing a senior US official.

Iran response includes Lebanon ceasefire demand - Al Mayadeen

 

Iran’s response to a US proposal sent through Pakistani mediation included a clause on an Israel-Lebanon ceasefire, Hezbollah-affiliated Al Mayadeen reported, citing sources.

The sources said including the Lebanon ceasefire file in the Iranian response was one of Tehran’s red lines in the negotiations.

They said any agreement with Washington must include an end to the war immediately upon its announcement.

The Iranian response also stressed the lifting of US sanctions and the release of frozen Iranian funds, the sources said.

Tehran also demanded the cancellation of OFAC restrictions related to Iranian oil sales, according to the report.

The sources said the Iranian response stipulated Iranian management of the Strait of Hormuz under the proposed understandings.

The proposed agreement includes 30 days of negotiations after the war is stopped to discuss details, the sources said.

Negotiations between Tehran and Washington will continue for now in writing through the Pakistani mediator, according to the report.

https://www.iranintl.com/en/liveblog/202605087268

'Iran proposal seeks sanctions relief, end to war - Tasnim'

 

Iran’s proposed text for negotiations with the United States underlines the necessity of lifting US sanctions, IRGC-affiliated Tasnim News reported, citing an informed source.

The proposed text also underlines the necessity of ending the naval blockade of Iran following the signing of an initial understanding, Tasnim cited the source as saying.

The proposal includes the need for an immediate end to the war and guarantees against any renewed attack on Iran, the source said.

Tasnim cited the source as saying Iran’s proposal stresses the need for an end to the war on all fronts.

The proposal also demands the rescinding of US OFAC sanctions related to Iranian oil sales during a 30-day period, Tasnim cited the source as saying.

https://www.iranintl.com/en/liveblog/202605087268

Saudi Arabia warns against continued closure of Hormuz

 

Saudi Arabia sharply condemned attacks reported earlier on Qatari, Kuwaiti and Emirati territories, warning against further escalation in the region and any move to shut the Strait of Hormuz.

In a statement, the Saudi Foreign Ministry called for an “immediate halt to the blatant attacks on the territories and territorial waters of the Gulf states, and to any attempt to close the Strait of Hormuz.”

The statement followed a series of incidents across the region.

The UAE said its air defences intercepted two drones launched from Iran, Kuwait reported “hostile drones” in its airspace and Qatar said a cargo ship was targeted in its territorial waters.

https://www.iranintl.com/en/liveblog/202605087268

IRGC-linked outlet shrugs off Trump rejection of Tehran response

 

A source cited by Iran’s state-linked Tasnim news agency dismissed Donald Trump’s criticism of Tehran’s response to the latest US proposal, insisting Iranian officials were not seeking Washington’s approval.

“No one in Iran drafts plans to please Trump,” the source said, according to Tasnim, adding that the US president’s reaction “does not matter at all.”

The source added that Iran's negotiations team should only have the interests of "the Iranian nation" in mind when drafting plans.

Trump had earlier described Iran’s response as “totally unacceptable,” raising fresh uncertainty over diplomatic efforts following weeks of war and ceasefire negotiations.

https://www.iranintl.com/en/liveblog/202605087268