U.S.
Department
Trump
to sign order Thursday aimed at eliminating Education Department
Trump
will direct his education secretary, Linda McMahon, to take 'all necessary
steps to facilitate the closure of the
USA TODAY
Trump
will direct his education secretary, Linda McMahon, to take "all necessary
steps to facilitate the closure of the Department of Education and return
education authority to the States," according to a White House summary of
the order reviewed by USA TODAY. It also calls for the "uninterrupted
delivery of services, programs, and benefits on which Americans rely."
Trump's
order, which is almost certain to invite legal challenges from the left, sets
up a new test for the bounds of presidential authority after the Trump
administration's efforts to shut down the U.S. Agency for International
Development by a federal district judge in Maryland.
The department, established as a Cabinet-level
agency by Congress in 1979, will not close immediately with Trump's signature.
Eliminating it in its entirety would require action from Congress.
Although
Trump has reduced the agency's workforce dramatically in recent weeks, the
agency still exists and continues to oversee vital federal funding programs for
schools.
Harrison
Fields, White House principal deputy press secretary, said in a statement to
USA TODAY the order "will empower parents, states, and communities to take
control and improve outcomes for all students.” He said recent test scores on
the National Assessment of Educational Progress exam "reveal a national
crisis ‒ our children are falling
behind."
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A final copy of the order was not available Wednesday, but it is
expected to closely and other media outlets reported earlier this month
was prepared for Trump.
The
order takes aim at "regulations and paperwork" required by the
Department of Education, arguing federal guidance in the form of "Dear
Colleague" letters from the department "redirect resources toward
complying with ideological initiatives, which diverts staff time and attention
away from schools’ primary role of teaching," according to the White House
summary.
Federal
funding for students with disabilities under the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act, Title I funding for low-income schools and federal student loan
payments will remain unchanged under the order while McMahon works on a plan to
"bring these funds closer to states, localities, and more importantly,
students," a White House official said.
Under
the order, education programs or activities that receive "any remaining
Department of Education funds" will not be allowed to advance diversity,
equity and inclusion or gender ideology, according to the White House summary.
Read more:
Republican
Govs. Ron DeSantis of Florida, Glenn Youngkin of Virginia, Greg Abbott of Texas
and Mike DeWine of Ohio are among the state leaders expected to attend the
signing ceremony.
Republicans
have long accused the federal government of holding too much power over local
and state education policy, even though the federal government has no control
over school curriculum. Trump told reporters last month that he hopes
McMahon eventually puts herself "out of a job."
His
order comes after received termination notices last week as part of
large-scale "reductions in force" across the federal government
pushed by Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency. Combining cuts with
voluntary buyouts, the Trump administration has trimmed the department's
workforce from 4,133 workers to 2,183 workers since the start of his second
term.
Read more:
Trump
has increasingly criticized the performance of U.S. public schools compared
with schools in other countries. "We’re ranked at the very bottom of the
list, but we’re at the top of the list in one thing: the cost per pupil,"
he said last month.
In
levying those complaints, Trump and other Republicans have often relied on data
from the Education Department's research arm, a branch the administration has
reduced to a skeleton staff, raising questions about tracking school progress
in the future.
The
order argues that even though the department has spent $1 trillion in federal
education dollars over 46 years, the U.S. has not improved in education. It
singles out that math and reading scores for 13-year-old students have dropped
to their lowest level in decades, and argues that low-performing students have
"fallen further behind."
Since
returning to the White House, Trump has discussed giving states the complete
authority to oversee schools, often singling out Iowa and Indiana as two
strongly performing states that "should run their own education."
Local school districts and states already oversee what is taught in schools.
The federal government, on the other hand, provides limited oversight for
schools that receive federal funding.
The
White House's Fields blamed the Democratic leadership of the last four years
for the nation's education troubles. He pointed to immigrants in the country
without authorization for straining school resources, arguing this dynamic
“coupled with the rise of anti-American CRT and DEI indoctrination” had hurt
America’s most vulnerable students.
Trump's
order marks another test of expansive executive authority embraced by Trump,
who has ignored Congress to shut down the offices of USAID and dismantle
operations of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
More:
Passing
legislation in Congress to eliminate the Department of Education would require
support from Democrats, making such an effort highly unlikely. It's not even
clear moderate Republicans in the U.S. Senate are on board with a GOP proposal
to shift the agency's offices elsewhere within the federal government (Trump
has begun with his Cabinet anyway).
Meanwhile,
the Education Department is already reeling from waves of employee
McMahon
repeatedly stressed during her that congressionally appropriated
funding for schools and students wouldn't be impacted by the Trump
administration's efforts to dismantle the Education Department. Democrats, and
some Republicans, viewed that message with skepticism.
In the
same hearing, McMahon to protect a specific student loan forgiveness plan
for public servants that Republicans and Democrats in Congress approved in
2007. Weeks later, aimed at limiting the types of borrowers eligible
for that same program.
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