PRESIDENT Donald Trump greets school children before signing an executive order to reduce the size and scope of the Education Department during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House on 20 March 2025 in Washington, DC.  CHIP SOMODEVILLA/GETTY IMAGES/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
WORLD

Trump shuts ‘no good’ Education Department

Order directs Education Secretary Linda McMahon to close the agency.

Agence France-Presse

WASHINGTON, United States (AFP) — US President Donald Trump signed an order Thursday aimed at “eliminating” the Department of Education, a decades-old goal of the American right, which wants individual states to run schools free from the federal government.

Surrounded by schoolchildren sitting at desks set up in the East Room of the White House, Trump smiled as held up the order after signing it at a special ceremony.

Trump said the order would “begin eliminating the federal Department of Education once and for all.”

“We’re going to shut it down and shut it down as quickly as possible. It’s doing us no good,” Trump said. “We’re going to return education back to the states where it belongs.”

The Education Department, created in 1979, cannot be shuttered without the approval of Congress — but Trump’s order will likely have the power to starve it of funds and staff.

The move honors one of Trump’s campaign promises and is among the most drastic steps yet in the brutal overhaul of the government that Trump is carrying out with the help of tech tycoon Elon Musk.

The order directs 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.”

Democrats and educators have slammed the move.

The top Democrat in the Senate, Chuck Schumer, called it a “tyrannical power grab” and “one of the most destructive and devastating steps Donald Trump has ever taken.”

Republican leaders, including governors Ron DeSantis of Florida and Greg Abbott of Texas, were in the audience for the signing ceremony.

Trump has cast the move as necessary to save money and improve educational standards in the country, claiming the US is lagging behind those in Europe and China.

But education has been a battleground for decades in America’s culture wars, and Republicans have long wanted to remove control of it from the federal government.