
"Escalating Tensions: Education Secretary Cuts Harvard Grants, Dismantling Department"
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The letter alleged that Harvard has "engaged in a systemic pattern of violating federal law" and accused the university of failing to comply with the Supreme Court's 2023 decision that overturned race-based affirmative action in admissions. McMahon's letter included various criticisms, from Harvard's new introductory math course, which she called an "embarrassing 'remedial math' program," to former President Claudine Gay's resignation amid plagiarism allegations, and claims that the Harvard Law Review discriminated against white authors.
This move represents the latest development in McMahon's controversial tenure as what she herself has described as "the last Secretary of Education." President Trump appointed McMahon with the explicit goal of dismantling the Department of Education, a mission formalized through an executive order signed on March 20, 2025.
McMahon has been actively implementing significant policy changes. In late March, she abruptly informed states that their time to spend COVID relief funds had immediately ended, canceling previously granted extensions. The decision primarily affected funds schools had budgeted but not yet spent from the approximately $130 billion in relief approved in March 2021.
More recently, on May 7, McMahon faced criticism from members of Congress for discontinuing approximately $1 billion in mental health grants intended to prevent school shootings. These grants, authorized by the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, supported hundreds of school districts across 49 states. Representatives Lucy McBath, Terri Sewell, and Salud Carbajal demanded that these grants be immediately reinstated.
On May 2, McMahon released a statement supporting President Trump's Fiscal Year 2026 "Skinny Budget," which she said "puts students and parents above the bureaucracy" and reflects her mandate as "the final Secretary of Education." The budget consolidates multiple grant programs into simplified funding streams while maintaining support for low-income families and special education students.
McMahon has defended her approach by arguing that education should be tailored to communities with greater parental involvement and local control. "The president made very clear that Pell grants, funding for students with special needs, all of those would continue," McMahon stated in March, "but he does believe that we'll be able to operate more efficiently by governors and state departments of education and superintendents and parents can certainly have more input into the education of their students."
Before her current role, McMahon led the Small Business Administration during President Trump's first term from 2017 to 2019. She was confirmed as Education Secretary on March 3, 2025.