US President Donald Trump has signed an executive order directing officials to begin dismantling the Department of Education, a promise he made on the 2024 campaign trail.
āWeāre going to shut it down as quickly as possible,ā Trump said after signing the order on Thursday. āItās doing us no good.ā
Trump has long called for the department to be axed, a cherished goal of some conservatives, but completely shutting it would require an act of Congress, which is unlikely.
The move is already facing legal challenges from those seeking to block the agencyās closure as well as sweeping cuts to its staff announced last week.
Trump said āthe US spends more money on education by far than any other countryā yet students ārank near the bottom of the list in terms of successā.
The White House stated that his administration would move to cut parts of the department that remain within legal boundaries.
The executive order is likely to face legal challenges, like many of the Trump administrationās efforts to shrink the size of the federal government.
At the signing ceremony, Trump praised Linda McMahon, whom he appointed to lead the department, and expressed his hope she would be the last secretary of education.
He said he would find āsomething elseā for her to do within the administration.
After Trump signed the order, Louisiana Republican Senator Bill Cassidy announced plans to bring legislation aimed at closing the department.
But Republicans hold a slim 53-47 majority in the Senate, and closing a federal department would require 60 votes, making such a goal a longshot.
But even if the department is not formally closed, the Trump administration could decimate its funding and staff as it has done with the US Agency for International Development (USAID), which subsequently stopped many of its programmes and humanitarian work.
The text of the executive order does not include specifics on what actions the administration will take and which programmes might be axed.
It orders McMahon to ātake all necessary steps to facilitate the closureā of the department and give authority of such matters to state and local governments.
It also directs her to ensure āthe effective and uninterrupted delivery of services, programs, and benefits on which Americans relyā.
Established in 1979, the education department administers student loans and runs programmes that help low-income students.
Trump has accused it of indoctrinating young people with racial, sexual, and political material.
Most US children attend public schools, which are free and governed by local officials. A common misconception is that the federal education department operates US schools and sets curriculum ā but that is primarily done by states and local districts.
And a relatively small percentage of funding for primary and secondary schools ā about 13% ā comes from federal funds. The majority of funding comes from state and local taxes.
The agency also plays a prominent role in administering and overseeing the federal student loans used by millions of Americans to pay for higher education.
Soon after she was sworn in, McMahon sent the departmentās 4,400 employees a memo titled āOur Departmentās Final Missionā, a possible nod to Trumpās aim to shutter the department.
āThis is our opportunity to perform one final, unforgettable public service to future generations of students,ā she wrote.
āI hope you will join me in ensuring that when our final mission is complete; we will be able to say that we left American education freer, stronger, and with more hope for the future.ā
Earlier reports suggested Trump would look to end some of the departmentās programmes and send others to different departments, such as the Treasury, something that still may happen but wasnāt made clear by Trump in his executive order.
He and fellow Republicans have accused the department of promoting a āwokeā political ideology, and say the department is pushing liberal views about gender and race.
Americaās largest teachersā union recently decried Trumpās plans, saying he ādoesnāt care about opportunity for all kidsā.
In its statement, the American Federation of Teachers said: āNo-one likes bureaucracy, and everyoneās in favour of more efficiency, so letās find ways to accomplish that.
āBut donāt use a āwar on wokeā to attack the children living in poverty and the children with disabilities, in order to pay for vouchers and tax cuts for billionaires.ā
For more than 40 years, conservatives have complained about the department and floated ideas to abolish it.
Just two years after it was established by Democratic President Jimmy Carter, his Republican replacement, Ronald Reagan, started the call to undo it to save money and to favour ālocal needs and preferencesā.
With 4,400 employees, it is the smallest agency in the presidentās cabinet and takes up less than 2% of the total federal budget.
Some of those staff have already been affected by the Trump administrationās sweeping workforce cuts, led by the Department of Government Efficiency (Doge), with many urged to retire, laid off, or placed on paid administrative leave.
Nearly 2,100 people at the agency are set to be placed on leave from 21 March.
Efforts by Doge to slash federal spending and radically restructure ā or simply abolish ā many government agencies have been overseen by tech billionaire Elon Musk.
By BBC News
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