Oklahoma's Ryan Walters quietly cancels plan to buy Trump bibles with taxpayer dollars
A non-Trump bidder was told his offer to provide the books wouldn't matter
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After insisting every classroom needed a Bible, tailoring the demand so that only Donald Trump-endorsed bibles met the criteria, and getting sued over the entire escapade, Ryan Walters, Oklahoma’s Superintendent of Public Instruction, has quietly dropped his plan to spend millions of taxpayer-funded dollars to shove Christianity into public schools.
Ryan Walters wants a KJV Bible in every classroom
Walters began pushing this agenda item back in June when he issued a memo demanding that every public school teacher incorporate the Bible into their curriculum in order to “teach our kids about the history of this country.” He said “Adherence to this mandate is compulsory” and that “Immediate and strict compliance is expected.”
Weeks later, he got more specific. He said districts had to provide physical copies of the Bible and the Ten Commandments to every teacher. He also explained how certain teachers would be required to use those books. For example, history teachers had to “highlight key historical moments where the Bible played a role” and music teachers could “explore how composers and musicians have interpreted and expressed biblical themes.”
Walters said in interviews that teachers who failed to comply could be fired. (“If teachers don't want to teach it, they are compelled to teach it, or they can find another job.”)
Then, to facilitate his absurd demand, Walters announced that he would set aside $3 million from his office’s budget to purchase bibles for use in classrooms. (He later asked the state legislature to double that but they never approved it.) That amount, his office explained, would come from a pool of money reserved for Department of Education staff salaries.
Besides the fact that teachers were not asking for bibles—or, for that matter, asking someone like Walters to micromanage what they do in the classroom—Oklahoma only has about 43,000 public school teachers, most of whom don’t teach classes that would need a Bible under Walters’ own plans. If you bought a copy of the book for every single one of them, it would come out to $139.53 per Bible. A complete waste of money. Even if you used the $3 million number instead, it was still $69.77 per Bible.
Things got even weirder in late September when Walters released his “Request for Proposal” for all those books—basically asking publishers to bid on supplying them to Oklahoma schools, presumably giving a contract to the company that met all the requirements and came in with the lowest bid.
And wouldn’t you know it: All the requirements described the Trump Bible just perfectly.
Walters said he needed 55,000 bibles that contained the copyright-free KJV translation (for “historical accuracy,” whatever the hell that’s supposed to mean). As I mentioned, there aren’t even that many teachers in the state, much less teachers who Walters said would need a classroom Bible.
Additionally, Walters said the books “must include” the Pledge of Allegiance, the Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution, and the U.S. Bill of Rights. All of which just happen to be included in the Trump bibles.
The books also needed to be leather-bound (or bound in “leather-like material”). And they needed to be shipped to schools within two weeks of the contract being signed. Which, in practice, meant the bibles had to already be printed and ready to go.
It wasn’t hard to read between the lines: Ryan Walters thought he found a “neutral” way to send Trump his share of over $3 million in taxpayer dollars. We knew that because the requirements for these bibles made no sense, financially or academically.
When reporters at Oklahoma Watch asked one of the largest Christian booksellers in the country if they carried anything matching what Walters wanted, the response was an unequivocal no.
A salesperson at Mardel Christian & Education searched, and though they carry 2,900 Bibles, none fit the parameters.
2,900 versions of the same book… and none of them would be good enough for Walters. The only other version of the Bible that appeared to fit the requirements was a different Trump-endorsed Bible that costs $89.99 (plus shipping).
Even beyond that, the window for bids was only open for two weeks instead of the standard four… which only made sense if you were simply waiting for one company to send in a bid proposal.
The RFP was so egregiously tailored to Trump that legal experts and a former Oklahoma attorney general said it appeared to violate state law because the RFP wasn’t truly competitive. There was no good reason the books had to include specific documents from U.S. history or have leather binding. If the goal of the RFP was to get the best price for a project funded by taxpayers, those unnecessary restrictions did nothing but drive up the costs and limit the options.
It was all especially idiotic since the KJV translation is already freely available online. Even a basic run-of-the-mill KJV bible runs a few bucks, tops.
There was no excuse for spending upwards of $60 per book unless the real goal was to help Trump line his pockets and improve Walters’ standing in the GOP so he could eventually be appointed as Secretary of Education under a future Trump Administration. (As of this writing, Trump has not announced his nominee for that position.)
Remember that no one was asking for this. Superintendents of large public school districts already told Walters they had no intention of playing along with his Bible-in-the-classroom plan.
Walters amended his request… but still catered to Trump
There was predictable backlash to all of this. So last month, Walters revised the RFP to make the requirements a little less stringent. The new deadline for applications was extended by one week, to October 21, giving publishers a total of three weeks to apply… but still not the standard four.
Also, the additional documents—like the U.S. Constitution—were no longer mandatory inside the books. But that, too, wasn’t really a change because of how it was worded in the amended RFP.
The new application said those documents could be “bound together or separately,” but added that they “must also be bound in durable material.” In other words, publishers would have to create a brand new book—with a sturdy cover—that was only a few pages long.
Why make that change? In my view, it was because it would look like you’re opening the door to non-Trump bibles… while immediately shutting the door on that possibility by adding a different meaningless requirement. The end result was that the Trump bibles were still the only viable options for the schools, and Walters had every intention of spending over $3 million in taxpayer money on them.
Christa Helfrey, a spokesperson for the Office of Management and Enterprise Services, told reporters the changes were made to provide “much better value to Oklahomans.” But that was always bullshit. The amended RFP, just like the original, was designed to accommodate the Trump bibles. And if Walters’ office wanted to save everyone money, all they had to do was nothing because the KJV Bible is already free to access online, just like all those additional documents.
A lawsuit aimed to put a stop to all this
A coalition of groups eventually filed a lawsuit to stop this plan from going into effect.
The ACLU, the ACLU of Oklahoma, Americans United for Separation of Church and State, the Freedom From Religion Foundation, and the Oklahoma Appleseed Center for Law & Justice represented more than 30 Oklahomans who have a variety of reasons for not wanting the Bible Mandate to go into effect.
The 32 plaintiffs include 14 public school parents, four public school teachers and three faith leaders who object to Walters’ extremist agenda that imposes his personal religious beliefs on other people’s children – in violation of Oklahomans’ religious freedom and the separation of church and state. The plaintiffs come from a variety of faith traditions, including Baptist, Catholic, Presbyterian (U.S.A.) and United Church of Christ, and some identify as atheist, agnostic or nonreligious. Some are of Indigenous heritage, and some have family situations – such as LGBTQ+ members or children with special educational needs – that cause particular concerns around teaching the Bible in public schools, especially around bullying.
Specifically, the lawsuit said that Walters’ Bible Mandate “interferes with the parents’ ability to direct the religious and moral upbringing of their children.” Their kids “face coercive instruction on religion in their public schools that is contrary to their own beliefs.” And it uses tax dollars to support “a single religious tradition.”
The lawsuit got more granular, too. It said Walters violated the Oklahoma Administrative Procedures Act, which has certain procedures when it comes to issuing new rules—including a “provision of notice and a comment period”—and Walters didn’t adhere to any of that. Furthermore, public school superintendents have the authority, under state law, to select their own instructional materials, and Walters can’t force them to use something they reject.
Finally, they said, Oklahoma’s Constitution (“specifically Section 5 of Article II and Section 2 of Article I”) prohibits state funding for the promotion of religion.
The lawyers asked the courts to step in as soon as possible because the deadline for the RFP was coming soon and the bibles were expected to be shipped to schools shortly after that. They want this stopped before any money went out the door. Then they wanted the Bible Education Mandate rescinded, the RFP withdrawn, and any potential contracts with publishers canceled.
Walters has now backed away from his own proposal
Since Trump got elected last week, Walters has been on a tear to get on the president’s good side. Walters called for eliminating the Department of Education, formed a “Trump Education Advisory Committee” tasked with implementing whatever Trump’s next Education Secretary wants, and announced a new “Office of Religious Liberty and Patriotism” in order to promote white-washed history and ensure that the “the right to pray in schools is safeguarded” (even though it already is).
But along with those headline-grabbing changes, Walters also canceled the proposal to buy up all those bibles.
According to Jennifer Palmer of Oklahoma Watch, all bidders were told that their proposals would be ignored and that a new Request For Proposal would be issued soon. What was wrong with the old version? Who knows.
Isett said he was too busy for a call with Oklahoma Watch.
The publication asked Walters’ office for public records regarding the purchasing of bibles but they “failed to turn up any records.”
But there’s one theory for why Walters decided he didn’t want to go through with this anymore.
It turns out the Trump Bible publishers weren’t the only people submitting a bid as many had predicted. There was actually an outside company that offered to supply Oklahoma with all the bibles it needed, meeting nearly all the requirements that were asked of them, for a much lower price.
That company was then told that the entire project was canceled.
Bidders were notified Thursday the state’s solicitation had been canceled. Dan Isett, a spokesman for the Education Department, didn’t explain why.
…
One bidder, Mark Herkommer, said the state owes bidders an explanation for the abrupt cancellation. Herkommer is the managing director of the Herkommer Foundation in Willis, Texas, which spent time and money, including purchasing a $500 insurance policy, to meet the bidding requirements.
“I would be disappointed if this was a stunt,” Herkommer said.
He said he supports the idea of using Bibles in schools as a literary reference.
His bid, which he asked to keep confidential to protect the competitive process, significantly undercut the $3 million allocation. But Herkommer said the two-week delivery time was unnecessarily restrictive and served to limit competition, and in his bid, asked that it be extended to 12 weeks.
His politics aside, that request doesn’t seem unreasonable: We’ll give you what you want, for a much cheaper price, but we need a little more time to make it happen. Had Walters allowed for a longer turnaround time to begin with, the backlash over this whole issue would have centered around why the Bible needed to be in classrooms at all, not why an Oklahoma official wanted to spend taxpayer money on Trump bibles (which is what got all the attention).
Walters’ office could have accepted that bid and rejected the one from the Trump Bible people (assuming they sent one in too, which has not been confirmed). Instead, they decided they didn’t need those bibles after all.
What happens now? It’s possible Walters’ office puts out a new RFP that’s even more directly tailored towards the Trump Bible and excludes all other options. Or maybe Walters decides he got all the mileage out of this publicity stunt and moves on to other ones. After all, at some point, even monkeys get tired of throwing feces at the same part of the wall.
As it stands, the Bible request is now listed on the Oklahoma Department of Education’s website as “canceled” instead of “open” or “closed.”
The irony is that Walters has also spent the week telling reporters that he believes there needs to be a nationwide Bible mandate despite everything that’s happening with his own proposal in Oklahoma.
“Look, I believe that if you’re teaching American history, the Bible absolutely has to be included. And we cannot allow left-wing activists to sit here and say we don’t like Christianity,” Walters said on NewsNation’s “The Hill” after he was asked by host Blake Burman, due to speculation President-elect Trump could select him to lead the Department of Education.
When pressed on whether he would mandate the Bible in schools nationwide, Walters responded, “You have to have it in the classrooms. We will ensure that history is taught in every class. That means kids will know American exceptionalism.”
Just to point out how ridiculous this all is: Ryan Walters, who could be tapped to run the Department of Education, wants to eliminate the Department of Education in order to ensure that “communities—not Washington bureaucrats—[get] to decide what is best for their children”… even though he also wants to become a Washington bureaucrat so that he can personally force classrooms across the country to use the Bible when teaching fake history because he believes that’s best for children.
If reporters were still interested in pointing out right-wing hypocrisy, there’s never been a better subject.
If you wanted to get more conspiratorial, you could say Walters canceled the requests for bids because he has loftier goals now—ones that could only be achieved if he were part of the Trump administration—so his attempt to curry favor with Trump is no longer necessary.
What about the lawsuit? One lawyer involved in the case told me that since Walters’ office says he plans to issue a new RFP, the “litigation plans remain unchanged.” Right now, the plan to buy bibles is on pause. There’s no reason to drop the lawsuit until that plan is off the table entirely.
Walters has been under fire for a while now
It’s worth mentioning that Oklahoma is among the worst states in the country when it comes to education and Ryan Walters has every intention on dragging the state to the very bottom of the list.
Walters is the same guy who approved the use of PragerU materials in public school classrooms. He claimed the Tulsa Race Massacre had nothing to do with race. He’s falsely insisted that President Joe Biden “wants to destroy our Christian faith.” He formed a faith committee to examine prayer in public schools; the committee, full of conservative Christian pastors, then recommended putting the Ten Commandments in every classroom. He also tried to put Christian chaplains in public schools. He appointed the troll who runs Libs of TikTok to a statewide library advisory board. He sent out a “sample prayer” for teachers to use for the people of Israel (and definitely not the innocent people living in Gaza). He’s a YouTube comment thread come to life.
He also backed a taxpayer-funded Catholic charter school (which the Oklahoma Supreme Court later declared illegal).
But these aren’t the only reasons people dislike him. Just ask his GOP colleagues. They hate the guy! Back in August, more than two dozen Republican state legislators sent a letter to House Speaker Charles McCall urging him to investigate Walters, a step which could potentially result in Walters’ impeachment. They cited the fact that he wouldn’t allow members of his committee, or its Senate equivalent, to witness Executive Sessions of the Board of Education. And that he refused to respond to the education committees’ inquiries. And that he didn’t properly spend money on school security that had already been allocated for that purpose. And that he was being shady about how he was spending money for his office’s travel budget. And that he wasn’t fulfilling open records requests in a timely manner. And—get this—that he refused to spend money that he was legally obligated to spend on asthma inhalers, putting students’ lives at risk.
But none of that has changed Walters’ dictatorial approach. He’s been pushing Christian Nationalism for years now, under the belief that no one’s going to stop him—and so far, no one has. At least not permanently. That means the state remains stuck with an education leader who doesn’t give a damn about education and is only interested in promoting himself. That means students across the state are worse off due to his selfishness and faith-based ignorance.
And that guy could soon have the power to control education for the entire country.
(Portions of this article were published earlier)
Walters appears to have totally bought into the myth our Constitution was somehow based on his favorite magic book. The U.S. Constitution does not mention the words God, Jesus, Bible or Christianity. Article VI expressly bans religious tests for holding public office in this country. The founders knew their European history and wanted nothing to do with the religious strife that had soaked the soil of the old world in blood for centuries. There was a time when the courts would have struck down his proposal in a heartbeat as our secular government cannot choose one religion over another. Unfortunately, that was before conservatism became the be-all and end-all of the human thought process.
So, Walters orders bibles in schools and insists they must be Trump bibles. After the backlash, he modifies the demand so that it doesn't have to be Trump bibles, but Trump bibles are still the only ones that would work. Then, another company says they can do what he wants cheaper with not Trump bibles so he says forget the whole thing. The only way his ass kissing becomes more obvious would be for him to physically kneel behind Trump with puckered lips.