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The Trump Team Turns to Education
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The Trump Team Turns to Education

The Department of Education seems to be on the chopping block.

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Happy Friday! Scientists have announced that Saturn has acquired 128 new moons. Is that a good or bad omen? We’ll let you decide. 

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • Greenland will rebuff any attempts by President Donald Trump to extend U.S. control over the island, its likely new prime minister said Wednesday. “We don’t want to be Americans. No, we don’t want to be Danes,” Jens-Frederik Nielsen, whose center-right Demokraatit party won in Greenland’s parliamentary elections on Tuesday, told Britain’s Sky News. Nielsen and his party support a gradual path to independence for the Danish territory. During a meeting with NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte on Thursday, Trump reiterated his desire to annex Greenland, citing national security concerns.
  • Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday said that Moscow still had unspecified conditions that needed to be met before it could agree to a ceasefire with Ukraine, but claimed to be open to a deal. “We need to talk to our American colleagues and partners about this, maybe call President Trump and discuss it with him,” he said, adding that any temporary truce should be tied to a broader deal that addresses “the causes of this crisis.” Later that day, Putin met with U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff, who presented him with the ceasefire proposal that emerged following talks between U.S. and Ukrainian officials in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday. Meanwhile, the Russian military claimed Thursday to have retaken most of Kursk—a Russian region where Ukrainian forces have controlled pockets of territory since launching a surprise offensive in August.
  • Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, a Democrat from New York, said Thursday that he would support the Republican-led government funding bill recently passed by the House, making it likely that there will be enough votes today to override a Senate filibuster and avoid a government shutdown. “A shutdown would give Donald Trump the keys to the city, the state and the country,” Schumer said in a speech on the Senate floor, citing fears that efforts by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency to radically shrink the size of the federal workforce would be strengthened by a shutdown. Sen. John Fetterman, a Democrat from Pennsylvania, has already committed to voting for the funding bill, meaning it would only need six more votes to pass the upper chamber.
  • U.S. District Judge William Alsup on Thursday ordered the federal government to rehire potentially tens of thousands of probationary employees whose jobs had been terminated by mass firings in recent weeks. The layoffs were directed by the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), which Alsup said did not have the authority to order such an action. The judge mandated that the departments of Veterans Affairs, Agriculture, Defense, Energy, the Interior, and the Treasury offer to reinstate employees fired on or around February 13 and 14. The OPM’s acting director, Charles Ezell, did not appear in court to testify in defense of the administration’s actions.
  • The White House on Thursday abruptly withdrew its nomination of Dave Weldon as director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, just hours before his confirmation hearing before the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee was set to begin. Weldon—a doctor, vaccine skeptic, and former U.S. congressman from Florida—reportedly did not have enough “yes” votes to receive the committee’s approval. “The concern of many people is that Big Pharma was behind this which is probably true,” Weldon wrote in a statement following the announcement. 
  • The number of migrants passing through the Darién Gap, a treacherous jungle pathway through Panama and a major thoroughfare for migrants, has fallen to its lowest level since the COVID-19 pandemic, according to new data from a Panamanian migration agency. The dramatic decline mirrors the rapid decrease in the number of migrants attempting to illegally cross the southern border of the United States since the beginning of aggressive enforcement actions against illegal immigrants by the Trump administration. 
  • Lawyers representing President Trump asked the Supreme Court Thursday to end a nationwide injunction from a lower court blocking an executive order revoking automatic citizenship for all children born in the United States. The order, which Trump signed in a direct challenge to more than a hundred years of constitutional interpretation, was blocked by three federal judges in Massachusetts, Maryland, and Washington state. The filings from acting Solicitor General Sarah Harris argue that the nationwide injunctions are an unconstitutional overreach of courts’ powers and ask that the orders apply only to the plaintiffs in each of the three cases that led to the rulings. 
  • Rep. Raúl Grijalva, a Democrat from Arizona, died Thursday from complications stemming from cancer treatment. He was 77 years old. Grijalva had served in the House of Representatives since 2002 and co-chaired the Progressive Caucus from 2009 to 2019. A committed environmentalist, he also chaired the House Natural Resources Committee. He is the fifth sitting House Democrat to die in the past 12 months. 

The Department of Education in the Crosshairs

Demonstrators gather outside of the offices of the U.S. Department of Education in Washington, D.C. on March 13, 2025 to protest against mass layoffs and budget cuts at the agency. (Photo by BRYAN DOZIER/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)
Demonstrators gather outside of the offices of the U.S. Department of Education in Washington, D.C. on March 13, 2025 to protest against mass layoffs and budget cuts at the agency. (Photo by BRYAN DOZIER/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)

On Thursday, a small group of teachers and students gathered outside the Department of Education’s Washington, D.C., headquarters to protest the Trump administration’s efforts to dismantle the federal agency. Bearing signs reading “kids deserve good schools,” “stop defunding our futures,” and “fund schools not billionaires,” the demonstrators argued that the White House was sacrificing the country’s young people on the altar of tech CEO Elon Musk’s cost-saving initiative. 

“They didn’t go to public school,” a D.C. educator told WUSA9. “They didn’t need these government programs.”

Two days earlier, the Education Department announced plans to cut its workforce by nearly half, from 4,133 employees to 2,183. But the sweeping layoffs were likely just an opening salvo. President Donald Trump has long advocated for disbanding the Cabinet agency, selecting Linda McMahon as education secretary to, in his words, “put herself out of a job.” The department’s remaining employees are now bracing for the president’s next steps.

“The president’s mandate, his directive to me, clearly, is to shut down the Department of Education, which we know we’ll have to work with Congress, you know, to get that accomplished,” McMahon told Fox News on Tuesday, when asked about the mass firings. “But what we did today was to take the first step, eliminating what I think is bureaucratic bloat.”

But even proponents of reforming the department are skeptical of the Trump administration’s heavy-handed approach. The real challenge, education policy experts say, is in streamlining the department without compromising its ability to carry out congressionally mandated functions—a difficult balance to strike in the absence of a clear plan for which positions to cut and which to redistribute.

So what are those key functions? Created via executive order in 1979, the department is intended to help states and local school districts provide a higher standard of education to students of all backgrounds, primarily through supplementary funding. But while defenders of the agency argue that it is needed to ensure nationwide standards, critics say it has weaponized federal funding to exert undue influence over how schools and universities operate. 

Despite being associated more with K-12 education, a far greater share of the department’s resources go toward higher education. The Education Department is charged with administering student loans and distributing the Pell Grant, which awards low- and middle-income students up to $7,400 per year toward college tuition. The former is by far its largest role: The department oversees $1.5 trillion in student loan debt for more than 40 million people—a job that required about one-third of its workforce prior to the administration’s cuts. 

“The Department of Education is basically a mega bank with a small K-12 policy shop attached,” Frederick M. Hess, the director of education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute, told TMD. “Far and away, the biggest part of what it does is handle financial aid for folks going to college.”

The cash that is distributed to K-12 schools through the Department of Education is primarily via two main programs: Title I and the Individuals with Disabilities Act. The former provides supplementary funding to low-income districts, while the latter ensures that students with disabilities can access education. Smaller directives include funding charter schools and initiatives focused on teacher quality and class size reduction.

But despite generally making up a small percentage of public schools’ overall budgets, the federal funding has allowed Washington to exert influence over curricula. Beginning in 1994, the Education Department began using funds to pressure states to adopt uniform standards and testing in math, reading, and science. This strategy culminated in the 2009 creation of Race to the Top, a $4.35 billion grant program that encouraged states to use the controversial Common Core Standards and accompanying tests.

“We were then at the point where the federal government, through the Department of Education and the Secretary in particular, was about to essentially dictate curriculum in schools—or at the very least the standards that frame the curriculum,” Neal McCluskey, director of the Cato Institute’s Center for Educational Freedom, told TMD. A collective push by small government conservatives, teachers unions, and parents succeeded in limiting the department’s reach, but many fear Washington could use the agency to reprise its role in determining what’s taught in the classroom in the future. 

Evidence of federal creep has also emerged in another key job of the Education Department: ensuring that civil rights laws are being upheld in institutions receiving federal funds. The department’s Office of Civil Rights (OCR) was initially formed to oversee desegregation and prevent explicit race-based discrimination, but it’s since been used as a tool by multiple administrations to enact their will on the day-to-day operations of schools and universities.

Under the Obama administration, Russlynn Ali, the head of the office, issued a controversial “Dear Colleague” letter in 2011 ordering universities to significantly reduce the standard of proof needed to find students and faculty members guilty of sexual harassment or assault. Under Biden, meanwhile, OCR head Catherine Lhamon expanded the interpretation of Title IX to create new protections for gay, transgender, and pregnant students. 

The Trump administration itself has also invoked the OCR in its push to end diversity, equity, and inclusion programs on college campuses—a strange footnote to its stated efforts to eliminate the department where the office resides. “They want to limit the ability of the department to do that kind of stuff in the future, so that’s part of the logic of the downsizing. But at the same time, they’re also seeking to use it to correct some of what they see as that really problematic agenda promotion,” Hess said. “So what you’re seeing is two things: They’re trying to use that OCR forcefully at the same time that they’re trying to rein it in going forward. Doing them both at once is obviously in tension.”

The conflicting goals may hint at a broader lack of strategy as the White House sets its sights on the Education Department. While the administration can slash the agency’s workforce and shutter its offices, it hasn’t indicated a desire to end the federal funding administered by the department. In the absence of a move to reform or reduce the programs (something that would undoubtedly require congressional approval), the tangible effect of gutting the department on schools is unclear. By the same token, administrative costs—things like salaries for remaining employees and running field offices—would likely be the only real cash saved. 

Arguments can be made for greater efficiency in the department, experts say. Some of its tasks, like distributing supplementary funding, are largely done using computer algorithms and arguably require fewer employees. And others, like administering student loans, may be better left to the Treasury Department. But whether downsizing the agency succeeds largely depends on how it’s done, and for now, the administration has shed very little light on what comes next. 

“We’ve been hearing calls for the elimination of the department since its founding. That is not new. But I am struck by the recklessness and velocity with which they have taken action before laying out a plan,” Peter Granville, a fellow at The Century Foundation and expert on higher education, told TMD. “They may have had much more success articulating a vision for how they would scale back the federal role in education without harming students, families, and schools. Because there is no plan put forth by the administration besides, ‘We’re going to gut it and get rid of it,’ no one knows what to expect.” 

“States don’t know what to do, school districts don’t know what to do,” he added. “By unilaterally taking these actions, the administration is taking away even the opportunity for a productive conversation in which the American people could weigh in.”

Today’s Must-Read

Flags outside the Fairmont Royal York in downtown Toronto, February 3, 2025.    (Photo by Andrew Francis Wallace/Toronto Star/Getty Images)

Canada Is an Ally, Not an Enemy

Donald Trump seems surprised by the ferocity of the Canadian response to his attempts to strong-arm the country with his imbecilic bullying and threats to annex it. I am not. Canadian pride may sometimes take the form of toxic anti-Americanism, but there is no doubting the resolve or the patriotism of our neighbors to the north. Other than the fact that he is one of the few conservative leaders in the Western world who has literally cut the size of government (by reducing the number of members on the Toronto city council), I do not know much about Doug Ford, the Conservative premier of Ontario who has promised to fight back against Trump’s predations with such tools as he has at his disposal. But he has made a pretty good showing for himself so far.

Toeing the Company Line

    Worth Your Time

    • President Donald Trump’s defenders often point to the late-19th century President William McKinley’s “reciprocal” tariffs as a historical example for the U.S. to follow. But writing for the Wall Street Journal, economists Donald J. Boudreaux and Phil Gramm argued that proponents of reciprocal tariffs have seriously misunderstood McKinley’s aims: “Reciprocal trade policy as envisioned by President William McKinley, whom Mr. Trump often cites as his role model, recognized that by the dawn of the 20th century America had emerged as an economic colossus capable of producing an abundance of products that could be profitably exported. As McKinley explained, ‘the expansion of our trade and commerce is the pressing problem. Commercial wars are unprofitable’… The Trump perversion of reciprocal trade co-opts a politically appealing phrase to justify his preferred policy. While the president uses European and Japanese tariffs on American cars to justify comparable tariffs on U.S. imports, nowhere does he propose real reciprocity. He could eliminate the 25% U.S. tariff on imported trucks as an inducement to other countries to eliminate their tariffs on U.S. automobiles. Mr. Trump denounces high tariffs on U.S. exports to Central and South America and would use his theory of reciprocity as an excuse to raise U.S. tariffs on imports from those countries. But real reciprocity would be achieved by eliminating the quota on U.S. imports of sugar, for which Americans pay twice the world price, in return for Central and South American countries lowering their tariffs against U.S. products.”

    Presented Without Comment

    Los Angeles Times: ‘Oh great’: Tesla Cybertruck sinks in Ventura Harbor after botched Jet Ski launch

    Also Presented Without Comment

    Mediaite: ‘I Own This’: Tim Walz Says Democrats ‘Wouldn’t Be in This Mess’ If It Weren’t for Him and Kamala Harris

    In the Zeitgeist

    The baseball movie is back: Eephus, about older men playing their last game of baseball before their field is torn down to build a school, was released on March 7. We’re readying ourselves for the nostalgia.

    Let Us Know

    Do you think the Education Department should be dismantled?

    Charlotte Lawson is the editor of The Morning Dispatch and currently based in Tel Aviv, Israel. Prior to joining the company in 2020, she studied history and global security at the University of Virginia. When Charlotte is not keeping up with foreign policy and world affairs, she is probably trying to hone her photography skills.

    James P. Sutton is a Morning Dispatch Reporter, based in Washington D.C. Prior to joining the company in 2024, he most recently graduated from University of Oxford with a Master's degree in history. He has also taught high school history in suburban Philadelphia, and interned at National Review and the Foreign Policy Research Institute. When not writing for The Morning Dispatch, he is probably playing racquet sports, reading a history book, or rooting for Bay Area sports teams.

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