Fox News is generating a new right-wing outrage cycle over immigration, this time directed toward a volunteer education program for migrant teenagers being temporarily housed in San Diego. The story is the latest example of Fox News’ visceral attacks on efforts to help migrants at the border and illustrates Fox’s tendency to nationalize local stories in an attempt to stoke its conservative viewers’ anger.
The San Diego County Office of Education recently announced an initiative to provide an education program in English and the arts for nearly 700 migrant teenage girls being held at the San Diego Convention Center. County Superintendent of Schools Paul Gothold said that “all children in California, regardless of immigration status, have a constitutional right to education.” So far, 13 teachers have volunteered to work with the migrants.
Fox News has decided to make this program the next target of the network’s never-ending culture war coverage. On March 29, FoxNews.com published a report titled “San Diego public school teachers to give migrant kids in-person instruction before their own students.” The article included a quote from a parent in San Diego, who said that “what is happening right now is immoral” and asked, “Why are taxpaying students put last?” The article also quoted Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA), who said, “The decision to provide in-person instruction to illegal migrants is outrageous and parents have every right to be angry."
That night, Fox News @ Night anchor Shannon Bream claimed that her show is “investigating a report that illegal immigrant children in San Diego will be given in-person instruction by teachers” and promised viewers that “we’ll keep you updated” on details around the program.
The following day, anchor Bill Hemmer credited Fox News for having “broke” the story, and media figures across the network quickly joined efforts to relentlessly hammer the program. According to Media Matters’ internal database, Fox News ran at least 30 segments covering the program between 11 p.m. EDT on March 29 and 2 p.m. on March 31.
Many of those making these criticisms insisted that their qualms are not with the general idea of educating migrants, but claimed that doing so while other children are still attending school remotely is effectively prioritizing migrant children over Americans. San Diego Unified School District aims to allow all students the option to return to in-person learning by April 12, and the teachers are currently volunteering to help while on their spring break.
Using the story as an opportunity to continue the network’s assault on teachers unions and school closures amid the pandemic, Fox figures called on San Diego officials not to “forget about the Americans” while helping migrants and claimed that “one of the greatest tragedies of COVID has been the teachers unions keeping children out of school.”
The story serves to insidiously exploit parents’ concerns over their children’s education amid a pandemic and to direct those anxieties and outrage toward migrants arriving at the border, fearmongering that American kids will “take a back seat” to migrant children. It is also not the first time Fox News has made an explicit effort to nationalize a local story, generating outrage among right-wing media and using it to further their narrative, in this case against migrants at the border.
Here are some examples of Fox News’ coverage:
- On Fox News @ Night, anchor Shannon Bream read a tweet from San Diego County Supervisor Jim Desmond, who wrote that “it's great there's in-person learning for” the migrant girls, but “I wish every child in San Diego County was allowed the same opportunity."
- On America’s Newsroom, co-anchors Dana Perino and Bill Hemmer railed against the volunteer program with Fox Nation host Lawrence Jones. Hemmer complained, “You sit at home and you stay on Zoom for a year, right, or you cross the border and you get free education.” Jones said, “It has become very clear that the teachers unions and the people that are volunteering, in theory, are activists.” Perino concluded that the program will encourage migration and doesn’t “prevent people from making that decision to send their kids alone across the border.” Jones agreed that the program is “creating more incentive.”