Unhinged Teacher Who Threatened Trump Supporters On Social Media Resigns
Charlie Kirk Staff
11/20/2024

A Connecticut special education teacher has resigned from her position after she posted an unhinged Snapchat video in which she threatened to fight anyone she knows voted for President-elect Donald Trump.
“Just because you won doesn’t mean we don’t remember who the f**k you voted for,” former educator Annie Dunleavy said in the video. “Please don’t test your gangster on me because you will end on a stretcher, gone forever. So serious.
“If you voted for Trump, please delete me, block me, get rid of everything of me or step to me so that I know what’s up and I can handle you how I see fit,” she continued. “Please just come forward, we f***ing know,” she said.’
Cheshire Public Schools superintendent Dr. Jeff Sloan learned of the video last weekend and issued a press release addressing the matter, Fox News reported.
“Unfortunately, it came to my attention over the weekend that someone had taken a video of one of our teachers who shared what she intended to be a private message to her group on Snapchat. She was expressing her personal opinion and not those of the Cheshire Public Schools,” the superintendent said.
“That being said, it is immediately clear that it will be impossible to conduct business as usual for our students and staff without temporarily removing the teacher from the building, so we have done so until the outcome of the investigation,” he said.
But later in the week he confirmed to Fox News Digital that the teacher had resigned.
“I am writing to inform you that Annie Dunleavy, our teacher who made the social media post I referenced in Monday’s email, has announced her resignation from her employment with the Cheshire Public Schools effective immediately,” the superintendent said.
“They were hurtful, deeply concerning, and ultimately undermined the faith that our community has placed in us,” he said. “As a leader of this school system, I feel terrible for the angst that this has caused our community and I look forward to returning our focus on the great work that our educators perform every day.”
The teacher expressed remorse after her resignation, WTNH reported.
“I was in a moment of high emotion, and I shouldn’t have posted,” she said. “The message came off wrong, which was if this is going to give people the permission in their minds to enact violence against women, I wanted to say, I’m not going down without a fight. I will fight for myself, and if someone was to try to hurt me, I would protect myself.”
“It’s my life’s dream to be a teacher,” the former teacher said.
“I consider those kids to be my kids, and they fill that for me, and it’s just so fulfilling, so rewarding, and I really know that what people see right now, I don’t look like that person, but I truly would do anything to help any child and family in need,” she said.