ESSEX JUNCTION, Vt. โ€” U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon paid a visit to the Essex-Westford School Districtโ€™s career and technology center on Tuesday while dozens of protesters, including students, demonstrated outside the school.

McMahon was in Vermont as part of her โ€œReturning Education to the Statesโ€ initiative, a tour of the countryโ€™s grade schools, colleges and universities to promote workforce development. The secretary was set to tour Vermont State Universityโ€™s campus in Williston, Vt., later Tuesday.

As President Donald Trumpโ€™s education secretary, McMahon has been tasked with shrinking the federal Education Department and returning control over education to the states.

Essex High School students protest on the school district campus on June 2, 2026, during U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahonโ€™s tour of the districtโ€™s career and technical center. COREY MCDONALD / VtDigger

In a press scrum during her tour Tuesday, McMahon said she specifically wanted to see the districtโ€™s Center for Technology, Essex.

โ€œThis is a wonderful model, and if Vermont could see its way to invest here, or in other places like this, I think that they could serve the state of Vermont very well for the skilled workforce needs that they have,โ€ she said.

News media were not invited to tour the school with McMahon. She later said she spoke with a number of students in the districtโ€™s tech program and touted the educational programs offered at the school, from automobile mechanics to culinary arts.

Her visit was also not publicly announced. The school district received notice of her interest in visiting last week, according to Essex-Westford School District board Chair Robert Carpenter.

While protesters mostly stuck to the campusโ€™ entrance, dozens of student protesters left their classes at Essex High School and dotted the school grounds on Tuesday, hoping to confront McMahon.

โ€œThereโ€™s a trans-hating racist in our building right now,โ€ Logan Fox, a senior at Essex High School, said through a bullhorn, as Secret Service and state police stood guard near the school.

Fox and other students said they only learned of her visit early Tuesday morning and that it was important for them to protest her visit.

โ€œThis administration is openly fascist, and the first line of defense for fascism is education,โ€ Fox said.

Hallie Corneau and Basil Taylor, juniors at Essex High School, said they were protesting to stand up for the LGBTQ+ community. Corneau said McMahon and the Trump administration were โ€œtearing apart our education system.โ€

โ€œI am out here, in any way I can, to protect my sense of security and self, and everyone elseโ€™s security and self,โ€ Taylor said.

Trump and the education secretary have worked to dismantle the Department of Education, offloading programs to other agencies and eliminating thousands of positions since the beginning of the presidentโ€™s second term.

McMahon has been a controversial figure in the role. A co-founder of World Wrestling Entertainment, she had virtually no experience in education prior to her appointment, and sheโ€™s since led the department through unprecedented turmoil. She has also criticized efforts to promote diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives in the countryโ€™s schools.

Last summer, she threw Vermont school districts into financial limbo when her department announced it was withholding $26 million in federal funding to Vermontโ€™s public schools โ€” funding that has since been released. And during her tenure, the Department of Educationโ€™s Office for Civil Rights has conducted numerous investigations into school districts โ€” including the neighboring Champlain Valley School District โ€” over their transgender student policies.

In a statement, Carpenter, the Essex-Westford school board chair, said the district is โ€œalways ready to provide tours of our CTE program to interested members of the public, including local, state, and federal officials.โ€

โ€œWe look forward to highlighting the success of the (districtโ€™s) CTE program within the greater context of the excellence and best practices modeled by Vermont CTE and Vermont public education as a whole,โ€ he wrote in a statement Monday, adding that the district would โ€œcontinue to amplify the values and equitable practices that ensure all students grow and thrive: in the EWSD community and beyond.โ€

Erin Maguire, the co-director of the districtโ€™s student support services, said staff were notified last week of McMahonโ€™s visit, but that the district was โ€œconstrainedโ€ in what it could announce.

Vermont and the Essex-Westford district have hosted members of the U.S. Department of Education in years past, Maguire noted, including then-President Barack Obamaโ€™s education secretary, Arne Duncan.

Still, โ€œthis is new, for obvious reasons,โ€ she told reporters.

Protesters on Tuesday criticized McMahon on a number of fronts, from her push for private and charter school funding to her dismantling of the Education Department. The demonstrators included Democratic gubernatorial candidate Amanda Janoo and Sen. Tanya Vyhovsky, P/D-Chittenden Central.

โ€œCongress is the one who set up the Department of Education, and this regime is illegally dismantling it,โ€ said Mary Lummis, a Winooski resident protesting on Tuesday. She called McMahon a โ€œpatheticโ€ choice for the education secretary.

Speaking to reporters inside the school building, McMahon said she was a โ€œstrong proponentโ€ for school choice and lauded a new federal school choice tax credit program established last year under Congressโ€™s One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The credit is widely regarded as a way to steer tax breaks toward private schools, create a national voucher program and expand private school choice across the country.

โ€œIโ€™ve heard a lot, you know, โ€˜School choice takes away from public schools,โ€™ and Iโ€™m branded with, โ€˜Oh, you want to get rid of public schools.โ€™ Absolutely not,โ€ she said. โ€œI want public schools to be better and better and better, and I have found that a rising tide lifts all boats. Competition is a good thing.โ€

Asked about the demonstrations outside the school, McMahon said her goal is to make sure that โ€œeducation is better and better.โ€

National test scores, including Vermontโ€™s, have declined for years, despite the government spending trillions since the Department of Educationโ€™s creation in 1980, she told reporters.

โ€œWe are failing our students, and we are continuing to fail them,โ€ she said. โ€œWe need to change, we need to do something different, and I think that education is best handled closest to the child. That is certainly what President Trump has told me time and time again.โ€

This story was republished with permission from VtDigger, which offers its reporting at no cost to local news organizations through its Community News Sharing Project. To learn more, visit vtdigger.org/community-news-sharing-project.