EducationU.S.A.

Would Trump have the ability to close the Department of Education?

President elect Donald Trump pledge to shutdown the Department of Education while he was campaigning

Washington, D.C. – Now that the nation’s 45th president has been reselected to serve again as the 47th president of the United States. What will be the first thing on Trump’s presidential agenda?

While campaigning Trump did mention that he wanted to get rid of the Department of Education. While at a rally in Wisconsin during September, Trump has been quoted by CNN as saying, “We will drain the government education swamp and stop the abuse of your taxpayer dollars to indoctrinate America’s youth with all sorts of things that you don’t want to have our youth hearing.”

Trump is unable to just shutdown the Department of Education on his own. It is much more complicated than what he is communicating for it to be. In order for him to do so, he would need full cooperation by Congress, and he is unlikely to receive such support.

The Department of Education has been ranked by U.S. News & World Reports as 12th in their listing of the Most Well-Developed Public Education Systems (3rd in best overall countries). In 1979, President Jimmy Carter established the Department of Education as promised to educators during this campaign for president.

Miles J. Edwards

Founder & Creative Chief Architect, Art, Trade & Lifestyle Media Group Miles J. is an award-winning professional writer, filmmaker, and journalist with three decades of deep-rooted expertise in media production and investigative storytelling. As the founder and Creative Chief Architect of Art, Trade & Lifestyle Media Group, he leads editorial strategy and high-fidelity content development across expanding regional bureaus, focusing on the critical intersections of public policy, emerging technology, and urban infrastructure. A native of the California Bay Area and a long-time resident and community advocate in metro Atlanta, Miles J. brings a unique, bi-coastal perspective to modern journalism. His current editorial work includes building comprehensive policy blueprints for state gubernatorial races and producing forward-looking docuseries that examine municipal development, transit innovations, and workforce evolution. Committed to lifelong learning and cutting-edge industry standards, he actively couples traditional journalistic integrity with modern marketing management frameworks to shape the future of digital news architecture. Expertise: Public Policy, Emerging AI Technologies, Transit Infrastructure, Urban Development, Media Architecture. Credentials & Affiliations: Member of the Atlanta Media Press Core, Project Callisto Search Quality Evaluator.

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