Moms for Liberty, a conservative “parental rights” organization strategically harassing school board members, teachers, and administrators across the country, is deeply tied to anti-civil rights advocacy. Beyond opposing education about the history of racism in America, the organization also recommends reading an American history book by a far-right conspiracy theorist that is sympathetic to slave owners, and the co-founder of the organization actively opposed desegregation efforts while formerly serving on her school board.
The organization’s staunch opposition to teaching “critical race theory” (CRT) perfectly fits in with its connection to anti-civil rights advocacy. CRT is actually a body of specific academic and legal scholarship, but this group and others have self-servingly (and incorrectly) rewritten the definition to essentially encompass any discussion of race or oppression.
Now, Moms for Liberty appears to be revamping its anti-civil rights movement under the guise of “parental liberty” — a seemingly innocuous term that is really a catch-all for opposition to equity in public education.
Moms for Liberty opposes CRT
Moms for Liberty co-founder Tina Descovich has claimed that the group actually has not “taken a stance on CRT,” saying that its goal is simply to “empower parents to stand up and reclaim their parental rights at all levels of government” and that it tries to “support our local chapters and things that they’re fighting for.”
But a June article in the far-right Epoch Times reported that “Descovich believes that CRT is divisive” and “denies the value of an individual based on the content of their character and their actions.” The national group’s official social media pages have repeatedly posted anti-CRT content, including “#StopCRT” hashtags as recently as October 14.
As of June 13, the group’s website had an anti-CRT page titled “Help Moms for Liberty Stop Critical Race Theory”; it has since been deleted. The group had another since-deleted page titled “Mama Lions are Waking Up” which described CRT as a “nationwide battle that is coming to a district near you” and recommended anti-CRT resources. Moms for Liberty even tried to solicit donations through anti-CRT messaging — “Donate Here to Help us Fight Critical Race Theory.”
It appears that Moms for Liberty is attempting to rebrand and wipe anti-CRT resources and statements from its public website -- while its continued anti-CRT advocacy tells a different story.
Moms for Liberty chapters are broken down by counties, and those county chapters often hold anti-CRT events. In Williamson County, Tennessee, the chapter hosted “CRT 101,” inviting speakers who claim to have previously taught CRT and now “repudiate” it.
Robin Steenman, head of the Williamson County Moms for Liberty Chapter, vocally opposes CRT, saying, “Critical race theory claims to solve racial discrimination by promoting racial discrimination. It is based on inherently racist assumptions and views virtually every situation through the lens of race.” She also described CRT as “destructive and divisive” and “used to plant seeds that oppression and racism are everywhere.”
The same county chapter created a list of “books of concern,” opposing the teaching of Martin Luther King Jr. and the March to Washington because of “photographs of political violence” and Ruby Bridges Goes To School because of “racist remarks” among other things. The group also disapproved of First Nations of North America: Plains Indians because it “paints white people in a negative light.”
Moms for Liberty recommends text from a slavery sympathizer and extreme conspiracy theorist
Nationally, Moms for Liberty recommends The Making of America by W. Cleon Skousen as a “helpful” text “when discussing the founding documents” of the United States.
Skousen’s The Making of America makes the argument that “slavery is not a racial problem,” claiming: