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Corrupt Government Title: "Trump wants to dismantle the Education Department. Here’s how it would work" President Donald Trump vowed to cut the Education Department and move its responsibilities back to the states on the campaign trail. The change would be an unprecedented move, as no Cabinet department has ever been dissolved without being reorganized in some way. Trump nominated Linda McMahon to be the next secretary of education but told reporters last week that he wants Linda to put herself out of a job as he prepares to downsize the department. Betsy DeVos, who served in the role under Trumps first administration, called for the Education Department to be scrapped altogether in an op-ed for The Free Press on Thursday. Having spent four years on the inside as secretary of education, struggling to get the departments bureaucracy to make even the smallest changes to put the needs of students first, I can say conclusively that American students will be better off without, DeVos said. The Washington Examiner spoke to three leading education policy experts, who explained how cutting the Education Department would work, if it is realistic, and what the effects would be. I think itd be fine, Frederick M. Hess, senior fellow and director of education policy studies for the American Enterprise Institute, said. The Department of Education is extraordinarily bureaucratic. It creates extraordinary amounts of red tape for the nations schools, especially relative to the money it actually provides. Hess said that under the Obama and Biden administrations, the department became a political entity frequently engaged in promoting particular ideological nostrums, which he called massively problematic. He added that the two Democratic presidents make the best possible case for abolishing the department. So, yeah, I think downsizing the department, or even abolishing it, is certainly wholly sensible. What is the process for dissolving the Education Department? In order to dismantle the department outright, congressional legislation would be required. You need 60 votes in the Senate unless the filibuster were to be abolished first, Hess said. So thats not going to happen. Instead, it is more likely that a reconciliation bill is passed, which could defund a number of programs and bureaucratic positions. This would only require 50 votes in the Senate, with Vice President-elect JD Vance casting the tiebreaking vote. This type of bill is often used to make changes to federal spending in a way that aligns with the congressional budget resolution. Congress would also have to amend legislation that grants the Secretary of Education authority to make certain decisions to the new secretaries, or other officials, Neal McCluskey, director of the CATO Institutes Center for Educational Freedom, said. A third option would be for Trump to use executive action to move some functions out of the department, Chester E. Finn Jr., distinguished senior fellow & president emeritus of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, said. Trump is reportedly drafting an executive order to begin the process of effectively or outright eliminating the Education Department. According to a CNN report, the move would happen in two parts: It would direct the secretary of education to create a plan to downsize the department through executive action and push for Congress to pass the legislation necessary to end the department. McMahon has not yet been confirmed as secretary of education, but her confirmation hearing before the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee is set for this Thursday. Eliminating the agency isnt the same as eliminating the myriad programs that it runs, billions that it sends out, and multitudinous regulations that it enforces (mostly pursuant to laws enacted by Congress), Finn, who is also Volkner senior fellow at Stanford Universitys Hoover Institution, added. Undoing those functions, programs, activities means dealing separately with the laws that created them dozens and dozens. If the department is abolished, but its Congressionally-mandated functions are not, Finn said this would be a mostly symbolic act akin to simply taking the name off the door. Before the Education Department was created in 1979, the now-defunct Department of Health, Education, and Welfare had an education division that was virtually equivalent to the Dept of Ed without being a separate Cabinet department. Depending on how dissolving or reducing the department is executed, McCluskey said he thinks the transition could be done in a couple of years, though three might be more realistic for the government. He said that if K-12 programs are eliminated, they could likely be block-granted to the states and either kept that way and administered by some other department, or dissolved over maybe six years, with the initial amount reduced by a third every other year. Student aid programs could be similarly phased out, starting with caps on grants and loans and reducing those every two years, McCluskey added. How many federal workers would this affect? McCluskey said that much of the reduction depends on the characteristics of each employee and whether they have federal job protections. Theoretically, every Education Department employee could simply be transferred to another department, particularly if that department absorbs the program they are attached to. However, McCluskey said, Presumably, there would be some redundancies with the merging department, and this may affect which bureaucrats would be transferred and which would be terminated. On the other hand, Hess said that through a reconciliation bill, you could eliminate funding for many, or most of those positions. What programs would be immediately cut? To eliminate many programs, Finn said that Congress would have to terminate, rewrite, or amend the authorizing legislation or stop funding via the appropriations process, but mentioned there would be serious pushback against this from interests that benefit from the money. Hess identified three key programs that the Education Department spends the most on and could be eliminated if the department was abolished: Pell Grants for low-income students to go to college, Title I, which gives money to school districts serving low-income children, and special education, which provides funding for children with special needs. The government allocated $24.5 billion for the Pell Grant in 2024, $18.6 billion for Title I, and over $15 billion for special education. McCluskey said that the savings could be used for debt reduction. One of the complexities in eliminating these programs, Hess said, is that not only do Democrats not want to cut them, but neither do Republicans for the most part even though they dont like the federal footprint and all the federal rules. The move would not affect school lunches, as the National School Lunch Program is handled by the Department of Agriculture, and would have little to no impact on summer care or transportation as those are mostly handled by state and local governments with minimal federal funding, except for emergency relief. What would replace the Education Department? However, many of its responsibilities can be transferred to other departments. For example, Finn said, Theres been talk of transferring the student loan mess to [the] Treasury. McCluskey noted that the first Trump administration proposed merging the Education Department and the Department of Labor, creating a new department. Education could also be rolled into Health and Human Services, basically recreating what existed before the Education Department: the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. The parts could be sent to various other departments; student aid to Treasury, the Office of Civil Rights to [the Department of Justice], and K-12 functions to HHS, he added. Or, though very unlikely, all the programs [the Education Department] administers could be dissolved, and the department just eliminated. Finn also speculated that if not the DOJ, the Office for Civil Rights could fall under Robert F. Kennedy Jr.s jurisdiction as Trumps nominee to lead the Department of Health and Human Services under something similar to what used to be the HEW. Would some states be affected more than others? McCluskey noted that Poverty rates tend to be highest in southern states, so they may face a disproportionate loss of federal K-12 funding. Finn said, POOR states would suffer the most, states full of poor folks (many of whom I believe voted for [Trump]!) Hess, on the other hand, noted that the overall impact would be modest because in K-12 education, the federal share of spending is really very small, which is part of what makes all the federal overreach and rules so problematic. He said that the feds only kick in about 10 cents on the dollar overall, and thats just two cents on the dollar for Title I. So were not really talking about huge impacts from what might be realistic cuts. Its not clear that you would have big winners or losers among the states because it tends to be earmarked based on which kids have been identified with special needs
some states might lose slightly more, some slightly less, Hess added, but in terms of the actual dollars involved, theres not going to be a huge difference, one state to the next. Would this mean a tax increase? However, McCluskey and Hess paint a more optimistic picture. They suggested that states would be able to spend even less on education, and would therefore not result in tax increases. Were [the Education Department] to disappear, state DoEs could likely be shrunk, because they are tasked with complying with federal dictates and helping to administer federal programs, McCluskey said. The federal government adds to state administrative burdens in exchange for federal funds. To the same point, Hess said many states employ up to a couple hundred bureaucrats whose jobs largely focus on ensuring reporting requirements so that their schools get clean audits. If you downsize the federal regulations and the federal demands, its not like you would need to grow the state agencies, he added. In fact, you would also be able to downsize the state agencies, because you would need fewer people filling out federal paperwork. What would happen to the ongoing Civil Rights investigations? Trump promised to remove federal funding and accreditation for schools found to have violated Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which ensures that all students have a right to an equal education. Under the Biden administration, no school has lost funding or accreditation over Title VI violations. The Office for Civil Rights, or at least its responsibilities, would not be dissolved if the department is abolished, because federal civil rights laws have to be enforced somewhere, unless terminated or amended by Congress, Finn said. All three experts mentioned the Department of Justice as the top department to which these responsibilities could be transferred. If this happened, Hess predicts OCR would be moved over wholesale, just with the supervision of ideally a Cabinet that has a stronger culture of due process and careful investigation. He said that regardless of what department is in charge of upholding civil rights on campus, Trump will likely use the Obama administration playbook to tackle campus antisemitism, which he says Bidens Secretary of Education chose to be completely disinterested in actually addressing. This entails putting extraordinary pressure to settle on universities fostering antisemitic activity by doing public record requests, launching an investigation, and threatening that if it finds evidence that these colleges have violated Title VI, that they will be deemed ineligible for federal funds, which would cost schools like Columbia or UCLA or Harvard potentially over $1 billion a year. He explained that this is how Obama got campuses to do star chambers where he coerced schools to more forcefully address allegations of sexual assault by suing them until they agreed to drop the evidentiary standard in order to kind of make this go away. So you can imagine the Trump OCR, whether in the Department of Education, or somewhere else, going after these colleges with billions of dollars on the line, forcing them to acknowledge misconduct and embrace very aggressive remedies, Hess said. And then use that to make clear to the rest of the field that if institutions dont want to be investigated for violating civil rights statutes, this is where they need to be. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 3.
#1. To: All (#0)
God Bless Anyone who can Abolish the Federal Department of Education...MUD
Abolish the left please.
One Federal Agency at a time...we only have so much DOGE to spread around. I also thoroughly enjoy the daily performative rantfwst whining about Musk publicizing the DeeCeeRATZ rampant, waste, fraud, and abuse...MUD BTW...do you reckon Poilievre might be taking a few notes?
#4. To: Mudboy Slim (#3)
Poilievre is trying to distance himself from Trump, his poll numbers are falling, he now has to say he hates Trump.
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