『Headline: "Education Chief McMahon Continues Controversial Crusade to Dismantle the Department of Education"』のカバーアート

Headline: "Education Chief McMahon Continues Controversial Crusade to Dismantle the Department of Education"

Headline: "Education Chief McMahon Continues Controversial Crusade to Dismantle the Department of Education"

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

このコンテンツについて

Secretary of Education Linda McMahon continues her controversial mission to dismantle the Department of Education, following President Trump's executive order signed earlier this year. On May 14, 2025, McMahon appeared on PragerU to explain her vision for transforming American education by reducing federal oversight and returning control to states and parents.

"Every year scores and performance goes down. We're clearly not doing something right," McMahon stated during the interview. "If we want to be the number one country in the world, we have to raise this bar. Our children have to be better educated."

The Secretary's recent actions have generated significant controversy. On May 5, McMahon sent a letter to Harvard University, claiming the institution was violating federal law and informing them they would no longer receive federal grants. This letter became the subject of misinformation when a marked-up version with spelling and grammar corrections circulated on social media, falsely attributed to Harvard. Fact-checkers confirmed this edited version originated from a user on X, not from the university.

Earlier this month, McMahon released a statement supporting President Trump's FY 2026 "Skinny Budget," which outlines major consolidations within the education system. The plan would combine 18 competitive and formula K-12 grant programs and seven Individuals with Disabilities Act programs into just two simplified funding streams.

"President Trump's proposed budget puts students and parents above the bureaucracy," McMahon said. "It reflects the historic mandate I have been given to serve as the final Secretary of Education."

In late March, McMahon abruptly canceled more than $1 billion in remaining pandemic relief funding by informing states that their deadline to spend COVID relief money had passed. She notified state education chiefs that all remaining funds had to be spent by 5 p.m. that same day, canceling previously granted extensions and stating that additional time "was not justified."

The Education Department has already eliminated roughly half of its workforce, including over 100 union employees from the Institute of Education Sciences, which oversees the National Assessment of Educational Progress that tracks K-12 student achievement.

While defending these massive cuts, McMahon acknowledged that closing the Department requires congressional approval and expressed her desire to work with lawmakers. "I want to have them partner with us so that they understand that what we really want to provide for the states are best practices and tools," she explained, adding that when the Department no longer exists, "there are other agencies that will uphold and provide" essential functions.

Critics, including NEA President Becky Pringle, have compared McMahon to former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, arguing that her agenda threatens to defund public education and divert resources to private schools.

Headline: "Education Chief McMahon Continues Controversial Crusade to Dismantle the Department of Education"に寄せられたリスナーの声

カスタマーレビュー:以下のタブを選択することで、他のサイトのレビューをご覧になれます。