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Trump asks Supreme Court to allow Education Department purge

Greg Stohr and Zoe Tillman, Bloomberg News on

Published in News & Features

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump asked the U.S. Supreme Court to let him resume dismantling the Department of Education, seeking to lift a lower court order that requires the reinstatement of as many as 1,400 workers.

The emergency request Friday challenges a federal district judge’s conclusion that Trump’s effort to shut down the department would leave it unable to perform duties required under U.S. law, including managing federal student loans, aiding state education programs and enforcing civil rights law.

“The Constitution vests the executive branch, not district courts, with the authority to make judgments about how many employees are needed to carry out an agency’s statutory functions, and whom they should be,” U.S. Solicitor General D. John Sauer said in the filing. Sauer is the administration’s top courtroom advocate.

The filing marks the 17th time since Trump’s inauguration that his administration has asked the Supreme Court for help as he seeks to implement a far-reaching agenda through executive orders and other unilateral steps. That number of requests far outpaces any of his predecessors.

It’s the first Supreme Court clash to squarely address Trump’s authority to dismantle entities created by Congress, including the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the U.S. Agency for International Development and the U.S. Institute of Peace.

Education Secretary Linda McMahon announced March 11 that the department was cutting half its staff through a reduction in force. Trump followed with a March 20 executive order that said McMahon should “to the maximum extent appropriate and permitted by law, take all necessary steps to facilitate the closure of the Department of Education.”

 

The effort is being challenged in two lawsuits, one brought primarily by states led by Democrats and the other filed by several Massachusetts public school systems and unions.

U.S. District Judge Myong Joun in Boston ruled in May that the personnel cuts would “likely cripple the department.” He said the challengers were likely to succeed in showing that Trump lacked power to effectively dissolve the department by getting rid of its employees, closing regional offices and moving programs to other federal agencies.

“A department without enough employees to perform statutorily mandated functions is not a department at all,” Joun wrote. “This court cannot be asked to cover its eyes while the department’s employees are continuously fired and units are transferred out until the department becomes a shell of itself.”

The Boston-based 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Wednesday refused to block Joun’s ruling, paving the way for Trump’s Supreme Court filing.


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