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Saturday, June 6, 2026

THE ART OF LOVING THE POORLY EDUCATED: TRUMP'S MASTER CLASS IN BUDGET DEMOLITION

 

THE ART OF LOVING THE POORLY EDUCATED

TRUMP'S MASTER CLASS IN BUDGET DEMOLITION

How to dismantle a century of public education funding in three easy steps — and call it freedom

There's a famous moment from a 2016 Nevada caucus victory speech where Donald Trump looked out at his crowd and declared, with genuine warmth, "I love the poorly educated!" At the time, pundits laughed it off as an unscripted gaffe. Eight years later, with the House Appropriations Subcommittee quietly advancing a FY 2027 education budget that reads like a demolition permit, it's worth asking: what if he actually meant it as a governing philosophy?

Because if you wanted to engineer a generation of poorly educated Americans with surgical precision, you'd be hard-pressed to design a better blueprint than the one currently moving through Washington.

The Numbers: A Masterpiece of Selective Generosity

Let's start with the House Appropriations Subcommittee's FY 2027 proposal, which arrived this week with the energy of a landlord sliding an eviction notice under the door at 2 a.m.

The headline cuts are breathtaking in their specificity — they don't slash randomly. They cut exactly where it hurts most:

  • Title I — the foundational formula funding that sends dollars to high-poverty schools — gets chopped by $1.6 to $1.9 billion, a 9–12% reduction, landing at $16.8 billion. This is notably worse than even the White House's own proposal, which had the decency to keep Title I flat.
  • Title II (Teacher Professional Development)zeroed out entirely.
  • Title III (English Language Acquisition)also zeroed out entirely.
  • And in a move that has the audacity of a bank repossessing your car while you're still making payments, the bill rescinds $1.6 billion in Title II funds Congress already approved for FY 2026 — money school districts have already budgeted for, already planned around, and are expecting to receive this October.

That last maneuver — the so-called "Title II Clawback" — deserves a moment of stunned appreciation. It's not just cutting future funding. It's reaching back in time to un-approve money that was already approved. It's the legislative equivalent of a restaurant charging you for a meal, watching you eat it, and then sending someone to your table to retrieve the calories.

Where the Money Does Flow

To be scrupulously fair, the bill isn't entirely a scorched-earth exercise. Some programs did receive increases:

ProgramChange
Charter Schools+$60 million
Special Education (IDEA)+$46 million
Impact Aid, REAP, Title IV-A+$5 million each

Notice the pattern? The programs serving children in existing public schools — the ones teaching English to immigrant kids, training their teachers, and funding after-school programs — get eliminated. The programs that route dollars away from traditional public schools get a raise. This is not an accident. This is the entire point.

The Bigger Picture: This Isn't Trimming — It's Demolition

To understand why this budget proposal feels different from ordinary partisan budget fights, you have to zoom out and look at the second-term strategy as a whole. Because what's happening now is not the familiar Washington ritual of proposing cuts that Congress quietly restores. This time, the administration is executing a structural dismantling that doesn't need Congress to succeed.

The MEGA Grant: Freedom With an Asterisk

The White House's own FY 2027 request proposes collapsing 17 separate K-12 federal programs into a single $2 billion "Make Education Great Again" (MEGA) block grant. The pitch is elegant: states get the money, states get the freedom, Washington gets out of the way.

What the pitch omits is that those 17 programs currently represent far more than $2 billion in funding. So "consolidation" is doing a lot of heavy lifting as a euphemism for "significant net cut with a catchy acronym."

States receive the MEGA grant with almost no federal strings attached — except two: spend 25% on literacy instruction, spend 25% on math. Everything else — teacher training, after-school programs, student enrichment, equity initiatives — is entirely at the state's discretion. In states with robust education budgets and political will, this might work fine. In states that are already underfunding public education? The federal safety net simply... disappears.

The Department of Education: A Building in Search of a Purpose

The longer game here is the complete elimination of the Department of Education — a goal that has migrated from bumper sticker to active executive strategy. Since Trump's March 20, 2025 executive order directing Secretary Linda McMahon to facilitate the department's closure, the deconstruction has been methodical:

  • Nearly half the department's staff has been fired or phased out.
  • The $1.7 trillion student loan and Pell Grant portfolio is being migrated to the Department of the Treasury.
  • Career and Technical Education programs and $1.5 billion in funding are being transferred to the Department of Labor.
  • The Office for Civil Rights (OCR) — which investigates Title IX violations, racial discrimination, and disability rights in schools — has been reduced by roughly 90% of its personnel, effectively shutting down federal civil rights enforcement in education without technically shutting it down.
  • Nearly $900 million in federal education research contracts were revoked, meaning the government has also quietly eliminated its ability to measure the damage being done.

That last point is worth sitting with. They didn't just cut the programs. They cut the instruments that measure whether the programs were working. It's the policy equivalent of removing the speedometer from a car that's already lost its brakes.

The Private School Pivot: Starving the Village to Feed the Manor

Running parallel to the public school defunding is an aggressive, well-funded pivot toward private, charter, parochial, and homeschool options — the centerpiece of which is the Educational Choice for Children Act (ECCA), embedded in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

The mechanism is clever. Rather than writing federal voucher checks directly — which would be politically and legally messy — the program allows taxpayers and corporations to redirect up to $1,700 annually of what they'd otherwise owe in federal taxes. That money flows to state-authorized Scholarship-Granting Organizations (SGOs), which distribute it as scholarships for private tuition, textbooks, and homeschooling materials. It's a voucher program that technically isn't a voucher program, which is exactly the kind of creative accounting that would get a public school district audited.

The ideological argument driving this pivot rests on four pillars:

  1. Cultural Capture — Public schools have been "captured" by left-wing ideology and are pushing agendas on race, gender, and history.
  2. Market Competition — If public schools have to compete for students, they'll improve.
  3. Bureaucratic Bloat — Public school dollars are eaten by administrators before reaching classrooms.
  4. Parental Sovereignty — Parents, not the state, should control their children's education.

These are not entirely unreasonable arguments in isolation. The problem is the execution. Early data from states with universal voucher programs shows that the majority of families using these scholarships already had their children in private schools. The program isn't rescuing poor kids from failing schools. It's providing a taxpayer-funded tuition discount for families who were already paying private school tuition. It's welfare for the wealthy, dressed up in the language of liberation.

Meanwhile, private schools receiving these public dollars are exempt from IDEA — meaning students with disabilities who follow a voucher into a private school effectively waive their federal right to specialized services like speech therapy or behavioral support. The children with the greatest needs get left behind in the increasingly underfunded public system. The irony of a "pro-family" movement building a policy architecture that most disadvantages the most vulnerable families is apparently lost on no one in particular.

The Legal Chaos: When Policy Meets Reality

Tucked into the House bill, almost as an afterthought, are the culture-war policy riders that have become standard accessories in Republican budget proposals:

  • All federal education funds are threatened for any school that allows transgender girls in female athletic programs.
  • All federal education funds are threatened for any school that "withholds or conceals" information about a student's gender identity from parents.

The second provision creates an immediate, spectacular legal collision. States like California have explicit statutory protections for LGBTQ+ students. State attorneys general would find themselves legally obligated to comply with state civil rights law and federal funding mandates that directly contradict it — simultaneously. The Supreme Court's Bostock v. Clayton County ruling, which extended Title VII protections to LGBTQ+ individuals, adds another layer of constitutional complexity that the bill's drafters appear to have addressed by simply not mentioning it.

With the OCR operating at 10% capacity, there's also no federal enforcement mechanism to actually implement these provisions consistently — meaning the primary effect is not uniform policy, but selective legal terror: districts in red states comply, districts in blue states refuse, and the resulting patchwork of litigation drags through federal courts for years while children wait.

What Happens Next: The Opening Salvo

Before local district superintendents start drafting their pink slips, a critical reality check: this is a starting position, not a final outcome.

The House bill passed the subcommittee on a strict party-line vote. It now heads to a full committee markup. The Senate has not yet released its version, and historical precedent is clear — the Senate will reject the steepest cuts, forcing a bipartisan compromise that will restore significant funding before anything reaches the President's desk.

The more consequential story isn't this specific bill. It's the administrative dismantling that doesn't require a bill at all — the staff layoffs, the program transfers, the research contract cancellations, the OCR hollowing. Those are happening right now, regardless of what Congress does with appropriations.

The Uncomfortable Synthesis

Here's what makes this moment genuinely different from ordinary partisan budget fights: the strategy is coherent. Whether you agree with it or find it alarming, the Trump administration's education agenda has an internal logic that its first term largely lacked.

The goal is not to reform public education. The goal is to make the federal government structurally irrelevant to public education — to transfer authority to states, dollars to private options, and accountability to no one in particular. The Department of Education building in Washington will still stand. The lights will still be on. But the agency will have been rendered functionally obsolete through a thousand small cuts, transfers, and executive orders — a ghost ship, still sailing, with no crew and nowhere to go.

Whether that constitutes freedom or abandonment depends almost entirely on which zip code you were born into — which, come to think of it, is exactly the kind of equity question that the administration just eliminated the research infrastructure to answer.

Donald Trump once said he loved the poorly educated. The FY 2027 education budget is, if nothing else, a very thorough love letter.


Sources & Citations

🏛️ FY 2027 House Appropriations Budget Cuts

The core funding cuts — Title I reduction, Title II and Title III elimination, and the Title II clawback — are documented by education policy organizations and trade press that covered the subcommittee markup directly.


📄 FY 2027 White House "Skinny" Budget & the MEGA Grant


🏗️ Department of Education Dismantling & Staff Layoffs


⚠️ A Note on Additional Claims

Several specific figures cited in the article — including the 90% OCR staffing reduction, the $900M research contract revocations, the ECCA/One Big Beautiful Bill scholarship tax credit details, and the Bostock v. Clayton County legal analysis — are drawn from the background research provided in the original brief. For full primary sourcing on those specific claims, the following additional searches are recommended:

  • OCR staffing cuts: Search "Office for Civil Rights staffing cuts 2025 2026" on ProPublica or the Washington Post
  • $900M research contracts: Search "Department of Education research contracts revoked 2025" on NPR Education or Chalkbeat
  • ECCA / One Big Beautiful Bill: Search "Educational Choice for Children Act One Big Beautiful Bill" on Congress.gov or Tax Foundation
  • Bostock ruling & Title IX: 🔗 https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/19pdf/17-1618_hfci.pdf

All links verified as of June 2026. Education policy is moving fast — bookmark Ed Week, Chalkbeat, and the NEA's news feed for real-time updates as the Senate budget process unfolds.