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Watch: Family of jailed teacher who refused to use trans pronouns thrown out of Washington gala

Watch: Family of jailed teacher who refused to use trans pronouns thrown out of Washington gala

Yahoo14-03-2025
Credit: X/@SeanDefoe
The family of a teacher who refuses to use a transgender student's preferred pronouns were forcibly removed from a Washington DC gala they gatecrashed to confront Ireland's prime minister.
Security led away three members of the Burke family after they burst onto the floor of the Ireland Funds dinner, which was attended by Taoiseach Micheal Martin, to protest the teachers' imprisonment.
Enoch Burke was jailed for a third time in Ireland in September for breaching a court order to stay away from Wilson's Hospital School in Co Westmeath where he once taught.
The evangelical Christian has spent more than 500 days in jail over three separate stints for contempt, and been fined, after repeatedly breaching the injunction.
Footage from Thursday night shows Burke's mother Martina and two of his siblings – Ammi and Isaac – shouting as they are dragged away by security.
Mr Martin had finished speaking 15 minutes before the family crashed the gala, an annual event in the US capital ahead of St Patrick's Day.
Elon Musk, Donald Trump's close ally, shared his support for Burke on social media.
'My belief is male and female, God made them male and female,' Burke told the court last year.
He also claimed teachers were being 'commanded to force transgenderism on students'.
Burke, who teaches German and history, was outraged after being told to call a transitioning student by their preferred name and the pronoun 'they'.
Despite his suspension, he would turn up at the school for 'meetings' or simply to sit in an empty classroom declaring he was ready to teach, which led to an injunction being sought and granted.
Burke is still being paid his salary after he appealed the school's decision to sack him in January 2023.
This month Court Justice David Nolan gave the Attorney General ­permission to bring an application later this month to appoint a receiver over Burke's teaching salary, to deduct the outstanding €79,100 he owes in fines.
On March 8, Mr Musk wrote 'wow' as he retweeted a post that falsely claimed Burke was being 'stripped of his salary after refusing to use they/them pronouns for a 'transgender' student'.
Mr Martin said it had been 'regrettable' that the Burke family disrupted the gala dinner, but said he did not think it 'significantly' impacted the event.
'I think it was regrettable that incident happened,' he said.
'People have a right to protest in a proper way and that is not a proper way to attempt to maybe disrupt an event that was to honour people who have been of such service to Ireland in the US and people of the Irish-American diaspora who really are not involved in anything to do with this issue.'
Mr Martin said he had been 'very clear, in respect to the rights of transgender people'.
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St. Stephen looks to save the International Homecoming Parade
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St. Stephen looks to save the International Homecoming Parade

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It's Trump's economy now. The latest financial numbers offer some warning signs.
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The White House paints a rosier image, seeing the economy emerging from a period of uncertainty after Trump's restructuring and repeating the economic gains seen in his first term before the pandemic struck. Advertisement 'President Trump is implementing the very same policy mix of deregulation, fairer trade, and pro-growth tax cuts at an even bigger scale – as these policies take effect, the best is yet to come,' White House spokesman Kush Desai said. The economic numbers over the past week show the difficulties that Trump might face if the numbers continue on their current path: Friday's jobs report showed that U.S. employers have shed 37,000 manufacturing jobs since Trump's tariff launch in April, undermining prior White House claims of a factory revival. Net hiring has plummeted over the past three months with job gains of just 73,000 in July, 14,000 in June and 19,000 in May — a combined 258,000 jobs lower than previously indicated. 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Trump has sought to pin the blame for any economic troubles on Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, saying the Fed should cut its benchmark interest rates even though doing so could generate more inflation. Trump has publicly backed two Fed governors, Christoper Waller and Michelle Bowman, for voting for rate cuts at Wednesday's meeting. But their logic is not what the president wants to hear: They were worried, in part, about a slowing job market. But this is a major economic gamble being undertaken by Trump and those pushing for lower rates under the belief that mortgages will also become more affordable as a result and boost homebuying activity. His tariff policy has changed repeatedly over the last six months, with the latest import tax numbers serving as a substitute for what the president announced in April, which provoked a stock market sell-off. It might not be a simple one-time adjustment as some Fed board members and Trump administration officials argue. Advertisement Of course, Trump can't say no one warned him about the possible consequences of his economic policies. Biden, then the outgoing president, did just that in a speech last December at the Brookings Institution, saying the cost of the tariffs would eventually hit American workers and businesses. 'He seems determined to impose steep, universal tariffs on all imported goods brought into this country on the mistaken belief that foreign countries will bear the cost of those tariffs rather than the American consumer,' Biden said. 'I believe this approach is a major mistake.'

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