US Education Department takes merciless $1 billion cut

Ruthless cuts
169 contracts scrapped
Wrecking ball
Cuts in education for cuts in billionaire tax
A department dismantled
Teaching shame?
No time to lose
Overhaul
Privately educated
Giving the public a wide berth
Undermining the system
Shifting perspectives
Heroes and villains
Reshaping civil rights enforcement
Warping race discrimination investigations
Curriculum review
Federal interference
Role flipped
Ruthless cuts

DOGE boss Elon Musk has subjected the US Department of Education to almost $1 billion in cuts while Donald Trump considers how to dismantle it altogether without legal obstacles.

 

 

169 contracts scrapped

At least 169 contracts pertaining to the department's Institute of Education Sciences (IES), which tracks US students' progress, were scrapped in a ruthless purge by the unelected Musk whose powers have just been enlarged by a new order signed by Trump.

Wrecking ball

US Democrat senator Patty Murray said in The Guardian that Musk was “bulldozing the research arm of the Department of Education – taking a wrecking ball to high-quality research and basic data we need to improve our public schools. Cutting off these investments after the contract has already been inked is the definition of wasteful.”

Cuts in education for cuts in billionaire tax

She added: “Elon Musk doesn’t care if working class kids in America get a good education, so whittling down the Department of Education means nothing to him. Make no mistake, this is just the first step Donald Trump and Musk are taking to abolish the Department of Education, leaving our public schools with fewer resources and support to pay for massive tax cuts for billionaires and giant corporations.”

A department dismantled

Speaking anonymously, insiders have indicated that the order to dismantle the department will be signed sometime this month by the President and will stipulate a two-tier strategy for closing the department down and farming its powers and responsibilities out to other agencies, something that will require congressional approval, Politico reports.

"Horrible betrayal"

Donald Trump made it clear in his  inaugural speech that the US public education system would be in the firing line given his conviction that it is among the "horrible betrayals" visited upon the American people.

 

Teaching shame?

“We have an education system that teaches our children to be ashamed of themselves — in many cases, to hate our country despite the love that we try so desperately to provide to them,” he told his audience at the inauguration ceremony on January 20.

 

No time to lose

“All of this will change starting today, and it will change very quickly,” he added to deafening applause.

 

Overhaul

Now we know what Trump has in mind when he referred to these drastic changes to the public school system, which neither he nor his children attended.

Privately educated

Trump himself was driven to his private school, Kew-Forest School in the Queens neighborhood of Forest Hills, by the family chauffeur until bad behavior saw him moved to a military academy, reports PBS.

 

Giving the public a wide berth

All five of his children by his three marriages were educated at private schools, including the youngest Barron from his current marriage to Melania.

 

"School choice"

Part of the President's vision for US education is growing "school choice" private sector with tax breaks for people wanting to send their kids to private schools.

 

Undermining the system

Republicans believe the government should help parents pay for private schooling but teachers’ unions and many Democrats say such a program negatively impacts the public system that educates 50 million US children, Reuters reports.

Shifting perspectives

One of Trump’s main beefs with the public system is that it offers students a perspective on America’s history that clashes with the traditional version.

 

Heroes and villains

In his July 4 address in 2020, Trump maintained that students were led to “believe that the men and women who built it were not heroes but villains,” leading to the toppling of statues such as that of George Washington, The Washington Post reports.

 

Reshaping civil rights enforcement

Trump plans are set to alter how the department investigates civil rights complaints to “reshape civil rights enforcement towards their (the Republicans’) ideological purposes,” Rachel Perera, a fellow at the Brown Center on Education Policy at the Brookings Institute, told The Guardian.

 

Warping race discrimination investigations

In fact, Trump has promised to get the department to investigate “anti-white” civil rights violations, which could interfere with race discrimination investigations, Perera added.

 

Curriculum review

To be led in the interim by Linda McMahon, who is yet to have her nomination confirmed, the public school curriculum is to be changed to include a ban on race and s e x education.

 

Federal interference

“While they seek to reduce or eliminate [the department], they are directly seeking to insert the federal government in reviewing and determining appropriate curriculum content for students and programming run by schools,” said Sarah Hinger, the deputy director of the ACLU racial justice program, in The Guardian.

 

Role flipped

“We’re really seeing a whole flip of the idea of the federal government’s role in education,” she added.

Never miss a story! Click here to follow The Daily Digest.

More for you