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    Home » Judge blocks Trump administration from attempting to dismantle Department of Education
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    Judge blocks Trump administration from attempting to dismantle Department of Education

    adminBy adminMay 23, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read0 Views
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    A federal judge in Boston has blocked the Trump administration from attempting to dismantle the Department of Education.

    U.S. District Judge Myong Joun issued a preliminary injunction Thursday that bars the Trump administration from firing half the Department of Education’s workforce.

    The order from Judge Joun — a Biden appointee — also prohibits the Department of Education from transferring the management of federal student loans to the Small Business Administration.

    The decision marks the first time a federal judge has determined the Trump administration’s sweeping changes to the Department of Education are unlawful.

    For now, the order puts a stop to the Trump administration’s effort to fire more than 2,000 Department of Education employees, transfer federal student loan obligations, and otherwise implement the president’s March 20 executive order to “take all necessary steps to facilitate the closure of the Department of Education.”

    Madi Biedermann, Department of Education deputy assistant secretary for communications, said the agency’s reduction-in-force was lawful and called Joun a far-left judge who “overstepped” his authority.

    “President Trump and the Senate-confirmed Secretary of Education clearly have the authority to make decisions about agency reorganization efforts, not an unelected Judge with a political axe to grind,” Biedermann wrote in a statement to ABC News. “This ruling is not in the best interest of American students or families. We will immediately challenge this on an emergency basis.”

    A group that includes several state attorneys general, schools, and nonprofits challenged Trump’s efforts to reduce the size of the Department of Education last month, arguing the president cannot unilaterally shut down a federal department created by Congress.

    Lawyers for the Trump administration argued that the efforts to reduce the Department of Education would make it more efficient, and were separate from Trump’s vow to abolish the department.

    The Department of Education building in Washington, March 24, 2025.

    Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

    Judge Joun was unconvinced. His decision offered a blistering assessment of the Trump administration’s claim that recent changes to the Department of Education are to improve efficiency, rather than carry out Trump’s vow to abolish the Department outright.

    “The idea that Defendants’ actions are merely a ‘reorganization’ is plainly not true,” he wrote.

    The changes imposed by Trump and Education Secretary Linda McMahon, Judge Joun wrote, “effectively impossible for the Department to carry out its statutorily mandated functions.”

    Though Trump has the authority to remove executive officers, the president does not have the power to dismantle entire federal departments outright, he wrote. He also cast doubt on the claim that the legislative effort to abolish the Department of Education was separate from his executive actions.

    “Not only is there no evidence that Defendants are pursuing a ‘legislative goal’ or otherwise working with Congress to reach a resolution, but there is also no evidence that the RIF has actually made the Department more efficient. Rather, the record is replete with evidence of the opposite,” the judge wrote, referring to the “reduction in force” firings.

    “Consolidated Plaintiffs have demonstrated that the Department will not be able to carry out its statutory functions — and in some cases, is already unable to do so — and Defendants have proffered no evidence to the contrary,” he wrote.

    “Today’s order means that the Trump administration’s disastrous mass firings of career civil servants are blocked while this wildly disruptive and unlawful agency action is litigated,” said Skye Perryman, president and CEO of Democracy Forward, which represented several of the plaintiffs. “Instead of taking a wrecking ball to our nation’s best values and our chance at a better future, this administration should be focused on how to improve education and opportunities for all.”

    “Today, the court rightly rejected one of the administration’s very first illegal, and consequential, acts: abolishing the federal role in education,” American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten said of the ruling. “The vast majority of Americans and states like Massachusetts, with the highest NAEP scores, want to keep the education department because it ensures all kids, not just some, can get a shot at a better life.”

    The injunction comes as Education Secretary Linda McMahon resumed calls to downsize the department during the agency’s fiscal year 2026 budget hearing on Capitol Hill. McMahon defended President Trump’s $12 billion dollar cut to the department in his skinny budget proposal and McMahon stressed her “final mission” to uncreate the agency must be done in a “lawful fashion.”

    The injunction is good news for some former Department of Education employees who spoke to ABC News.

    Kishia Kegler, one of hundreds of fired civil servants whose official separation starts in June, told ABC News she is committed to returning as appeals play out.

    “Students and families need the services that the Department of Education provides,” Kegler said in a statement. “It’s been broken since this unlawful takeover and dismantling began. I’m still committed to this work.”



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