On January 20, 2025, President Donald Trump signed Executive Order 14148, eliminating several White House initiatives focused on educational equity housed within the Department: • White House Initiative on Advancing Educational Equity, Excellence, and Economic Opportunity for Native Americans and Strengthening Tribal Colleges and Universities • White House Initiative on Advancing Educational Equity, Excellence, and Economic Opportunity for Black Americans •
White House Initiative on Advancing Educational Equity, Excellence, and Economic Opportunity for Hispanics • White House Initiative on Advancing Educational Equity, Excellence, and Economic Opportunity Through Hispanic-Serving Institutions. In March 2025, Trump signed
an executive order which would begin the dismantling of the Department of Education, seeking to fulfill decades of conservative ambition to eliminate the agency, but raising new questions for public schools and parents. The
Office of Educational Technology was eliminated at this time. The White House earlier said the agency would continue to oversee "critical functions" like student loans. In April 2025, Linda McMahon announced that the Department of Education would resume garnishment of the wages of student debtors whose loans are in default. Republican attempts to close the agency date back to the 1980s. Partisanship over the department has been rife since the start, from progressive-leaning teachers' unions who organized against President George W. Bush's "
No Child Left Behind" policies to conservative Republican presidential candidates in 2016 who ran against the
Common Core standards elevated by President Barack Obama's "
Race to the Top" program. mass
privatization of public schools, and ending
subsidized and free school lunches. Project 2025 also seeks to create a
conservative school
curriculum for all public schools. The plan also includes provisions for the layoffs of millions of public employed teachers. Trump's second term policies have been compared to Project 2025. Multiple polls in February and March 2025 showed that roughly two-thirds of Americans oppose the idea. The position of the
National Education Association (NEA), representing 2.8 million American teachers, was that stripping the department of its resources and mission would negatively impact the millions of students in low-income communities who need educational services and support. On March 3, 2025,
Linda McMahon was sworn in as the nation's 13th Secretary of Education. Trump emphasized that McMahon's primary objective would be to close the Department of Education, stating, "I want her to put herself out of a job." McMahon echoed Trump's comments, stating that the department was not needed when asked directly if the United States needed the department. On March 11, 2025, seven weeks after
Donald Trump's second term began, the
Department of Government Efficiency announced it would fire nearly half the Department of Education's workforce. Trump signed an order on March 20 aimed at closing the department to the maximum extent allowed by law; U.S. district judge
Myong Joun in Boston blocked the mass layoff and the dismantle attempt on May 22, 2025. Though the Trump administration appealed, a federal appeals court declined on June 4 to lift Joun's ruling. On July 14, the
Supreme Court allowed the mass layoffs to proceed in a 6-3 decision. On March 20, 2025, Trump signed
an executive order However, the department cannot be closed without the approval of Congress, which created it. In November 2025, McMahon argued on social media that other federal agencies or state governments could take on the grantmaking and informational work that was currently performed by the Education Department.
Layoffs In February 2025, US Department of Education offered its staff incentives to resign or retire early. In March 2025, the department announced a plan to reduce its workforce by half.
Impacts Based on a preliminary review of the layoffs that were ordered, the majority of cuts were seen in the
Federal Student Aid office which oversees financial aid disbursement and student loans, and the
Office for Civil Rights, which protects students and teachers from discrimination. While current Education Secretary McMahon has claimed that congressionally appropriated monies such as financial aid will not be affected by the plan to downsize or close the department, staff turnover could create multiple problems for those receiving aid. The Trump administration has promised that formula funding for schools, funding such as
Title 1 for high poverty schools and the Rural Education Achievement Program (REAP), which are protected by law, would be preserved. However, nearly all statisticians and data experts who work with the program would be affected by the layoffs and downsizing of the department, as the department was downsized from over 100 people to just three workers. The department oversees the lending of tens of billions of dollars in
loans to students and parents and oversees the collections process of the roughly $1.6 trillion in outstanding loans for over 40 million borrowers as of March 2025. If the department were to be closed, it has been theorized by experts that other federal entities such as the Treasury Department would be left taking over the responsibilities of managing the loans. On March 21, 2025 it was announced by Trump that the management of the entire federal student loan portfolio and the other "special needs" programs overseen by the department would be moved to other departments. Trump specified that the
Small Business Administration would take over responsibility for student loans and the
Department of Health and Human Services would take on the special needs and nutrition programs.
Responses In a joint letter, senators
Elizabeth Warren,
Bernie Sanders, and a group of Democratic senators spoke out against the mass layoffs that were seen in March 2025 and urged Education Secretary McMahon to reinstate employees that were laid off. Representative
Bobby Scott, the ranking member on the
House Committee on Education and the Workforce, raised claims that the dismantling of the department would "exacerbate existing disparities, reduce accountability, and put low-income students, students of color, students with disabilities, rural students, and English as a Second Language students at risk".
Derrick Johnson, the president and CEO of the
NAACP, criticized Trump's attempt to close the department while raising allegations that Trump was dismantling the basic functions of democracy. == Organization ==