
Linda McMahon Shakes Up Education Landscape as Controversial Education Secretary
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McMahon was confirmed as Education Secretary on March 3, 2025, by a Senate vote of 51-45. Since then, she has been at the center of controversy regarding the future of the Department of Education. McMahon has publicly backed President Trump's push to dismantle the department, stating that "it's not working."
Last week, on May 7, 2025, McMahon made waves with a scathing letter to Harvard University, calling the institution a "mockery" and threatening to cut off all federal grant funding. This move has drawn significant attention from education experts who have been analyzing the implications of her stance.
McMahon's approach to leadership appears consistent with her previous tenure at the Small Business Administration, where she set high expectations. Former colleagues remember her commanding attention in meetings and establishing clear boundaries of trust with her team.
While McMahon no longer leads the SBA, the agency recently announced a major reorganization on March 21, 2025, pursuant to Executive Order 14210. The restructuring plan will reduce the SBA workforce by 43%, eliminating what the agency described as "the expansive social policy agenda of the prior Administration" and returning to pre-pandemic staffing levels.
The SBA reorganization focuses on promoting business formation, prioritizing risk management and fraud prevention, expanding disaster response support, eliminating redundant pandemic-era positions, ensuring 30% of the agency is field-based, promoting veteran businesses and American manufacturing, and preserving accountability offices.
McMahon's background includes significant private sector experience as a business mogul associated with WWE (World Wrestling Entertainment) before entering government service. During her SBA tenure from 2017 to 2019, she was noted for her willingness to learn from subject-matter experts and her efforts to expand educational opportunities for women entrepreneurs by helping take brick-and-mortar programs online.
After leaving the SBA in April 2019, McMahon served as chairwoman of America First Action, a pro-Trump Super PAC, before being nominated to her current role as Education Secretary in November 2024.
Her confirmation hearing for the Education Secretary position occurred on February 13, 2025, amid aggressive efforts from the Trump administration to shrink the Education Department's footprint, with dozens of employees placed on administrative leave and reports of an executive order being prepared to begin dismantling the 45-year-old agency.