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Bill to Shut U.S. Education Department Introduced in Congress
The New American ^ | 02.08.47 | Alex Newman

Posted on 06/04/2017 6:28:43 PM PDT by Coleus

Legislation to shut down the controversial and unconstitutional U.S. Department of Education was introduced in Congress this week by Representative Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), a leading constitutional conservative. The bill, H.R. 899, would help President Donald Trump follow through on his campaign statements suggesting a desire to abolish the department as well as the Obama-backed “Common Core” school standards. The legislation was introduced on the same day U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos was confirmed by the Senate.

If and when the bill is passed into law, the one-sentence measure would give the powerful U.S. Education Department until the end of 2018 to wind down its operations. What would happen then with the dizzying array of unconstitutional federal “education” programs, statutes, and decrees was not immediately clear. But sources on Capitol Hill said the focus was on getting the ball rolling, with the details to be nailed down later.

The bill is literally only one sentence long, at least for now. “The Department of Education shall terminate on December 31, 2018,” reads the text of the legislation. The bill was introduced with a good number of co-sponsors, all of them among the more liberty-minded wing of the Republican Party who take their oath to the U.S. Constitution seriously. Among the original co-sponsors are congressmen Justin Amash (R-Mich.), Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.), Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah), Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), Jody Hice (R-Ga.), Walter Jones (R-N.C.), and Raul Labrador (R-Idaho). It was referred to the House Committee on Education and the Workforce.

In a February 7 statement released in conjunction with the bill, Congressman Massie, the lead sponsor, eloquently and succinctly explained why the U.S. Education Department needed to be shuttered. “Neither Congress nor the President, through his appointees, has the constitutional authority to dictate how and what our children must learn,” explained Massie, who has an almost perfect score on the “Freedom Index” for voting constitutionally during his first two terms in Congress. In other words, the Constitution does not authorize federal education meddling, and therefore, it needs to stop.

There are also practical reasons why shutting down the department is good policy. “Unelected bureaucrats in Washington, D.C. should not be in charge of our children’s intellectual and moral development,” Massie observed. “States and local communities are best positioned to shape curricula that meet the needs of their students. Schools should be accountable. Parents have the right to choose the most appropriate educational opportunity for their children, including home school, public school, or private school.”

Congressman Walter Jones, another one of the more Constitution-friendly members of Congress, also pointed out that the federal government has no legitimate business meddling in education. “For years, I have advocated returning education policy to where it belongs — the state and local level,” explained the conservative lawmaker from North Carolina. “D.C. bureaucrats cannot begin to understand the needs of schools and its students on an individual basis. It is time that we get the feds out of the classroom, and terminate the Department of Education.”

Yet another liberty-minded lawmaker, Representative Raul Labrador of Idaho, touted the benefits of local control over education policy. “I’ve always been a proponent of empowering parents, teachers and local school boards who best know our children and their needs,” said the congressman. “Eliminating the U.S. Department of Education is the most important step we in Congress can take in returning decision making to the local level.”

Freshman Congressman Andy Biggs of Arizona, meanwhile, noted that the federal education bureaucracy played a massive role in imposing the current educational disaster afflicting America's children. “Education of our students should lie primarily with parents, teachers, and state and local officials who know how to meet their individual needs best,” he explained. “Since its inception, the Department of Education has grown into an unrecognizable federal beast, and its policies have helped foster Common Core across the country. It is time the one-size-fits-all approach by the federal government is ended and authority is returned to the local level.”

In a press release announcing the bill, the lawmakers behind the effort noted that the U.S. Department of Education began operations in 1980. But it was hardly uncontroversial. In fact, the next year, in an address to the nation on his program for economic recovery, President Ronald Reagan — an icon among GOP voters and Americans generally — touted his desire to shut down the unconstitutional bureaucracy altogether.  As the third step in his proposed plan, President Reagan called for shutting down two cabinet departments — education and energy. Some of the activities of the departments, he said, perhaps thinking of the nuclear arsenal overseen by the Energy Department, for example, would continue independently or in other parts of government. But the time had come for serious action to rein in big government.  

“There's only one way to shrink the size and cost of big government, and that is by eliminating agencies that are not needed and are getting in the way of a solution,” Reagan said. “Now, we don't need an Energy Department to solve our basic energy problem. As long as we let the forces of the marketplace work without undue interference, the ingenuity of consumers, business, producers, and inventors will do that for us.”

“Similarly, education is the principal responsibility of local school systems, teachers, parents, citizen boards, and State governments,” the popular president continued in his speech. “By eliminating the Department of Education less than 2 years after it was created, we cannot only reduce the budget but ensure that local needs and preferences, rather than the wishes of Washington, determine the education of our children.”

Unfortunately for America and the Constitution, the U.S. Education Department continued to exist, and to accumulate more and more power, money, and control over schools nationwide — squandering hundreds of billions of dollars while making education worse. Since the Reagan administration, Republicans at all levels of government have paid lip-service to shutting down the unconstitutional bureaucracy. But they now control the White House and both houses of Congress, giving the GOP and conservative Americans a historic opportunity to follow through.

And indeed, Trump has long touted the idea of shutting down the whole operation. “A lot of people believe the Department of Education should just be eliminated — get rid of it,” Trump said in one of many similar statements on the campaign trail. “If we don't eliminate it completely, we certainly need to cut its power and reach.” The solution, he suggested, would be to go back to what the Constitution explicitly requires — absolutely no federal role in education.

“Education has to be run locally,” Trump also said. “Common Core, No Child Left Behind, and Race to the Top are all programs that take decisions away from parents and local school boards. These programs allow the progressives in the Department of Education to indoctrinate, not educate, our kids. What they are doing does not fit the American model of governance. I am totally against these programs and the Department of Education. It’s a disaster. We cannot continue to fail our children — the very future of this nation.”

In separate comments, asked what departments he would cut, Trump again directly aimed at the unconstitutional schools bureaucracy. “I may cut Department of Education,” he explained. “Common Core is a very bad thing. I think that it should be local education.” He then blasted establishment globalist Jeb Bush and other Big Government Republican candidates, who he said “want children to be educated by Washington, D.C. bureaucrats.” More than a few other GOP presidential candidates also called for shutting the whole thing down.   

Of course, despite the lack of constitutional authority to do so, even before the U.S. Department of Education was officially established during President Jimmy Carter’s administration, the federal government had already started meddling in education. In fact, for decades, the unconstitutional U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, created without Congress by an out-of-control President Dwight Eisenhower, was quietly expanding its influence over schooling across America under various guises.

Since then, Congress has continued to pass massive and completely unconstitutional education schemes purporting to usurp power over education that was specifically reserved to the states and the people under the Constitution’s Tenth Amendment. Most recently, Democrats and establishment Republicans passed the “Every Student Succeeds Act” — a gargantuan educational monstrosity celebrated by Obama as a “Christmas miracle” — usurping even more unconstitutional powers under the demonstrably fraudulent guise of returning power to the states. The bill even funds the creation of “full-service community schools” that would all but replace parents.      

Advocates of shutting down the Education Department and restoring local control celebrated the new bill, but called for a few amendments to ensure that the federal tentacles would not continue to exert influence over schools. Sheri Few, president of the national grassroots group United States Parents Involved in Education (USPIE), noted that her organization's mission is actually to end the U.S. Department of Education and all federal mandates relating to education. “So, we are very pleased to learn of Rep. Massie’s bill and we are grateful to bill sponsors for taking the lead on this important issue,” Few said in a written statement.

“However, if we really want the feds out of the education business, we should advocate that ALL federal education programs be closed,” Few continued. “For example, closing USED without eliminating the federally funded testing consortia, leaves the potential for the consortia (SBAC and PARCC) to remain in their role as an institutional mechanism that perpetuates Common Core and the same re-branded national standards. Therefore, any effort to shut down USED must include a sunset of the federal testing consortia.”

The grassroots education group also recommended an amendment to the legislation that would require Education Secretary DeVos to present the department's closure plan to Congress “for transparency and approval,” Few said. With state chapters across America, the group has been working hard to restore local control of education, in part by advocating an end to the U.S Education Department. The activists will continue working toward that mission in the months ahead. (This writer volunteers on the group's advisory board).   

Whether Education Secretary DeVos will get onboard with the agenda pushed by the Republican lawmakers and even President Trump on the campaign trail remains to be seen. However, shortly after Trump selected her, a statement was released indicating that DeVos planned to work on “higher national standards.” Critics expressed serious concern. While she quickly released a statement distancing herself from the politically toxic Common Core scheme imposed on America with bribes and bullying from Obama's Education Department, DeVos has not publicly called for abolishing the unconstitutional agency she now leads.  

The billionaire “school choice” advocate, who was viciously opposed by teachers’ unions and the hysterical far-left, along with some opposition on the right, was narrowly confirmed in a historic 51-50 Senate vote on February 7. Vice President Mike Pence cast the deciding vote to break the tie after two liberal Republicans broke ranks and sided with Democrats. But if conservatives wanting to abolish the U.S. Department of Education get their way, DeVos may soon be out of a job anyway. And for schoolchildren, the Constitution, and real school choice, that would be excellent news.  Alex Newman is co-author of Crimes of the Educators, and a correspondent for The New American, covering economics, education, politics, and more. Follow him on Twitter @ALEXNEWMAN_JOU. He can be reached at: anewman@thenewamerican.com


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; Politics/Elections; US: Arizona; US: Idaho; US: North Carolina
KEYWORDS: alexnewman; devos; doe; education; hr899; tna; trump
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To: ArtDodger

I don’t have any sympathy for those in make work gov-co jobs.

There are some good people in gov-co who do useful things. The department of education needs to be closed down.


21 posted on 06/04/2017 6:51:55 PM PDT by wally_bert (I didn't get where I am today by selling ice cream tasting of bookends, pumice stone & West Germany)
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To: Jet Jaguar

Oh, no!

Think of the children.

Kids are going to die.

Kids are going to not eat. Kids are not going to learn.

Parents are going to have to be more responsible.

Teachers are going to lose so many of their perks.

Teachers unions will not have much power in Washington.

Think of all the demonstrations. Think of all the marches that will now have to take place. Think of all the marchers that will wear out their shoes from pacing back and forth.

Kids won’t be able to spell, and kids wont learn math, and ids won’t be able to play basketball anymore.

Oh, the humanity!


22 posted on 06/04/2017 6:52:23 PM PDT by adorno (w)
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To: Coleus; ExTexasRedhead

Department of Education

Budget (2016) $68 billion
Staffing: 4,400

It isn’t big, but it does a lot of damage. Out it should go! And do it while Jimmah Cahatah is still above room temperature so he can see one of his “brilliant ideas” go by the wayside before he takes a well-deserved dirt nap.


23 posted on 06/04/2017 6:52:27 PM PDT by vette6387
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To: Coleus
Let's watch how Paul Ryan allows this to wither on the vine through procedural obfuscation and trickery.
24 posted on 06/04/2017 6:52:59 PM PDT by Governor Dinwiddie (My wish list: failover server, six sigma uptime, thanks for https!)
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To: Coleus

Its a good start. Too bad its probably DOA


25 posted on 06/04/2017 6:53:21 PM PDT by Mom MD
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To: Coleus
Since the Reagan administration, Republicans at all levels of government have paid lip-service to shutting down the unconstitutional bureaucracy. But they now control the White House and both houses of Congress, giving the GOP and conservative Americans a historic opportunity to follow through.

Call me a skeptic but again all we will see is lip service from this Congress with leaders like Ryan and McConnell. It will be lucky to see the light of day.

26 posted on 06/04/2017 6:54:12 PM PDT by eartick (Been to the line in the sand and liked it, but ready to go again)
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To: MountainDad

“Another stupid “make work” agency.”

But then aren’t most of them? And the rest of them are inefficient and run by incompetents who see them as simply “jobs programs” for Liberal a$$holes bent on the destruction of the country. Thus far, I see Tillerson (State), Mattis (Defense),
and a couple of others as keepers, but I think unless he shows us something in the next few weeks, AG Sessions should be fired.


27 posted on 06/04/2017 6:55:51 PM PDT by vette6387
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To: ArtDodger

Funny u sad that. I call my Mom 85 a few times a week because she’s housebound and I’m way out of state but my other brothers and sisters do who are very local tend to her in the important things. The one time, I must of been on speaker phone or whatever and my sister says in the background, “but Trump’s shutting down the EPA.” And then another time very recently, in the background I can hear her say, “Danielle (our niece) is going to lose her job because they are shutting down the windmills.”

My response was and with libbies you have to be blunt. That is BS, Trump is cutting the EPA 30% and as far as Danielle, Trump has never mentioned windmills, Exelon shutting down or cutting down their windmill installations is a company decision.”

I’m all for not subsidizing any energy especially ethanol.


28 posted on 06/04/2017 6:56:22 PM PDT by Undecided 2012
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To: Salvation

“Go, Congress. Trump is watching.”

But sadly, Ryan and Mc Scrotumneck are “watching” along with their dickhead buddies in the Congress who are trying against all odds to return “things” to the way they were when RINOs got paid for doing nothing.


29 posted on 06/04/2017 6:57:53 PM PDT by vette6387
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To: Coleus

Yipeee! Shut the socialist monstrosity down.


30 posted on 06/04/2017 6:59:59 PM PDT by liberalism is suicide
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To: Extremely Extreme Extremist

-——You don’t need a bill. You file a lawsuit simply stating that Dept of Ed is unconstitutional and in violation of the 10th Amendment.——

There isn’t any court in the land that would rule in your favor....

I’m not sure what precedence you would use to declare it unconstitutional since it’s a cabinet dept operationing since 1980 signed into law under the peanut farmer and was a dept since 1867 as part of the interior dept.


31 posted on 06/04/2017 7:00:58 PM PDT by Popman
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To: Undecided 2012; ExTexasRedhead

“My response was and with libbies you have to be blunt. That is BS, Trump is cutting the EPA 30% and as far as Danielle, Trump has never mentioned windmills, Exelon shutting down or cutting down their windmill installations is a company decision.”

But federal subsidies are what keeps windmill companies in business. If wind energy was an effective solution that gave us a decent chunk of the electricity we need, it wouldn’t take a federal subsidy (and it’s freeloading attendant bureaucracy) to make it happen.
I look around here where I live and every school and public office building now has covered parking courtesy of the subsidized federal solar panel business. Sure would be nice if I could have the government erect a portico in my yard with solar panels on it giving me a shady place to park my cars, and “free” electricity.


32 posted on 06/04/2017 7:05:18 PM PDT by vette6387
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To: Coleus

It’s way overdue. Jimmy Carter signed it into law in Oct. 1979 in the last gasps of his failed presidency, and it didn’t begin operation until May, 1980. Pres. Reagan should have murdered it in its crib, but he did not have the courage that Pres. Trump has.

Many children would have had the benefit of a decent education without government stupidity getting in the way, such as transgender bathrooms and Common Core weirdness. But alas, that worthless agency has lingered all this time while the education of American children has gone from bad to worse. The only thing that’s gone up is the cost.


33 posted on 06/04/2017 7:06:11 PM PDT by txrefugee
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34 posted on 06/04/2017 7:12:44 PM PDT by DoughtyOne (May the Covfefe be with you...)
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To: adorno
Think of all the demonstrations. Think of all the marches that will now have to take place. Think of all the marchers that will wear out their shoes from pacing back and forth.

Great timing, Representative, the school year is just over, and allah dem teachers can go to DC to protest!

35 posted on 06/04/2017 7:13:48 PM PDT by null and void ( The Flat Earth Society claims they have members all around the globe!)
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To: Coleus; nickcarraway; narses; Mr. Silverback; Canticle_of_Deborah; TenthAmendmentChampion; ...

We don’t have a “U.S. Department of Education”.

We have a U.S. Department of liberal indoctrination. It is a cancer.

Ending it would go a long way in returning us to a Free Republic.


36 posted on 06/04/2017 7:16:22 PM PDT by cpforlife.org (President Trump, Make Government Constitutional Again! MGCA 2 MAGA!)
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To: Coleus

Get it to the state level and below. Drain the progressive education swamp.
Some states will still be progressive Commies, but at least free up the ones who aren’t.


37 posted on 06/04/2017 7:17:08 PM PDT by GnuThere
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To: vette6387

AG Sessions should have remained in the U.S. Senate. Trump needs a better AG without baggage.


38 posted on 06/04/2017 7:17:57 PM PDT by GuavaCheesePuff
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To: Coleus

Having submitted the bill to end the DoEd, GOP House members will scam conservatives around the country for contributions to their PACs, knowing full well that the bill will never survive the gauntlet of committees.

The financial con game will probably be moderately successful.


39 posted on 06/04/2017 7:18:09 PM PDT by Carl Vehse
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To: vette6387

u are exactly right, but I think there has been so much fed money pushing it that in some places the companies can grow without fed freebees.
Let’s face it coal is done. Natural gas has replaced it. Wind and Solar farms need infrastructure to deliver it to where it needs to be. If it’s profitable without freebees then so be it.


40 posted on 06/04/2017 7:21:34 PM PDT by Undecided 2012
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