On a humid Monday morning in Washington, D.C., the Supreme Court, in a terse, unsigned order, lit a fuse under one of the federal government’s most symbolic departments: the U.S. Department of Education.
Without a full hearing, without oral arguments, the Court’s conservative majority granted President Donald Trump the authority to move forward with mass layoffs at the department—a decision that could reshape the landscape of American education for a generation.
The ruling immediately lifted a lower court’s injunction that had blocked the terminations, greenlighting a reduction-in-force plan that will eliminate over 1,400 federal jobs by the end of this week.
Supporters called it a return to state sovereignty in education. Critics warned of chaos, deep inequities, and a potential dismantling of federal safeguards for millions of vulnerable students.
But the message from the high court was clear: the president has the power to reshape his own executive branch—even if the consequences ripple across every school district in America.
The Backstory: Trump’s War on “Federal Bloat”
Since his re-election, President Trump has made no secret of his intent to radically downsize the federal government. Nowhere was this more apparent than in his revived push to abolish or hollow out the Department of Education, long a target of conservative ire.
At campaign rallies, Trump labeled the agency a “bloated bureaucracy” and a “liberal indoctrination cartel.” His second-term Secretary of Education, Linda McMahon—a political outsider with business credentials but no background in public education—was tasked with doing what no cabinet secretary had done before: make the department functionally obsolete.
The plan? Cut the workforce by half. Reassign dozens of functions to states. Eliminate what the administration called “duplicative oversight” and “federal micromanagement.” And eventually, shrink the department down to a regulatory skeleton.
But in April, the first wave of layoffs was stopped dead in its tracks.
⚖️ The Legal Challenge: Teachers’ Unions and Judicial Roadblocks
The order to terminate 1,400 Education Department employees was met with swift opposition.
Several lawsuits were filed by teachers’ unions, education rights groups, and even civil rights organizations. They argued that federal education programs—especially those addressing disability accommodations, Title IX gender equity, and school desegregation enforcement—couldn’t legally function with so few personnel.
Judge Myong Joun, a Biden appointee to the U.S. District Court in Massachusetts, agreed. He issued a temporary injunction blocking the layoffs, stating that the Trump administration could not make such drastic staffing decisions without Congressional input.
“The Department of Education is not a private corporation that can downsize for efficiency,” Joun wrote in his ruling. “It is a constitutional actor with congressionally mandated responsibilities.”
When the administration appealed, the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld Joun’s decision in June, setting the stage for a showdown at the Supreme Court.
⚖️ The Supreme Court Steps In
On Monday, July 29, the Court responded with an emergency ruling. The injunction was paused.The Trump administration, once again, had the green light to fire the employees—not eventually, but immediately.
There was no hearing, no argument, no fanfare. Just a short order, citing a previous emergency ruling from May in which the Court had similarly allowed Trump to fire members of independent federal agencies.
The implication was unmistakable: The President controls the Executive Branch. Period.
Within hours of the decision, termination notices went out.
One email obtained by CNN read:
“This RIF [Reduction In Force] action is not a reflection upon your performance or conduct and is solely due to agency restructuring, as described in previous correspondence.”
The effective date: August 1.
The Dissent: Justice Sotomayor Sounds the Alarm
Not everyone on the bench agreed.
In a scathing dissent, Justice Sonia Sotomayor—joined by Justices Kagan and Jackson—warned that the Court was opening a dangerous door.
She called the ruling “indefensible” and accused the majority of ignoring the very real and immediate harm to vulnerable students.
“Rather than wait for legislative action to begin shuttering the Department,” she wrote, “Secretary McMahon slashed the agency’s work force in half, concededly without analyzing the effect of those terminations on the Department’s statutorily mandated functions.”
She cited likely impacts on programs that serve students with disabilities, low-income communities, and victims of sexual harassment in schools. Civil rights enforcement, in particular, she argued, would be crippled.
“This ruling unleashes untold harm,” she concluded.