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School buses are seen parked behind an elementary school in Pottsville, Pennsylvania, in June. Photo: AP

Coronavirus: in bid to reopen US schools, Donald Trump threatens their tax-exempt status

  • President, who says rivals are exploiting pandemic by refusing to reopen schools and businesses, tweets that children must be ‘educated, not indoctrinated’
  • Trump has already moved to eject foreign students taking only online classes due to pandemic

President Donald Trump, seeking to force school districts and universities to reopen despite the coronavirus, on Friday said the US Treasury Department would re-examine their tax-exempt status and funding.

Trump already has threatened to cut their federal funding and sought to eject university students from abroad.

“Too many Universities and School Systems are about Radical Left Indoctrination, not Education,” the Republican Trump wrote in a tweet on Friday likely to sit well with his conservative base.

He accuses Democrats of exploiting the pandemic for political purposes by refusing to reopen schools and businesses, even as health experts caution against the perils of easing restrictions too quickly.

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US surpasses 3 million coronavirus cases, as White House pushes to reopen schools

US surpasses 3 million coronavirus cases, as White House pushes to reopen schools

“Therefore, I am telling the Treasury Department to re-examine their Tax-Exempt Status and/or Funding, which will be taken away if this Propaganda or Act Against Public Policy continues. Our children must be Educated, not Indoctrinated!”

Trump’s administration is pushing schools to relaunch in-person classes even as cases of the novel coronavirus surge in some of the country’s most populous areas, prompting some to roll back their plans to relax restrictions.

School administrators are weighing the risk to opening up their buildings to primary and secondary students and staff as US cases have topped 3 million this week.

Harvard, MIT sue US for move to banish online-only foreign students

Some universities have announced online-only instruction plans, while others weigh options such as school calendar changes.

Trump this week threatened to cut off federal funds for schools that do not open their doors.

On Monday the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency said international students must leave the country if their schools only offered online classes this autumn, prompting lawsuits.

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