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Moms for Liberty Launches First New York City Chapter in Queens

The organization responsible for book challenges and leadership change across the country has set its sights on the nation鈥檚 largest district.

This is a photo of a Moms for Liberty member standing in front of a stack of books.
Moms for Liberty has launched its first chapter in the city鈥檚 largest school system. The group is responsible for challenging young adult books featuring LGBTQ+ characters and discussions of racism, which they say contain themes that can harm children. (Giorgio Viera/Getty Images)

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Moms for Liberty, the conservative parent group flipping school boards and , has quietly opened its first chapter in New York City, setting its sights on the country鈥檚 largest school system. 

Elena Chin, a former school counselor at a Department of Education elementary school in Queens for 23 years, founded the group after feeling increasingly alarmed by COVID closures, LGBTQ+ inclusion, and required diversity and equity workshops which she felt framed staff as 鈥渨hite supremacists.鈥 

鈥淲hat we hope to accomplish is minimize it before it even starts and is full blown into the schools,鈥 Chin said. 鈥淩aise awareness. Get a parent at every school board meeting to watchdog. We can’t normalize this stuff.鈥

Elena Chin (The Queens Village Republican Club)

Meeting by Zoom for about six months, the new Queens, New York chapter is following the same agenda as the organization, hoping to accomplish what some of the 285 other chapters already have: Limit or remove books and content featuring LGBTQ+ identities, racism and sex, which they believe can harm children. 

Some education experts were doubtful the New York City chapter will find much support in the overwhelmingly blue metropolis, but acknowledged people have always been in the city. Other parent groups with similarly conservative ideals have already gained a foothold locally.

Across the country, Moms for Liberty 鈥 making the Queens launch unsurprising to Michigan State researcher Rebecca Jacobsen, who鈥檚 been tracking the groups鈥 presence at school board meetings nationwide. 

鈥淭heir explicit mission says to represent voices that feel unheard. So in some ways, a really strong liberal location might lead to a small group of parents feeling like they don’t have a voice,鈥 Jacobsen said. 鈥淢oms for Liberty has stepped in and said, 鈥榳e’re here to represent you.鈥 And that’s a powerful feeling.鈥 

Chin was particularly concerned by the use of preferred pronouns, the number of children who told her they were gay, and the fact that she . 

鈥淲e’re telling children, you can tell me [you鈥檙e gay], and not your parents. That sounds like grooming to me,鈥 Chin said. 

As a term, 鈥済rooming鈥 has often been appropriated by conservatives to describe LGBTQ+ inclusion 鈥 a trend experts say minimizes real threats of child sexual abuse and vilifies queer people. 

Chin believes the number of children claiming they were gay and posters celebrating diversity was a 鈥渟ocial contagion鈥 at P.S. 64, for kids she said were just looking for more acceptance or to fit in with friends. 

Gender Queer was the only title Chin referenced in an interview with 成人抖阴. The memoir, which won two American Library Association awards, the Alex for young readers and the Stonewall for nonfiction, has become a around the country for parents and politicians looking to ban school discussions about gender identity. 

In setting up the New York chapter, Chin has met roadblocks when attempting to open a bank account and finding a venue for in-person meetings. Two major banks declined her request. Only a third accepted, a smaller, local one which she declined to name. 

About 20 adults have 鈥渏oined the movement鈥 since April, Chin said. Outside of Queens, four members of the new Moms for Liberty chapter are from Brooklyn and one is from the Bronx. Every major racial group is represented. 

Yet not all are parents: Many are retirees, grandparents who 鈥渃an have a voice without fear,鈥 said Chin, who believes more parents with children in the city鈥檚 schools are staying away. 

鈥淢any people are fearing for their jobs, fearing the association,鈥 she said, 鈥溾 and they fear retaliation against their kids.鈥

She is currently searching for a local location to screen an anti-trans documentary. The chapter plans to organize to oppose . While New York City goes beyond current state requirements to offer sex ed to its middle and high schoolers, the expansion would bring modified lessons to K-6 graders.

The group will also challenge curricula with an 鈥渁nti-American message,鈥 she said, that might make some children believe they are 鈥渧ictims鈥 and others 鈥渙ppressors.鈥 

Because the city鈥檚 schools are not governed by traditional school boards, where other chapters have exercised power to oust superintendents, the Queens chapter will advocate through media, political connections and gaining membership.

鈥淭hat’s really my goal. To get people motivated everywhere,鈥 Chin said. 鈥淚 would love to see a chapter in every borough, minimally.鈥 

Moms for Liberty has been characterized , which Chin said is, 鈥渘ot a bad thing at all.鈥 

Even after the characterization, more members have joined nationally, Chin claimed. 鈥淪o just twirl away,鈥 she said. A spokesperson for Moms for Liberty鈥檚 national arm confirmed the group 鈥渟aw a bump in membership and chapter openings,鈥 after the SPLC鈥檚 hate group distinction in June 2023.

Maya Henson Carey, a research analyst with SPLC, said the organization鈥檚 rhetoric and work disproportionately hurts Black, brown and LGBTQ+ students, already some of the nation鈥檚 most vulnerable student populations. 

鈥淏y taking out books and parts of history that reflect who they are, they’re really seeking to erase their identities from public spaces and the classroom,鈥 Henson Carey said. 

Though about 76% of New York City voted for President Joe Biden in the last election, have always thrived, particularly in parts of Queens, Staten Island and southern Brooklyn. It’s those pockets where Chin has already found support.

But some experts doubt the group鈥檚 conservative agenda will find much of a home in the city at large.

鈥淲hen they get into the issue of book banning and attitudes towards gay and trans people, it’ll resonate with some folks, but I think the outcry against them will be very strong,鈥 said Joseph Viteritti, public policy and education scholar at Hunter College. 

鈥淚f they’re going to lead with that kind of stuff, they’re going to realize very soon that we’re not Florida here,鈥 added Viteritti, who served as a senior advisor to schools chiefs in New York City, Boston and San Francisco.

Moms for Liberty was met with large counterprotest for holding its national summit in Philadelphia in July. Though the city鈥檚 majority, like New Yorkers, do not align with the group鈥檚 mission or Republican backers, Moms for Liberty chapters often launch in politically blue and purple areas. (Michael Santiago/Getty Images)

Yet already this year, parents of all races preferring more conservative education policies have made waves in the city, including in lower , a historically liberal block of neighborhoods. 

Via , conservative have found more power 鈥 40% of candidates endorsed by Parent Leaders for Accelerated Curriculum and Education were elected this cycle. Only 2% of public school parents voted in the election, according to . 

PLACE, while not affiliated with the Queens Moms for Liberty chapter, shares some similar values. Particularly in wanting to preserve and expand merit-based admissions policies to the city鈥檚 most coveted schools 鈥 a practice research suggests reinforces racial imbalances. 

鈥淚 know that the things [Moms for Liberty] are talking about are things that I hear parents here in New York talking about all the time,鈥 said Maud Maron, co-president of PLACE and community education council member in lower Manhattan鈥檚 District 2. 

In a dramatic reversal, the district, where seven of 10 community council members were PLACE-endorsed, has just announced it . 

Parents often say, 鈥業’m 100% there, I just can’t tweet under my own name,鈥 or 鈥業 just can’t say it, because of work ramifications,鈥 Maron said.

For scholars who track Moms for Liberty鈥檚 work, despite hesitance or fear parents may feel in aligning with the organization, it鈥檚 clear small networks of parents are effective and organized at making their voices heard, sharing strategies via social media from coast to coast. 

As a result, New Yorkers may soon see the same language and challenges levied in Florida once the Queens chapter begins to act on its agenda.

鈥淲e would have thought, wow, those are really different,鈥 Jacobsen said, referencing the Queens launch and other regions that would have seemed unlikely. 

鈥… That’s really what’s different today,鈥 she said, 鈥渢he ability to very quickly move the same message to really disparate places.鈥

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