I know what you’re here for. You saw something on social media about Donald Trump trying to eliminate the Department of Education, and now you’re wondering: Wait, is that actually real?
Yup. It’s real. And in typical Trump fashion, it’s louder than necessary, bolder than expected, and wrapped up in a 1980s-revenge-movie level of villain monologue about “draining the swamp.” Only this time, the swamp is… our kids’ report cards?
Let’s break it down.
What Exactly Happened?
Trump—never one to play it subtle—has officially vowed to abolish the Department of Education if he returns to the White House. Not reduce it. Not audit it. Not change the fonts in their PowerPoints. No. He wants to terminate it. Full stop.
In a campaign stop that somehow felt like a school board meeting hosted at a UFC weigh-in, Trump stated that he would eliminate the department and hand all education power back to the states.
Cue the applause. And the yelling. And the Twitter wars.
Why is this a big deal? Because the Department of Education currently manages things like federal student aid programs, Pell Grants, Title I funding for low-income schools, and civil rights enforcement in education. Just a few tiny things. No biggie. Just the fate of about 49 million students.
But Can a President Even Do That?
Now here’s the part where reality tries to walk in wearing sensible shoes. Technically, Trump can’t unilaterally shut down an entire federal department. That would require Congress to vote on it—yes, the same Congress that can’t agree on what day it is.
But what he can do (and kind of already started to do when he was president) is pull funding, fire staff, and make the agency so useless it collapses on itself like a sad Jenga tower.
According to former Education Secretary John King (the guy who actually ran the thing), the department has already seen layoffs, staff cuts, and budget slashes.
“The FAFSA system broke recently,” he said. “And guess what? The people who were supposed to fix it had already been laid off.”
So yeah. Even without official execution orders, the department’s slowly being choked out like a cable subscription in 2025.
Why Do Some People Love This Idea?
To be fair (ugh, I hate writing that part), a lot of Americans actually agree with Trump on this. In the YouTube comments section—which is basically the Coliseum of modern opinions—people were practically cheering:
“DOE has been around for decades, and low income families have been stuck in the worst schools imaginable.”
“Since creation of USDOE student performance has plummeted. You’re fired.”
“More money, more money, and our ranking in the world has steadily gone down. So MONEY isn’t the issue, is it?”
And you know what? They’re not totally wrong. The U.S. spends more per student than nearly any country on Earth… yet our test scores look like someone spilled coffee on the SATs.
Cue the “I love the poorly educated!” meme.
Supporters argue that school choice programs, charter schools, and education tax credits could offer parents more control while eliminating bloated bureaucracy.
And of course, there’s that sweet, sweet promise of “smaller government.” Just like how removing the lid makes the blender more efficient, right?
What Could Go Horribly Wrong?
So glad you asked.
Experts, teachers, and just about anyone who’s ever filled out a FAFSA form say removing the DOE could create absolute chaos. You think education is uneven now? Wait until every state gets to do whatever it wants.
That means a kid in Mississippi might be learning creationism in science class while a kid in California is coding Python at six years old. Uniform standards? Gone. Oversight on discrimination? Peace out. Federal grants for students with disabilities? Don’t count on it.
John King put it bluntly:
“We got more than 20,000 civil rights complaints last year. The layoffs hit those offices. So who exactly is going to answer them?”
Also, a lot of people rely on federal student loans to get through college. Are we now trusting the Treasury Department to take that over? The same guys who make pennies and somehow still can’t fix the coin shortage?
Who Gets Hurt Most?
Spoiler alert: Not the kids going to $40,000-a-year prep schools with organic cafeteria menus and fencing clubs.
It’s the vulnerable families. The ones in low-income neighborhoods. The kids with special needs. The students who depend on Pell Grants, financial aid, and federal protections to have a shot at anything beyond a high school diploma and a retail job.
According to King, “Half of SUNY students rely on Pell Grants to attend college. Remove that, and you remove the ladder.”
But hey, who needs ladders when you’re busy climbing political polls?
So, Is This Just Politics?
Absolutely. But it’s also way more than that.
Let’s not pretend Trump woke up in a cold sweat thinking about school lunches and classroom size. This move is red meat for his base. It’s about signaling that he’s anti-“woke,” pro-“freedom,” and deeply committed to removing anything that smells like federal oversight.
And in the age of polarized education debates—from banned books to TikTok school fights to whether drag queens are allowed near children’s libraries—blowing up the Department of Education is a political firework.
It says: “I’ll go farther than DeSantis.”
It screams: “This swamp? I’m nuking it.”
And it whispers (kind of ominously): “Your kid’s teacher might be next.”
What Are Democrats Saying?
Mostly some version of: “ARE YOU SERIOUS RIGHT NOW?”
They argue that this is a transparent attempt to dismantle civil rights protections, lower educational standards, and defund public education without offering any viable replacement.
They point out that education in America already suffers from inequality. Without federal guardrails, things will go off-road real fast.
And yes, you can expect many “won’t someone think of the children?” posts.
The Meme Wars, of Course, Are Glorious
- “We don’t need no education” is trending, obviously.
- “I love the poorly educated” is back.
- And somewhere, someone is making a Liberty University vs. Hogwarts comparison.
- One guy wrote: “The Department of Indoctrination is finally getting what it deserves.”
It’s all fun and games until someone’s kid can’t read.
What Comes Next?
If Trump wins in 2024 (again, deep sigh), we could actually see an attempt to dismantle the DOE.
Would it succeed? Maybe not. But the damage could already be done. Cut enough funding, delay enough services, reassign enough duties, and suddenly the “useless” department people complain about is actually… gone.
And if that happens, don’t act surprised when states like Texas make the Bible their primary science textbook. Or when families in rural areas find themselves googling “How to homeschool without WiFi.”
Final Thoughts from Someone Who Took the SATs Twice
Do I think the Department of Education is perfect? LOL. No.
Do I think it’s bloated and needs reform? Absolutely.
Do I think torching it with a flamethrower because someone on Twitter called it “woke” is a good idea? Hard pass.
Here’s what I do know: without federal oversight, it’s the kids with the fewest resources who lose.
And unless we’re planning to teach algebra through memes and Reddit threads, maybe we should slow down before handing over the keys to the nation’s education system like it’s a garage sale.
Because trust me—no one wants to take the GED in a country where “Yeet” is a vocabulary word.