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Targeting the Vulnerable: How the Trump Administration鈥檚 Actions Harm Young Children and Their Families

The stakes are high for young children in the upcoming debate about the proper size and role of federal programs and agencies.

Administration Cuts
Fernanda Reyes via Shutterstock

While the second Trump administration has only been in power for about 50 days, they have already taken numerous actions that will have a negative impact on young children and their families. In the coming days, President Trump is expected to issue a designed to dismantle the Department of Education (ED). Despite polling that indicates that such a move is unpopular among most Americans and the fact that actually abolishing the department , the administration seems committed to starting a process that will significantly impact the ability of the department to fulfill its mission. In her first message to ED staff after being confirmed, Education Secretary Linda McMahon instructed employees to prepare for the department鈥檚 a clear indication that she plans to attempt to wind down the work of the department.

The Department of Education is responsible for the two largest federal funding streams for public schools: Title I and IDEA (Individuals with Disabilities Education Act) programs. Title I grants provide each year to fund services for students from low-income families, including pre-K . IDEA grants provide each year to help states and districts better serve students with disabilities starting at birth. Portions of these funds are dedicated to serving children in pre-K programs (Part B, Section 619) as well as infants and toddlers with disabilities or delays (Part C). Specifically, that IDEA supports over 500,000 pre-K children and more than 400,000 infants and toddlers with disabilities or delays. Significantly cutting the budget and overall power of the department will undoubtedly leave many of these young children worse off.

While many important federal early learning programs are the responsibility of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Service (HHS), ED plays an important role as a partner in administering those programs. For example, ED works with HHS to administer the , a competitive grant program that has sent to aid them in improving access to high-quality child care and pre-K education while improving data collection. In recent years, ED has also made a concerted effort to improve the quality of kindergarten and the early elementary grades that follow through its . It also plays an important role in helping low-income college students access on-campus child care services through the .

The administration has already made designed to better serve young children. Some of these cancelled contracts include research on the best, evidence-based ways to teach reading to children in kindergarten through third grade as well as ways to boost student attendance. And despite assurances that the cuts would have no impact on the National Assessment of Educational Progress, known to many as the Nation鈥檚 Report Card and a key data source for tracking long-term education trends, we鈥檙e already that this vital function of the department is also being undermined.

HHS, home to most of the major federal early learning programs, has also been targeted by the administration for funding and personnel cuts. The administration has already laid off about , including 20 percent of staff in the Office of Head Start and 25 percent of staff in the Office of Child Care. In response to these cuts, over 40 House Democrats to HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. outlining concerns about the impacts of the staffing cuts on the over 778,000 children and their families who rely on Head Start. These cuts will likely lead to delays in receiving grants and technical assistance for programs across the country. The letter demands that the federal employees be reinstated so that they鈥檙e able to continue their important work.

Outside of the administration鈥檚 actions of cutting both staff and funding for important early learning programs, the budget resolution recently passed by the House of Representatives at the behest of the administration makes cuts to Medicaid despite the for such cuts. The blueprint $4.5 trillion in tax cuts and a $2 trillion reduction in federal spending over a decade. As part of the spending reductions, the blueprint calls for the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which has jurisdiction over Medicaid, to cut spending by over the next decade (on a related note, the seven-month funding patch released over the weekend by House Republicans $40 million in fiscal 2024 spending for over 70 programs that benefit children and families).

More than depend on Medicaid to receive health care and of those enrolled are children. Medicaid also helps to identify and support children with delays or disabilities as early as possible by funding developmental screenings, evaluations, and for infants and toddlers. In fact, Medicaid covers of children in the country with special health care needs and disabilities. Cuts to Medicaid could also as early educators lose their health care and need to find better-paying jobs or jobs where they can receive coverage, illustrating just how high the stakes are for young children in the upcoming debate about the proper size and role of federal programs and agencies.

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Aaron Loewenberg
E&W-LoewenbergA
Aaron Loewenberg

Senior Policy Analyst, Early & Elementary Education

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Targeting the Vulnerable: How the Trump Administration鈥檚 Actions Harm Young Children and Their Families