Peter Greene writes about the contradiction at the heart of Trump’s education goals. On the one hand, Trump says he will eliminate the Department of Education and turn federal funding over to the states, to use as they wish. At the same time, he says that he will punish schools if they persist in teaching liberal ideas that Trump dislikes, like diversity, equity and inclusion, or if they are insufficiently patriotic.
How will he punish schools if the federal funding has been relinquished to the states?
Greene writes:
It has been on the conservative To Do list for decades, and the incoming administration keeps insisting that this time it’s really going to happen. But will it? Over the weekend, Trump’s Ten Principles for Education video from Agenda 47 was circulating on line as a new “announcement” or “confirmation” of his education policy, despite the fact that the video was posted in September of 2023.
The list of goals may or may not be current, but it underlines a basic contradiction at the heart of Trump’s education plans. The various goals can be boiled down to two overall objectives:
1) To end all federal involvement and oversight of local schools.
2) To exert tight federal control over local schools
Trump has promised that schools will not teach “political indoctrination,” that they will teach students to “love their country,” that there will be school prayer, that students will “have access to” project-based learning, and that schools will expel students who harm teachers or other students.
He has also proposed stripping money from colleges and universities that indoctrinate students and using the money to set up a free of charge “world class education” system.
Above all, he has promised that he “will be closing up” the Department of Education. Of course, he said that in 2016 with control of both houses of Congress and it did not happen.
Are there obstacles? The Department of Education distributes over $18 billion to help support schools that educate high-poverty populations, providing benefits like extra staff to supplement reading instruction. The Project 2025 plan is to turn this into a block grant to be given to the states to use as they wish, then zeroed out. Every state in the country would feel that pinch; states that decide to use the money for some other purpose entirely, such as funding school vouchers, will feel the pinch much sooner. The department also handles over $15 billion in Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) funding, which helps cover the costs of special education; Project 2025 also calls for turning it into an unregulated block grant to states with no strings attached, meaning that parents would have to lobby their state government for special ed funding.
Cuts and repurposing of these funds will be felt immediately in classrooms across the country, particularly those that serve poor students and students with special needs. That kind of readily felt, easily understood impact is likely to fuel pushback in Congress, and it’s Congress that has the actual power to eliminate the department.
Beyond the resistance to changing major funding for states and the challenge of trying to move the trillion-plus-dollar funding system for higher education, the Trump administration would also face the question of how to exert control over school districts without a federal lever to push.
Previous administrations have used Title I funding as leverage to coax compliance from school districts. In 2013, Obama’s education secretary Arne Duncan threatened to withhold Title I funds if a California failed to adopt an “acceptable” standardized testing program. In 2020, Trump himself threatened to cut off funding to schools that did not re-open their buildings. And on the campaign trail this year, Trump vowed that he would defund schools that require vaccines. That will be hard to do if the federal government has given all control of funds to the states.
The Department of Education has limited power, but the temptation to use it seems hard to resist. Nobody wanted the department gone more than Trump’s education secretary Betsy DeVos, who was notably reluctant to use any power of her office. But by 2018, frustrated with Congressional inaction on the Higher Education Act, DeVos announced a plan to impose regulations on her own. In 2020, she imitated Duncan by requiring states to compete for relief money by implementing some of her preferred policies.
Too many folks on the Trump team have ideas about policies they want to enforce on American schools, and without a Department of Education that has control of a major funding stream, they’d have little hope of achieving their goals. Perhaps those who dream of dismantling the department will prevail, but they will still have to get past Congress. No matter how things fall out, some of Team Trump’s goals for education will not be realized.

The question makes as much sense as asking whether a wrecking ball will achieve its goals — it swings one way … then it swings the other … the end result is nothing but destruction … that’s the goal.
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Trump’s puppeteers are revealing themselves. The next 18 months or so are critical for educating the public so that they are shown the door in the midterms. Trump is too stupid to put a plan like this in place. As long as his handlers feed him with accolades and riches he will sit on his wall like Humpty Dumpty spouting the script given to him.
Public education has inherent problems that will never be corrected with forces that choose to dismantle rather than innovate. The goals include reaping the monetary rewards of privatization as well as the monetization of curriculum and associated resources to drive that curriculum.
I believe the most dangerous threat we face is the warped curriculum that is being forced down our nation’s collective throat. We are already seeing the effects of this warped curriculum in our everyday lives. Our nation’s youths are being slowly brainwashed as many sit by and wring their hands.
Resist anyway you can. Fight book banning, teach about our history, teach the world’s history, and value our national diversity.
Don’t let the bastards win.
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Agreed, Rratto!
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“I believe the most dangerous threat we face is the warped curriculum that is being forced down our nation’s collective throat.”
That curriculum is an xtian nationalistic theofascist curriculum that is so warped in regards to the US Constitution that it shouldn’t be given the light of day.
Project 2025, the tRump’s guiding document is an xtian nationalistic theofascist one.
Don’t say you weren’t fairly warned.
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Unfortunately, if federal dollars go to states “to do as they wish,” it is unlikely that the funds will be used to help disadvantaged or classified students in many states. Red states will likely direct funds to expand more privatization. This list of so-called goals sounds like a compilation from whatever groups handed the GOP money and complained the loudest. Project based learning is an interesting choice, if implemented correctly, considering so many students in our public schools have been relegated to sitting in front of screens for so much of the day.
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Am I to understand that “zeroes them out” mans that the feds will not provide more money after the initial grant?
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The federal programs eg Title 1 will eventually be transferred entirely to the states.
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he will say he eradicated wokeness from schools and his followers will lap it up and cheer him on. I can’t believe he admitted he won’t be lowering grocery prices. Much easier to say he lowered the prices to the lowest price that has ever been lowed by any pricer in the history of prices. Prices so low grown men were weeping and the late, great Hannibal Lecter had eggs and milk for dinner instead of you since the prices were so, so low (followed by cacophonous howls and fevered applause).
That’s much easier if you ask me.
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When the convicted rapist, fraud and felon says he will punish anyone who is not patriotic, he means loyalty to him, not to the US Constitution or the rule of law.
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Lloyd,
A new expression: “for the love of Trump!”
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