Jeremy Bauer-Wolf
Investigations Manager
Underlings in the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, or U.S. DOGE Service鈥攚ho are combing through troves of government finances to prune spending they deem wasteful or discordant with President Donald 国产视频 ideology鈥攈ave seized access to federal Education Department data.
DOGE injected the Education Department data, including 鈥渟ensitive internal financial鈥 information into Microsoft鈥檚 artificial intelligence (AI) software Azure, last week. DOGE officials are dissecting the agency鈥檚 spending over Education Department contracts, , and even menial amounts of money down to work trip expenses, according to news reports, with the goal being to hack away at the agency鈥檚 funding and staffing until the Trump administration disposes of the department entirely.
This incursion into protected data, not only at the Education Department, but across the federal government, almost certainly . Plus, the austerity expedition is being carried out, in some cases, by deeply inexperienced DOGE staff who likely could not pass standard federal security clearances. One 19-year-old DOGE employee worked at a network monitoring firm that hires reformed black hat hackers, . He also maintained multiple domain names registered in foreign countries, which a federal agency would have flagged in vetting him.
DOGE workers within the Education Department are apparently federal employees who cleared background checks, an Education Department spokesperson told the Post. 鈥淣othing inappropriate or nefarious鈥 is happening, she said.
However, this vague assurance addresses none of the still-standing, and highly alarming, privacy considerations.
First, consider the mammoth scope of the information the Education Department collects. Students and their families who fill out , or FAFSA, are sketching an intimate picture of their households for the department鈥攊ncluding where they live, their contact and demographic details, Social Security numbers, financial assets of both applicants and parents, and tax information.
In fact, after a recent law change, the Education Department and Internal Revenue Service now share data on FAFSA filers. That tax data included on the FAFSA is subject to strict protections. As the Education Department鈥檚 Office of the Chief Information Officer , the agency 鈥渕ust have adequate controls in place to protect the confidentiality of that information and implement safeguards to prevent unauthorized access and use.鈥
The department needs this type of information to administer financial aid, and thus has collected data on everyone who either applied for or received a Pell Grant or student loan to attend college, which is a vast swath of the country. More than 42 million Americans have student loans, filed last week by two consumer protection organizations, Student Defense and Public Citizen Litigation Group. The duo is suing to prevent DOGE鈥檚 access to confidential information, arguing the entity is infringing on such fundamental federal laws as , which dictates how government agencies can store and use personal data.
Millions of college go-ers supplied the Education Department with information about their lives with implicit trust the agency would guard it and only rely on it to help them make key choices about financial aid. They, and future college applicants, shouldn鈥檛 have to fear DOGE officials with unclear political motives will leverage it for their own aims.
Distressingly, beyond DOGE workers intruding into Education Department systems, their reported practice of feeding sensitive data to AI risks its public exposure. Data that is used in AI software is particularly vulnerable to . Microsoft has admitted some staffers manually to monitor for inappropriate behavior, and a even once allowed users to read others鈥 chat histories.
In essence, DOGE processing individuals鈥 data through AI bolsters the risk of unnecessary exposure. It is mishandling information in ways that compromise basic principles of data protection and privacy.
Recognizing that privacy dangers currently abound, Rep. Bobby Scott, a Virginia Democrat and ranking member of the House Committee on Education and Workforce Government Accountability Office, the watchdog agency, last week to assess the security of Education Department IT systems, as well as several other agencies鈥. A collection of House and Senate members, including Scott, also to the Education Department last week, demanding to know how the agency is securing sensitive data.
Ultimately, the Trump administration has not shared its full vision for the Education Department and the data housed within it鈥攂eyond dismantling it, which cannot formally happen without congressional approval.
For one, Trump has been vocal about targeting diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) efforts. DOGE could probe Education Department databases to identify degrees offered by colleges that receive federal funding and that do not pass the new administration鈥檚 anti-diversity litmus test. The department could then pressure institutions to abandon these programs, including by threatening their access to federal money in some fashion.
The Trump Education Department has already ordered employees to review grants to institutions and potentially cut those connected to DEI initiatives,
The department could also probe employee data to determine which staff to kick out. The DOGE team reportedly scrutinized employee records to figure out who took diversity-related training and then put them on leave, . 国产视频 100 Education Department staff members are on leave, and as many as 300 took the diversity training, the Post reported.
A playbook for purging DEI work from higher education has already been developed, and the person who helped draft it has been publicly crowing about his newfound access to the Education Department.
Christopher Rufo, a conservative pundit who was floated as a potential Education Secretary under Trump, was, starting a couple of years ago, at New College of Florida, a public liberal arts institution.
Republican Governor Ron DeSantis named Rufo and other similarly minded conservatives to the college governing board in 2023, who in the years since have axed programs like gender studies and fired many high-level administrators.
New College, once considered a haven for the marginalized, including many LGBTQ students, was transformed into a right-wing beacon. The Education Department under President Joe Biden in fact began investigating whether the conservative leadership of New College created a hostile environment for .
Rufo , documenting him purportedly visiting the Education Department office. He wrote he heard 鈥渋ncredible excitement about what the DOGE boys are uncovering鈥 and that 鈥渢urns out, the IT department holds the keys to the castle.鈥
Later, Rufo that he would start 鈥渁 new campaign to expose ideological corruption鈥 at the Education Department.
鈥淭he permanent bureaucracy must鈥攁nd will鈥攂e held to account,鈥 he wrote.
Rufo has long bemoaned diversity programs of all stripes in higher education, and may rely on information gleaned from 国产视频 Education Department to strike at what he called 鈥渄iscriminatory DEI bureaucracies鈥 among colleges.
He urged the administration to wield the Civil Rights Act against colleges to promote 鈥渃olorblindness鈥 over diversity. The Trump administration could start civil rights investigations into institutions, in which it 鈥渃ould demand internal admissions data, such as students鈥 SAT scores, GPAs, and class ranks, disaggregated by race,鈥 Rufo said.
This would represent an astonishing level of government encroachment into operations most often left to colleges鈥攂ut then, DOGE representatives executing intrusions across government are trampling traditions or privacy concerns.
The Trump administration should heed calls of consumer and privacy advocates, government officials, and American citizens and excise DOGE, composed of operatives, and block them from accessing this data. It鈥檚 data entrusted to the government for the sole purpose of helping students, many of them vulnerable, afford college鈥攊t鈥檚 not for some inexperienced, teenage coders to rifle through as they execute the will of DOGE head Elon Musk.