A Clayton High School valedictorian had her microphone cut mid-speech, and now says her diploma is being withheld.
Senior Leen Hijaz stepped off her approved script during the Class of 2026 commencement in Clayton, North Carolina.
What she said next pushed a routine graduation speech into a national conversation.
| Key takeaways Hijaz left her district-approved remarks to name suffering in Palestine, Sudan, Congo and Afghanistan, and families affected by ICE.Principal Melissa Moore Hubbard was filmed taking her arm and ending the speech; Hijaz says she was then told her diploma would be withheld.Johnston County Public Schools says staff acted to keep the ceremony on purpose, and told CBS 17 the diploma question is being looked into. |
What happened on stage?
Hijaz opened with the approved welcome, then said every person has a voice.
She continued into unapproved lines about global suffering and immigration enforcement.
Video shows Principal Hubbard guiding her away from the microphone.
Classmate Owen Ring said he did not see the problem and called it freedom of speech.
| Stage | What happened |
| Approved opening | Welcomes the Class of 2026 to commencement |
| Off-script turn | References Palestine, Sudan, Congo, Afghanistan and ICE |
| Intervention | Principal Hubbard takes her arm and ends the speech |
| Aftermath | Hijaz says she is told her diploma is withheld |
| District reply | JCPS says the matter is being looked into |
What is each side saying?
Here is where the two accounts split.
| Leen Hijaz (valedictorian) | Johnston County Public Schools |
| Says she spoke for people unable to graduate worldwide | Says the student departed from her approved remarks |
| Calls it a stand for her Muslim and Arab community | Says staff protected the program’s integrity and focus |
| Frames the moment as free speech | Says it was not about limiting a student’s voice |
Why is this story spreading so fast?
The clip jumped from the commencement ceremony to social feeds within hours.
Clayton High School Valedictorian revives a familiar tension: student expression versus a school’s control of approved remarks.
Our read of the coverage is that the withheld diploma claim, more than the speech itself, is driving the share count.
Hijaz also earned an associate degree from Johnston Community College a week earlier.
The story at a glance
| Detail | Information |
| Student | Leen Hijaz, Class of 2026 valedictorian |
| School | Clayton High School, Clayton, NC |
| District | Johnston County Public Schools |
| Principal | Melissa Moore Hubbard |
| Diploma status | “Being looked into,” per JCPS |
Where we sourced this
We built this report from on-the-record local reporting:
- CBS 17 / WNCN: original interview and full district statement
- WSPA: statewide coverage
- QC News: regional coverage
- WFLA: national pickup
- YouTube: video of the speech
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