Trump signs executive order to dramatically shrink education department – live | US news


Education department ‘will be much smaller’ under Trump order, but continue some functions, White House says

The White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt told reporters that the Department of Education will be dramatically downsized by the executive order Donald Trump will sign today, but continue administering student loans and Pell grants, as well as enforcing some civil rights laws.

Abolishing the department, as Trump and his conservative allies say they want to do, will require an act of Congress. Its unclear if the president will push for that, or if there are the votes to make it happen.

“The Department of Education will be much smaller than it is today,” Leavitt said. “When it comes to student loans and Pell grants, those will still be run out of the Department of Education. But we don’t need to be spending more than $3tn over the course of a few decades on a department that’s clearly failing in its initial intention to educate our students.”

She added that “any critical functions of the department … will remain”, such as enforcing laws against discrimination and providing funding for low-income students and special education.

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Key events

Trump signs executive order to dramatically shrink education department

Donald Trump has signed an executive order to greatly reduce the size of the federal department of education.

In remarks beforehand to a White House event filled with schoolchildren and Republican governors, attorneys general and lawmakers, Trump claimed, falsely, that there was widespread, bipartisan support for “eliminating the federal Department of Education once and for all”.

His press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, told reporters earlier on Thursday that the executive order would not eliminate but greatly reduce “the scale and the size of this department”. Closing the department, which was created by Congress in 1979, would require a law passed by the House and Senate.

Nevertheless, Trump welcomed the Republican governors of Texas, Florida, Ohio, Indiana, Tennessee, Idaho, Louisiana Nebraska and a co-founder of the far-right group Mom’s for Liberty, before declaring that his administration “will take all lawful steps to shut down… the department”.

Trump insisted that removing the federal role in education would “return” responsibility to the states, but questions remain over who will take over certain critical functions, like enforcing civil rights laws that prohibit discrimination against ethnic and racial minorities, and making sure that federal laws ensuring access to disabled students are followed.

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