world Blog by humble servant. on X.As of this morning, March 20, 2025, at 06:24 AM EDT, significant developments are unfolding regarding the Trump administration’s push to eliminate the U.S. Department of Education. Here’s the latest based on available information and sentiment captured from posts on X

Humble Servant News on X

As of this morning, March 20, 2025, at 06:24 AM EDT, significant developments are unfolding regarding the Trump administration’s push to eliminate the U.S. Department of Education. Here’s the latest based on available information and sentiment captured from posts on X:

President Donald Trump is set to sign an executive order today, Thursday, March 20, 2025, aimed at dismantling the Department of Education, a move telegraphed as a fulfillment of his campaign promise to return education oversight to the states. This follows aggressive staff reductions announced on March 11, 2025, when the Department slashed nearly 50% of its workforce—cutting from approximately 4,133 employees to 2,183. Over 1,300 workers were laid off, and around 600 opted for voluntary resignations or retirements, with affected staff on paid administrative leave until June 9, 2025. These cuts, directed by Education Secretary Linda McMahon, have already thinned operations across key areas like civil rights enforcement, student loan management, and educational research.

Today’s executive order, as reported by Reuters and echoed in posts on X, won’t fully dissolve the Department—Congress holds that power, and past bipartisan resistance suggests it’s a tough sell. Instead, it’s expected to further gut discretionary functions, potentially halting programs like diversity initiatives or research contracts worth hundreds of millions. The White House pitches this as a blow against federal overreach, with Trump and McMahon arguing it trims billions in "bureaucratic waste" while empowering states. Posts on X today, like those from users celebrating the move, reflect this sentiment, with some calling it a long-overdue end to a failing system.

However, the backlash is fierce. Twenty-one Democratic attorneys general have filed lawsuits, claiming the staff cuts violate constitutional mandates to uphold programs like Pell Grants and student loan oversight—critical given the $1.6 trillion portfolio. Critics on X and elsewhere warn that a hollowed-out agency risks chaos for students and schools, especially with a $79 billion discretionary budget on the line. The cuts have already shrunk oversight capacity, raising questions about how states will pick up the slack without federal support.

Current sentiment on X shows a polarized divide: some cheer the Department’s "chopping block" fate as a win for local control, while others predict educational decline, pointing to the U.S.’s already shaky global rankings. The reality hinges on Congressional action—or inaction—and how states adapt. For now, March 20 marks a pivotal step in Trump’s elimination agenda, with the executive pen poised to strike.



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