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President Trump signs order aimed at dismantling the Department of Education


Earlier in the day, the White House press secretary acknowledged that the agency won't be entirely abolished. But it will become "much smaller," she said.

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WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump ordered his administration on Thursday to dismantle the Department of Education, looking to achieve a top campaign promise even though the White House acknowledged the agency can't ‒ and won't – entirely be dissolved.

Flanked by over a dozen students seated at school desks, Trump signed the long-anticipated executive order at a ceremony in the White House's East Room attended by several Republican governors and state education commissioners.

"Should I do this?" Trump asked the children as he took a seat at a desk with the presidential seal. The kids nodded in approval and signed similar folders with printed text while Trump signed the official document.

"We're going to eliminate it, and everybody knows it's right," Trump said, vowing to get rid of the agency "once and for all."

Trump directed 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, which has been in the works for weeks.

However, the order's immediate impact is unclear since only Congress can eliminate a federal agency. Also, the federal government does not set school curriculum. That's long been the purview of states and local school districts.

"The Democrats know it's right, and I hope they're going to be voting for it because ultimately it may come before them," Trump told hundreds of supporters assembled for the signing.

'Uninterrupted delivery of services'

The order calls for the department to simultaneously close and maintain an "uninterrupted delivery of services, programs, and benefits on which Americans rely."

Trump said federal Title I funds for schools in high-poverty regions, funding for students with disabilities, Pell Grants and student loans will be "fully preserved" and still administered by the department. Federal education programs such as Title I are set by Congress and would require congressional approval to alter.

“But beyond these core necessities, my administration will take all lawful steps to shut down the department. We're going to shut it down and shut it down as quickly as possible," he said.

Earlier in the day, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters the Education Department, created by Congress in 1979 during the Carter administration, would not be abolished under Trump’s order but would eventually become “much smaller than it is today."

Programs and activities receiving "any remaining Department of Education funds" won't be permitted to promote diversity, equity and inclusion or "gender ideology," the White House said.

Staffing cut in half

Trump's directive comes after the Education Department sent more than 1,300 employees termination notices last week as part of large-scale "reductions in force" across the federal government led by the administration's Department of Government Efficiency, under the guidance of billionaire tech entrepreneur Elon Musk.

Between cuts and voluntary buyouts, the Trump administration has trimmed the department's workforce in half from more than 4,000 employees to roughly 2,000 workers since the start of the president's second term.

"We're going to be returning education, very simply, back to the states, where it belongs," Trump said.

Republicans have long accused the federal government of having too much influence over local and state education policy. Trump told reporters last month that he hoped McMahon would put herself "out of a job."

Although the U.S. ranks near the top in per-pupil funding globally, Trump said it consistently ranks too low in education performance compared with other countries including chief rival China.

"Those are two stats you don't want: the most money spent per pupil, and you're at the bottom of the list," he said. "And that's where we are – like it or not – and we've been there for a long time."

Trump falsely claimed the U.S. ranked first in spending and last in student achievement, according to most analyses.

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. The office's gutting has raised questions about how officials will track school progress after Trump's downsizing of the department.

Expanding presidential authority

Trump's order sets up a new test for the bounds of presidential authority after a federal district judge in Maryland this week blocked his administration's efforts to shut down the U.S. Agency for International Development.

Congressional Democrats blasted what they characterized as a blatantly illegal move by Trump, and teachers unions vowed to sue to block the administration from winding down the department.

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, responded succinctly to Trump's plan to sign the order.

"See you in court," she said in a statement Wednesday

U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., a top funding appropriator, said in a statement that Trump was taking a "wrecking ball" to the agency despite knowing "perfectly well he can't abolish the Department of Education without Congress."

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Mixed reactions to Trump's order to dismantle Education Department
Residents in Columbia, Missouri, and New York City reacted to President Donald Trump's executive order aimed at dissolving the Education Department.

"But he understands that if you fire all the staff and smash it to pieces, you might get a similar, devastating result," she said. 

Advocates for student loan borrowers issued similar critiques. 

“Let’s be clear: there’s no Executive Order the President can sign to legally eliminate the Department of Education," said Aaron Ament, president of the National Student Legal Defense Network. "Linda McMahon acknowledged that herself. The real effect of this decree will just be even more hardship and confusion for students and families."

Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison and Zachary Schermele @ZachSchermele.