Trump signs order to shut down Education Department in front of students sitting at desks

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President Donald Trump signed an executive order to begin eliminating the US Education Department in front of a dozen students sitting at staged desks.

Trump delivered remarks on why he is ‘eliminating the federal Department of Education once and for all’ and then walked past more than a dozen young children.

‘Good looking people here,’ he said, gesturing at the students, and patted one of them on the shoulder.

Trump then asked the students sitting at both sides of his desk if he should do it, and some of them nodded and smiled.

President Donald Trump holds an executive order after signing it in the East Room of the White House (Picture: Getty Images)

The president took a seat and joked if anyone in the East Room of the White House was superstitious. He used his usual, thick black marker to sign his name on the document, and the students signed replica documents on their desks simultaneously.

Trump held up the document and smiled widely, and the students followed suit. One of the older students, whom Trump had touched on the shoulder, had signed his with a heart.

Most of the students smiled, but one young boy was pictured yawning during the dedicated event on Thursday afternoon.

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Speaking at a podium moments earlier, Trump said, ‘We’re going to shut it down and shut it down as quickly as possible.’

A child yawns during the signing of an executive order to shut down the Department of Education by President Donald Trump (Picture: Reuters)

‘We want to return our students to the states. Governors are so happy about this, they want education to come back to them,’ he said.

His order directs Education Secretary Linda McMahon to start dismantling the department.

But critical programs it has been overseeing will be taken over by federal departments, including Pell Grants federal student loan payments, Title I funding for low-income schools and money for students with disabilities.

‘They’re going to be preserved in full and redistributed to various other agencies and departments that will take very good care of them,’ Trump said.

President Donald Trump signs an executive order in the East Room of the White house in Washington, DC, to start dismantling the Department of Education (Picture: Getty Images)

Trump thanked McMahon for ‘presiding over something that’s so important’.

‘Hopefully, you won’t be there for too long,’ he said. ‘But we’re going to find something else for you, Linda.’

Trump acted on his campaign promise to dismantle the department which he has called wasteful, and send education work back to the states.

His administration had already cut the department’s workforce in half.

President Donald Trump shows his signature after signing an executive order to begin the process of dismantling the Department of Education (Picture: EPA)

The Education Department was created in 1979 when Democratic then-President Jimmy Carter signed legislation to form it as a Cabinet-level agency. In doing so, Carter fulfilled a campaign promise to the National Education Association, which was the nation’s biggest teachers’ union.

Republican presidents have sought to get rid of it since the 1980s, and many parents who were against the coronavirus pandemic shutdown and other federally dictated school policies got behind it.

‘That was 45 years in the making,’ Trump said.

Trump is the first modern president to move to shutter a federal department.

President Donald Trump arrives to speak at an education event and executive order signing in the East Room of the White House (Picture: AP)

Completely doing away with the department requires congressional approval.

The union representing the Education Department, the American Federation of Government Employees, stated it was ‘outraged’ at Trump’s directive.

And the nonprofit legal organization Democracy Forward vowed to challenge the order.

‘We will be filing litigation against this action and will use every legal tool to ensure that the rights of students, teachers, and families are fully protected,’ stated the organization’s CEO, Skye Perryman.

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