Trump
expected to sign executive order to abolish US education department
President
made campaign promise to axe the department – but needs congressional approval
to follow through
Rachel
Leingang and Hugo Lowell in Washington
Thu 20 Mar
2025 15.35 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/mar/20/trump-executive-order-education-department
Donald Trump
is expected to sign an executive order on Thursday that instructs the US
education secretary, Linda McMahon, to start dismantling the agency, seemingly
attempting to circumvent the need to obtain the congressional approval needed
to formally close a federal department.
The order –
which has been anticipated for weeks given Trump campaigned on a promise to end
the education department – directs McMahon to “take all necessary steps” shut
down key functionalities “and return education authority to the states”.
Trump’s
order targeting the department comes after the administration has already taken
steps to undercut its authority by instituting a round of layoffs that has
reduced its workforce by nearly half and cancelled dozens of grants and
contracts.
The idea of
shutting down the education department dates back to efforts by Republicans in
the 1980s. But the push has become increasingly mainstream in recent years as
pro-Trump grassroots activists took aim at agendas that promoted education
standards and more inclusive policies.
Trump
adopted the mantle on the campaign trail and promised to return education
policy to the states, although education has long been the responsibility of
state and local governments, which provide 90% of the funding and the federal
government does not mandate curriculum.
The bulk of
the education department’s budget is made up of federal grant and loan
programs, including the $18.4bn Title I program that provides funding to
high-poverty K-12 schools and the $15.5bn Idea program that helps cover the
education costs for students with disabilities.
The White
House said those programs, as well as the $1.6tn federal student loan program,
would not be affected by the order. It was not immediately clear how many
spending cuts the administration would be able to achieve without cutting those
initiatives.
Representative
Thomas Massie, a Republican from Kentucky, has separately introduced a
one-sentence bill on Friday that would terminate the US Department of Education
at the end of 2026. Similar efforts have failed to get enough votes to pass in
previous years.
Project
2025, the Heritage Foundation’s rightwing manifesto for the Trump
administration, lays out how dismantling the federal education department would
work, leaving behind – if anything – a husk focused solely as a
“statistics-gathering agency that disseminates information to the states”,
writes Lindsey Burke, the author of the education chapter and leader of
Heritage’s education policy center.
But without
cutting out the department itself, the incoming Trump administration, buoyed up
by a rightwing backlash to public schools that intensified after the Covid-19
pandemic, could alter key parts of the department’s budget and policies in ways
that would be felt in schools nationwide.
Some
Republicans support the idea of sending block grants to states that aren’t
earmarked for specific programs, letting states decide whether to fund
low-income students or students with disabilities instead of requiring them to
fund the programs for those students. Programs that don’t affect students
directly, like those that go toward teacher training, could also be on the
chopping block. Expanding the use and promotion of school vouchers and
installing “parents’ rights” policies are also likely.
In late
January, Trump signed executive orders to promote school choice, or the use of
public dollars for private education, and to remove funding from schools
accused of “radical indoctrination”. Trump also revived a “1776 commission” to
“promote patriotic education”.
The
education department boasted that in the first week of the Trump administration
it had “dismantled” diversity, equity and education programs.
Soon after
Trump took over, the department was loaded with key staffers tied to a
rightwing thinktank, the America First Policy Institute, often referred to as a
“White House in waiting”. The thinktank has supported driving out diversity
programs and banning books, which the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism
documented in a report on the institute’s ties to the education department. The
policy institute has promoted installing Christianity in government, including
in schools.
The
department ended investigations into book banning and got rid of a book-ban
coordinator position last month in a move announced by Craig Trainor, the
acting assistant secretary for civil rights, who previously held a role at the
thinktank.
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