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The U.S. Supreme Court allowed the Education Department to proceed with mass layoffs. But not all the firings were reversed.
When it comes to federal spending, the Trump administration has made clear it does not feel bound by actual laws or the goals Congress had in mind in passing legislation.
A total of 10 Republican senators are urging the Trump administration to reverse its decision to withhold more than $6 ...
Like Santopadre, Tiffany Benson, superintendent of Travis Unified, which includes Foxboro and Cambridge elementary schools in Vacaville, also in an email to The Reporter, steered clear of ...
The Department of Education (DOE) will initiate widespread layoffs following the U.S. Supreme Court’s July 14 ruling.
In a decision with far-reaching implications for democratic rights and public education, the US Supreme Court on Monday ...
When the Supreme Court overturns rulings without offering any explanation, it is simply wielding raw power. And raw power ...
The National Education Association has been congressionally chartered since 1906, but Republicans argue it no longer serves the mission the charter established.
"What the Trump administration is doing to the Department of Education is not about policy. It’s about power," said PA Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta.
Amid a broader push to slash spending and regulations across the government, Trump has said his ultimate goal is to leave education oversight to the states. However, state and local officials — not ...
Instead, the justices found another path — a sneakier one. Repeatedly, they have let Trump amass vast new power, and they have done so without putting their names on it. They are proving willing ...
"This Court has been extraordinarily unfriendly to the Voting Rights Act over the last couple of decades," a voting rights expert told Newsweek.
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