President Trump and Elon Musk are eyeing the Department of Education for their next offensive on the federal workforce.
The Wall Street Journal reports that White House officials have discussed an executive order to reorganize or dismantle the department:
"The order would call for developing a legislative proposal to abolish the department," the Journal reports.
Musk, a "special government employee" who leads the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), posted on X — which Musk owns — that Trump "will succeed" in dismantling it.
This comes as Democrats are raising questions about Musk's authority and whether his moves to disrupt and destroy agencies, such as the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), are lawful.
The nonpartisan Congressional Research Service released a report Tuesday saying Trump "does not have the authority to abolish" USAID.
"Because Congress established USAID as an independent establishment (defined in 5 U.S.C. 104) within the executive branch, the President does not have the authority to abolish it; congressional authorization would be required to abolish, move, or consolidate USAID," the CRS report says.
USAID employees found themselves locked out of their offices, email and work accounts over the weekend. Democrats staged a rally in front of the headquarters, but were turned away when they tried to enter the building.
USAID oversees the administration of billions of dollars of humanitarian, development and security assistance.
Trump has described USAID as a "criminal organization," and many Republicans view it as a taxpayer-funded slush fund for liberal pet projects abroad.
Not all Republicans agree.
"I have felt for a long time that USAID is, is our way to combat ... China's effort to really gain influence around the world, including Africa and South America in the Western Hemisphere," Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) said, according to Mediate.
Trump appointed Secretary of State Marco Rubio as USAID's acting administrator, an apparent attempt fold it into the State Department
"[It] was always the goal was to reform it, but now we have rank insubordination," Rubio told Fox News in an interview. "Now we have basically an active effort — their basic attitude is, 'We don't work for anyone, we work for ourselves, no agency of government can tell us what to do.'"
Democrats on the House Foreign Affairs Committee are calling on Chair Brian Mast (R-Fla.) to convene a hearing with senior Trump administration officials to determine whether the efforts to shutter the agency are illegal.
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