Project 2025’s section on education proposes that the U.S. Department of Education’s largest funding streams for K-12 schools be turned into block grants to the states with minimal oversight. The two big programs are Title 1 for poor kids and the funding for students with disabilities (IDEA).
The states would be free to convert these funds into vouchers, instead of spending them on low-income students or students with disabilities.
The National Education Association explains here:
Block Grant Overview
Typically, the deal between the federal government and states when specific program funds are block-granted is that the federal government will provide less funding in return for less regulation and requirements. With less regulation, the assumption is that states should be able to do as much or more with less money. While it may be appealing initially to those who administer federal grants at the state and local level, in reality, fewer dollars mean fewer programs and services. States and school districts may have more flexibility in using federal funds but it comes at the expense of the students the federal grant program was designed to help in the first place.
Many states already underfund their commitment to public education. If states and districts don’t cover the shortfall, students receiving Title I and IDEA services will suffer. Furthermore, both Title I and IDEA have maintenance of effort and supplement, not supplant requirements to ensure states and districts hold up their levels of spending when receiving federal funds. Those requirements will fall away, too, and, most likely, so will the funding commitments by states and districts.
Title I of the ESEA and IDEA were created to ensure all students have equal access to an education, regardless of family income or disability. Many states were failing to adequately educate students in these populations, if at all. The federal role here was clear: where a student lived or their circumstances should not determine the quality of their education. ESEA and IDEA enshrined this principle and attached specific conditions and requirements that states must follow, in return for federal financial assistance, to ensure that students from lower-income families and communities and those with disabilities have the same opportunity to learn as any other student. “No-strings-attached” block grant funding turns the clock back 60 years on education policy and progress, and turns its back on our nation’s commitment to educating all students. While one would like to think that we can trust states to do the right thing on behalf of all students, history tells us differently.
Providing states with federal aid and fewer requirements leaves the door open for states to do as they wish. Title I of ESEA and IDEA include important requirements and protections for students and families precisely because they were lacking previously. At its core, the Department of Education is a civil rights agency, providing dollars, regulations, requirements, guidance, technical assistance, research, monitoring, and compliance enforcement to preserve and protect students’ access to a free and appropriate education. Strip it away, and you strip away the rights of certain students to a meaningful education.

The entire Trump budget represents elevating wealthy interests while abandoning the idea that this country represents opportunity for all. While education cannot cure poverty, it can and does provide opportunities and access for those that were not born into great wealth. The federal government has tried to offer school districts additional funds to defray the extra costs of students with special needs. Trump’s budget fleeces the public schools which will deprive millions of under served students of those opportunities, particularly in red states with state block grants. The whole budget represents strip mining the common good to help pay for tax cuts for billionaires so Trump and the GOP can repay their wealthy donors. Trump will spin his plunder as a tremendous benefit to all. Everything he is doing represents a massive transfer of wealth and value from working families to the ultra-wealthy.
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Trump, the Fascist Narcissist, is scratching and clawing at every program, not just education, for every penny he can cut just say to the MAGA Cult that 1. He cut the budget like he said he promised. 2. Give the MAGA Wealthy the tax cuts he promised. Trump could care less how he fulfills his promises.
What Trump is doing has absolutely nothing to do with making life better for anyone in the United States except for himself, his family, and the wealthy. He could care less if all the children in this country receive the education each every one of them deserve or not, that people go hungry, can’t pay their rent or pay their mortgage and end up out the street, that the Veterans don’t receive the medical and mental health support they need, that the medical system in the United States is one of the worst in the world, does not care about the environment, etc., etc. Trump absolutely does not understand or care about what life is like for the rest of the world outside of Mar-A-Lago.
Yes, cutting educational funding can lead to the privatization of public schools. Something the Republicans want very much. But for Trump the education of the masses means nothing to him. Education is not important to him. It never has been and never will be. So as long as Trump is in office he will continue to cut funding, cut funding, cut funding for education. Next year will be no different than this year. Or the next unless he is gone. I rather doubt that Trump even understands what privatization of private schools means so, like everything else, it is meaningless to him.
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