Family Values and Education
Wyoming is a unique place – it represents the best of what America stands for. Our values prioritize faith and family. Parents must be highly involved in the education of their children and education should be laser-focused on the priorities of reading, writing and arithmetic, leaving other social issues to be discussed by parents at the time they determine is appropriate. I am committed to fighting for Wyoming parents and their children. I have, and will continue, to advocate for the sanctity of human life from conception to natural death, for religious freedom, and against woke ideology.
More on Family Values and Education
Henry Rodgers
The House Anti-Woke Caucus, a newly formed group that hopes to defund and expose wokeness throughout the federal government, shared its previously unpublished membership list with the Daily Caller.
Cortney O'Brien
Wyoming Rep. Harriet Hageman, R., grilled a witness on Thursday about whether banning a pornographic magazine for first-graders was "censorship" following controversy over states targeting certain controversial books and curricula in public schools.
Washington, DC – Today, Congresswoman Harriet Hageman voted in favor of H.R. 5, the Parental Bill of Rights Act. The bill, which was cosponsored by Hageman, passed 213-208. This legislation clearly defines both the rights of parents and the responsibilities of school districts – providing transparency and accountability in education.
Nick Perkins
Wyoming Congresswoman Harriet Hageman voted in favor of H.R. 5, the Parental Bill of Rights Act, on Friday.
Hageman was a co-sponsor of the bill and, according to a press release from Hageman's office, it "Clearly defines both the rights and the responsibilities of school districts- providing transparency and accountability in education."
Parents rightly have concerns about what their children are being taught, yet when they attempted to share those concerns publicly they were muzzled and labeled as potential domestic terrorists, despite any presence of unlawful action.
Harold Hutchison
Republican Rep. Harriet Hageman of Wyoming grilled a witness during a Thursday hearing, asking if she believed preventing teachers from showing first graders pornographic magazines was “censorship.”
Suzanne Bowdey
It says a lot about the state of our nation when the country's second largest lender, Bank of America, feels the need to reassure people: "We are capitalists." CEO Brian Moynihan reiterated that message to shareholders last week after the uproar over his company’s woke investments.
Leo Wolfson
Social conservatives in Wyoming and around the country have criticized Speaker of the House State Rep. Albert Sommers, R-Pinedale for his actions, or lack thereof, on three different bills.
Hannah Romero
US Representative Harriet Hageman recently visited Green River, stopping at a local school to meet a student who wrote her a letter and then talking with local officials at City Hall.
A visit to school
Last Thursday morning, Hageman attended an assembly at Harrison Elementary School, showing up in response to a student's letter.