Fresh Air - The Gutting Of The Department Of Education
Episode Date: March 12, 2025The Department of Education is reportedly eliminating 50% of its workforce. Washington Post writer Laura Meckler talks about the fallout, from the enforcement of civil rights laws in schools, to stude...nt loans and grants.TV critic David Bianculli reviews A Thousand Blows, the new historical drama series from Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knight.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This is Fresh Air. I'm Tonya Mosley.
The Department of Education is reportedly gutting its workforce.
The Department of Education is reportedly gutting its workforce. In addition to the more than 1,300 workers who were fired on Tuesday,
more than 600 have accepted separation packages
or were fired last month during their probationary period.
This leaves the department to roughly half of its workforce,
which is responsible for enforcing civil rights laws in schools,
supplying student
loans and grants, and tracking student achievement.
These new layoffs come as President Donald Trump calls to eliminate the department altogether.
At the heart of Trump's effort is a plan to consolidate what he describes as waste
within the government, vowing to cut federal funding for schools and colleges that promote
quote, critical race theory and transgender ideologies.
Earlier this week, the U.S. Department of Education also sent letters
to 60 colleges and universities. It says are under investigation
for violations relating to alleged anti-Semitic harassment
against Jewish students during pro-Palestinian protests on campuses nationwide.
Joining us to talk about all of this is Laura Meckler, against Jewish students during pro-Palestinian protests on campuses nationwide.
Joining us to talk about all of this is Laura Meckler, a national education writer for The
Washington Post, who covers news, politics, and the people shaping American schools.
Her book, Dreamtown, Shaker Heights and the Quest for Racial Equity, is an examination
of the ideals and realities of racial integration in her hometown of Shaker Heights, Ohio. Our conversation was recorded yesterday.
Laura Meckler, welcome to Fresh Air. It's so nice to be here. Let's start with the
backstory behind the letter that was sent this week to the 60 colleges by the
Department of Education for alleged violations relating to anti-Semitic
harassment. Remind
us of what this stems from.
Danielle Pletka Well, all of this stems from protests that
broke out on campus following the October 7th, 2023 Hamas attack on Israel, which was
then of course followed by the war between Israel and the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip. And of course, there were very,
very passionate, strong, angry protests at campuses all over the country. So there's
been this tension that colleges have been facing, especially last academic year, to
be honest, but to some extent this year too, about how to balance the free speech rights
of the protesters against the rights of other
students to be on campus and to be on campus in an atmosphere that's free of harassment
for Jewish students to feel safe. In some cases, they did not feel safe. And all of
that was sort of stirring and quite active as President Trump was running for his second
term. And then once he took office, he's taken a very strong step to try to essentially clamp down on colleges and force them, they would say,
to take anti-Semitism seriously.
Lylea Salazar You've actually been reporting on how the
Trump administration pulled last week. It's 400 million in federal grants and contracts
from Columbia University. And just to remind people, Columbia
was sort of the epicenter of the protests last spring. Can you tell us more about the
accusations that happened there on that campus as well as the cuts to funding? I mean, $400
million sounds like an incredibly large amount and what that actually impacts.
Well, we don't have the full scope of what it impacts, but yes, $400 million is a lot of money for a university, for any university
and for Columbia University. This unfolded very quickly at Columbia. About a week and
a half ago or so, the Trump administration told Columbia that it was under investigation
for how it was treating Jewish students and whether it was safeguarding them against anti-Semitism. And then just four days later, they concluded
that they weren't and pulled this $400 million by their calculations in grants and contracts.
This is not normally how things are done. Normally, there's a long investigation and
there's a process by which universities can sort of come into compliance which is what almost always happens. In this case, they just said, you haven't
upheld your duty under federal civil rights law and therefore we're pulling this federal
funding. So it was quite dramatic and a lot of people read it as a real shot across the
bow not just to Columbia but to other universities around the country too.
Right, because 60 other universities received a letter just on Monday. I would assume there
probably is fear around funding cuts for those universities as well.
Absolutely. I mean, everybody is fearful. And I think we should put this into some really
broader context here, which is that universities have been on their heels really since the start of this administration. There have been
a series of actions that have been taken and that have been threatened in terms of funding
and sort of general control over what they do from the Trump administration. And so universities
are already feeling very frightened, unsure, and frankly, scrambling about what they will
do if they lose all this federal funding. Some of these schools are very dependent on
federal funding through NIH research grants and other means. And the Trump administration
is going about this quite aggressively, as we saw with Columbia on Friday, and now this
threat to, as you said, 60 other universities to say,
yes, you are also on our radar and we could do the same to you.
So the Office of Civil Rights within the Department of Ed sent that letter to the colleges and
universities and that office, which under a larger proposal to dismantle the Education
Department, would fall under the jurisdiction
of the Department of Justice. Can you share the latest of what we know about this draft
executive order to dismantle the department that has been circulating? Have you seen it?
I have seen it. Of course, President Trump campaigned on a promise to close the Department
of Education. And when he showed up on his first day, there was a draft executive order waiting for him actually
that would have called on Congress to do such. We should note that the administration does
not have the power to simply close the Department of Education. Only Congress would have the
ability to do that. Congress created the agency and only they can dismantle the agency. But
what this executive order, the
initial version of this executive order would have said was, ask Congress, come up with
a plan to get Congress to eliminate the department, and in the meantime, do what you can to dismantle
it to diminish it. And then we saw another version of the executive order floating around
that did not have the part about calling on Congress to act, but did say that you should do what you can to diminish the agency on
your own. So it's not entirely clear what the administration's thinking is right now,
but we do know two things. Ultimately, they would like to eliminate the department. Congress
is not likely to do that. And absent that, they would like to do what they can to reduce its footprint, potentially take parts of the agency and send them elsewhere,
although that too is legally problematic.
Lyle Ornstein Remind us what the U.S. Department of Education
is responsible for.
Kate Sills Sure. So the biggest thing that it does is
run the Student Federal aid program, the loans
and the Pell grants that come from the federal government. That's a huge responsibility.
On the K-12 side, they administer a couple of very large grants. Now, 90% of education
spending comes from the state and local governments, but 10% comes from the federal government.
Some of it's from a program called Title I, which aids high poverty schools. Some of it's from a program called IDEA, which
helps cover the costs of educating students with disabilities. And then the department
also has, as you mentioned, the Office for Civil Rights. And the goal of the Office for
Civil Rights is to enforce, it's more than the goal, it's task, it's mandate is to force federal
civil rights laws, which say you cannot get federal funding if you discriminate on students
or others on campus on the basis of sex, race, national origin, and other factors as well.
So that's their job. So those are the major functions of the Department of Education.
Danielle Pletka Going back to what you said about how it would
take an act of Congress to dismantle, I do want to talk with you about the ways that
the administration can change the function without Congress. One of the ways is by taking
some of what the Department of Education does and then having other departments handle that.
Can you give us some examples of that?
Dr. Kirsten Krofman Well, there has been an aspiration for them
to do that. For instance, there's been talk and Linda McMahon, the education secretary
during her confirmation hearing, kind of floated these ideas of moving, for instance, the Office
for Civil Rights to the Justice Department or moving, say, the Title I program to the
Department of Health and Human Services or moving the Federal Student Loan Program to the Treasury Department. However,
all of these programs in statute are said to be housed at the Department of Education.
So it isn't really clear at all to me or the experts I've talked to that they can just
on their own try to move it. Now, maybe they will try, in which case, as you said, I think we'll likely see court action. But I also think there's another
path that's possible, which is rather than try to move these pieces around the government
is change how they're used, either try to diminish them through unilateral canceling
of grants and contracts, through reducing the staff, which
we've already seen, the significant reduction in the staff at the Department of Education,
and through changing how they use the powers of the Department of Education itself, including
the Office for Civil Rights.
Lorie Goldstein There was an executive order that Trump put
forth in February where he demanded the Secretary of Education to deliver recommendations to him for eliminating funding
for K-12 schools that engage in the indoctrination,
as he puts it, over race and gender topics.
And schools are typically a reflection of their communities.
And the curriculum is not set by the federal government,
but states and the districts themselves.
So how would the federal government
enforce something like this?
Danielle Pletka The first thing to talk about is exactly what
you were just sort of pointing to, which is that there is a contradiction between the
rhetoric that we hear from the White House, which is about returning education to the
states and letting local people make these decisions and having empowering parents and all of this, and then
at the same time, essentially trying to control education from Washington. So we have a real
contradiction there. Having said that, how would you go about doing that? Well, the way
you do it is the argument is that when you say talk about race in certain ways in schools, or when you talk about gender and
particularly transgender identity in schools, you are essentially violating civil rights
laws. They would say, yes, education should be controlled by school districts, but they
don't have the right to violate federal law, which of course they don't. But there is a
lot of debate about what federal law actually
has to say about these issues.
Lylea Kaye This idea of moving the Office of Civil Rights,
which as you mentioned, enforces Title IX and the Individuals with Disabilities Education
Act to the Department of Justice, how would being under the DOJ change the function of
that office? Well, it wouldn't necessarily change anything. So the Justice Department could use the power
in the exact same way that the Education Department uses the power. It would just be sitting in
a different building in Washington. When you talk about dismantling the Department of Education,
there's really two things to think about. One is to think about, are we diminishing what the department does? Are you cutting the funding? Are you doing less? Are you essentially
pulling back on the federal influence over schools? Or are you just getting rid of the
department and moving stuff around? And those are two very different things.
Lyle Orr Yes, they're two very different things, but ultimately, could the administration get what
it wants through that second action?
I think that theoretically it could.
I mean, it could, if they could find a way to get Congress to go along, or maybe they
ignore Congress and just try to do it on their own and try to spread the functions around,
they would declare victory on that.
I don't know how much that necessarily impacts
people on the ground, whether there is a Department of Education or not. However, I do think that
there's a symbolic importance to having this agency. I think the reason why it was created
was to try to say that, hey, education is important and it deserves a seat at the table
when we talk about the most urgent federal priorities, and that, you know, we're gonna have a secretary who has stature and who is in the cabinet room and with the other
cabinet secretaries and who has a voice to be a leader on education, and all of these
elements that come from having a department itself. So theoretically, the Treasury Department
could run the student aid program. You know, theoretically, any agency could give out grants.
Theoretically, the Department of Justice could enforce civil rights laws in the context of
education just like it does in other contexts.
Like those things could happen.
But the question also here around having a department is about like, what do we say that
we value and what ideas and what issues do we want to have a seat at the table.
It's pretty interesting that Linda McMahon has taken this role as the head of the Department
of Education to dismantle it.
Can you kind of give us a sense of is she working herself out of a job?
Is she there just for that explicit purpose?
What can you tell us about her?
Well, it's interesting. She's not somebody who has a strong background in education.
She has a little bit of education experience. She served on a state board for about a year,
and she's been a trustee of a college in Connecticut. She's obviously best known as being the CEO
of World Wrestling Entertainment with her husband, Vince McMahon. But the other
thing you need to know about Linda McMahon is she's very close to Donald Trump. And she
served as the administrator of the Small Business Administration in his first term. And she
worked on his reelection and she co-chaired his transition and now she has this job. So,
you know, she is not somebody who has to really...
She's a billionaire. She doesn't have to worry about a paycheck if theoretically the Department
of Education went away. I think that, again, it's going to be very difficult, if not impossible,
to close the Department of Education. So that's really much more of a talking point. I think
that one thing we should be looking for is at what point do they start pivoting away from really talking about closing the education department?
Because the more they talk about it, if it doesn't happen, does that look like a failure
on the part of President Trump? I don't think he would like that much. So I think we're
much more likely to see her come in there. She's really kind of a grown up. Before she got
there, it felt like the 20-something dozers were running the place. Now she's coming in
and the people who opposed her didn't so much oppose her for who she was, but more because
of what the agenda was.
Nicole It's also pretty interesting because when
Betsy DeVos was sworn in, it was pretty clear
her ideology around education.
She was just such a big proponent of school choice.
With McMahon, what did she indicate during her confirmation hearings would be her focus
around education, understanding her background?
She basically parroted the Trump
lines about education.
She spoke about being in favor of school choice, which as you said was a Betsy DeVos priority.
She talked about wanting to decrease the footprint of the Department of Education.
She did acknowledge that only Congress could close it.
She talked about equity and gender ideology and needing
to get rid of those out of schools. She said she would look into what Doge was doing and
make sure it didn't go too far. So she had a fairly as expected confirmation hearing.
I do think though that there's another interesting contrast with Secretary DeVos because yes,
school choice was her and is still, we should
say, her passion. She believes very strongly in school choice, which really didn't advance
on the federal level under her tenure. But she also had a very, very different outlook
about the federal role in education. She thought it needed a light footprint. So while she
undid a lot of what the Obama administration
did, she did not impose her own philosophical agenda. In fact, in a story I wrote last year,
we looked into the creation of the 1776 Commission, which was to promote patriotic education in
schools. And it had begun with Donald Trump calling Betsy DeVos up one summer evening in 2020 and said, we've got
to stop the 1619 project. How do we ban it from schools?
Which was the New York Times, right, by Nikole Hannah-Jones.
Exactly.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes. It was their effort to really reframe American history around slavery and the role
that slavery has played in this country and its history. And, you
know, Betsy DeVos's response to President Trump was like, no, we can't ban the 1619
project. That's not our job. We're not here to run a national curriculum. You know, I
don't like it either, but that's up to individual school districts. And that's a very different
point of view that we're seeing. And that was really how she governed during her whole four years was like, you know, she wasn't telling school districts
what to do in either direction. She viewed the federal government as having a light footprint.
And now we see such a different, different orientation where they very much, I don't
think they would have any trouble
banning the 1619 project.
Telling us...
In fact, it's banned on the state and local level in many places.
Right. But that's one thing, to ban it on the local level, you know, the local and state
governments, that is their job to set curriculum. You know, it isn't the federal role to decide
what students learn, what students have to do to graduate,
what books people read. Those are not federal roles traditionally. But under this new way
of looking things under the Trump administration is that they're defining things like this
as being essentially akin to racial discrimination, that this is essentially discriminating against white people if they're forced to see American
history through the lens of slavery. Those are the sorts of arguments that are being
made that essentially if you are pushing, you know, so-called critical race theory,
if you're trying to say that the country is systemically racist, if you're saying that
white people have privilege that other people don't have. All of these things gear you into the territory of a definition of racial discrimination that is very different
than what we've seen in the past, essentially using the civil rights laws to try to stop
what their proponents would see as efforts to try to eliminate racism. So that is a very different orientation, a much more muscular federal
role that we've already seen rolled out just in these opening weeks of the Trump administration.
So it's a stark contrast to the first Trump administration.
Our guest today is Washington Post national education writer, Laura Meckler. On Tuesday,
the education department announced it was firing more than 1,300 department workers.
We'll be right back after a short break.
I'm Tonya Mosley and this is Fresh Air.
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Laura, I want to talk a little bit about some of the actions of DOGE. That's the Department
of Government Efficiency run by Elon Musk. We see that dismantling the education department
is part of a larger effort by DOJ to streamline
the government. They've terminated something like 89 contracts with the Department of Education,
which has had an immediate impact on the Institute of Education Sciences. What have you been
following on that front?
Yeah, well, DOJ showed up and they just really began taking a hacksaw to a lot of different
parts of the education department's mission.
Specifically, they started with the Institute for Education Sciences, which is the research
arm of the education department, and began just canceling grants.
There's a provision in federal grants and maybe others as well where you can cancel
it for, quote, convenience, which means basically any reason we want, and that's what they did. So these
are research grants that were meant to try to figure out what is the best way of doing
something.
For instance, there was one grant that compared two different ways of teaching math. It was
an experiment essentially to see which one was more successful. There also are important
grants that deal
with collecting data about education statistics around the country, how we know how many schools
there are, how many teachers there are, what's the demographic makeup of the student body
of the teaching force. All of that information comes through this part of the agency. So
that's one thing that they did. They also began canceling grants that had anything to
do with diversity, equity, and inclusion. If it had any of those words in it, essentially,
it got canceled as being inconsistent with the administration's priorities. And you also
saw them putting a lot of employees on administrative leave. Initially, they said they were going
to put people on leave who did work related to DEI because they don't want that work done
anymore. But they actually went further than that and put a lot of people on leave who did work related to DEI because they don't want that work done anymore.
But they actually went further than that and put a lot of people on leave, it appears,
simply because they had at some point participated in some sort of a diversity program. And this
includes programs that were touted under the first Trump administration that then Education
Secretary Betsy DeVos herself was a supporter of. So essentially, if you
just participated in something like the Diversity Change Agent Program, which was a program
to essentially help try to change the culture at the department. If you were just an everyday
participant and you went to like a one-day training or a two-day training, you know,
a few years ago, you might have been put on administrative leave. So Doge has been quite
active.
Danielle Pletka Why is Trump doing this? What is his vision
for education?
Jennifer McAllister Well, it's interesting because when you listen
to President Trump talk about education, he really talks about two different things and
they're somewhat in tension. The first thing he talks about is, quote, returning education to the
states, which is somewhat of a puzzling thing to say because education is already run by
the states and local governments to a very large effect. Now, there was a time not that
long ago, you probably remember the No Child Left Behind Act that was passed under President
George W. Bush, where the federal government did have a much bigger role. But that was actually rolled back near the end of the Obama
administration. So really, the federal footprint today is somewhat light. But he does talk
about returning education to the states. And the second thing we hear about from him is
getting essentially, you know, wokeness and, you know, gender ideology and equity and race
conversations essentially out of the schools. So he wants to use the power of the federal
government to influence the way that schools talk about those subjects and the policies
that they use. So, you know, you can see how these are somewhat in tension with one another.
You have the
federal government on one hand saying, well, this should be run by the states, on the other
hand saying, yes, except for this, that, and the other.
Can you remind us as it pertains to the culture war issues and anything related to DEI, some
of the origins of that? I know a few years ago we were really talking about critical race theory within K through 12 education.
I've also heard President Trump talk about
the mothers, the parents who have really been pushing like sort of this lobby to push against DEI in schools.
What can you tell us about that?
Yeah, so the term critical race theory, which became sort of a basket term for everything that conservatives did not like about the
conversation around race in schools. But what it really is about is taking as a given that
there is systemic racism in the country. And, you know, for some people, that's an obvious,
of course, there's systemic racism. And for other people, that's quite offensive. So that was essentially the dividing line that we saw. We really saw a lot of this being churned
up following George Floyd's death in May of 2020. And a lot of schools felt a moral imperative
to really address questions of race and equity and to talk about what was happening in our country. And then what you had was essentially a backlash to that, where
you essentially had mostly white people who were saying, you know, this is offensive to
me. How can you say, are you saying I'm racist? They didn't like any insinuation that they
were part of the problem. And I think that that's essentially where
you saw a lot of pushback. Most of this really began on the local level at school-born meetings.
Then you started seeing parent groups form. I should actually say that those parent groups
were initially formed in response to COVID policies and people who were angry that schools
were closed too long. They were angry that their children were being required to wear masks, and they were fighting against that.
And then those groups essentially morphed into fighting about the content of these conversations
around race.
So and then that escalated to the state level where you sort of led by Florida and Governor
DeSantis there, you saw a lot of legislation essentially controlling
what could be taught. You couldn't have certain conversations about race or gender in classrooms.
There were new restrictions on what books were allowed to be read. There were efforts
to take books out of the library. Sort of all these culture wars were percolating all
through the Biden years, essentially, and
sort of teed up for Trump when he started running for reelection.
Lyleon Haughey Did this also really ramp up the conversation
around school choice? I know that Trump has really talked about that. I know Secretary
of Education, former Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos was a big proponent of school
choice. Can you tell us a little bit more about Trump's vision as it relates to
school choice?
Dr. Kirsten Krofman Sure. I do think there is a direct relationship
between the pandemic and school choice, as well as what we are now seeing from President
Trump. The frustration around public schools, some of which really were closed for a very
long time, as long as a year and a half in some cases, where, well, the schools were
open, but they were operating remotely. There was huge frustration around that, and that all teed up long-time
efforts. These go back decades to try to essentially allow public money to pay for private schools
and today also for homeschooling through various types of voucher programs. And we've seen
an explosion of these in conservative, mostly conservative states around the country of really big, expansive voucher programs that in many cases are available to all families,
whereas they used to be limited by say income or maybe they were targeted to students in
certain parts of the state or maybe to students with disabilities. Now they're essentially
open to anybody where you can get thousands of dollars in state funding to apply to something
other than public school. So that's been happening over the last few years, a very robust school
choice movement around the country. And now President Trump also campaigned on bringing
that to the federal level. And there is an effort right now to add a federal school choice
program into a big budget bill that is being negotiated
now that can pass through Congress with a simple majority in the Senate as opposed to
the normal threshold of 60 votes for new programs like this. The leading idea that proponents
are pushing hard is a tax credit. It's in fact a 100% tax credit for donations to what are called scholarship
granting organizations. And then you would essentially get that money back through the
tax code when you pay your taxes.
Lyle Ornstein This sounds like it would be a big upset to
the public school funding model.
Kate Sills Well, there are certainly public school advocates
who are very worried about that. They're worried on two levels. They're worried about sort of the opportunity cost of it. Like if we have
billions of additional dollars to spend on education, they believe it should be spent
on the public schools and not on private schools. They also worry about, and certainly on the
state level, which is where a lot of the money for public schools comes from, that if you
are spending all this money on voucher programs, will there be enough for the public schools? Will you have to cut
public school spending at some point? And then lastly, the concern is, does this essentially
lure kids away from public schools to private schools? Now, of course, advocates on the
other side would say that that's their choice. They're making a choice about what's best
for their kid. But from the public school point of view, every child who leaves, they take their money
with them. They no longer get that per pupil funding. So this is a big deal for public
schools.
Hostie So how does a school choice program impact rural areas where private schools are
scarce?
Dr. Ketchum Yeah, well, they're much less likely to be able to take advantage of it because, as you
say, there are fewer private schools. So kids just have fewer choices about what to do.
And also in rural areas, we should say that often the schools are the biggest employer
and really the center of the community. So they play a very important role. In fact, you know, for many
years we really saw reluctance of Republicans representing rural areas in many states to
support school voucher programs for that reason. However, that has somewhat shifted and there
has been more support from those Republicans over time for these programs. But yeah, I
mean, school choice
does not have the same kind of impact in a rural area that it does in a suburb or in
a city where there are a lot more options.
Mm-hmm. Can you talk about the impact of cuts to students with disabilities?
Yeah. Well, the federal government requires that schools, public schools, offer students with disabilities a free and appropriate education.
And as part of that, they have agreed to pay for part of the cost.
Now, they've never paid the amount that they said they would, but they do pay some of the
cost and help school districts fund these services, which can be quite expensive, depending
on what a particular student's situation
is. But the idea is that we want students with disabilities to not just be ignored for
many years before this. Schools would just refuse to educate them, and they're no longer
allowed to do that. They do have to provide education to students regardless of their
disability. Okay, let's take a short break. If you're just joining us, we're talking to national education
writer Laura Meckler of the Washington Post about what it would mean in practice for the
Department of Education to be dismantled. We'll continue our conversation after a short break.
This is Fresh Air. One of the interesting things noted in Project 2025 is to narrow institutional
funding to historically black colleges and universities. One of the things President
Trump was lauded for during his last presidency was making permanent an annual funding commitment
of millions to HBCUs. It's just interesting to be at this point where there seems to be
such a culture war over things that are very specific to people of color or other identities.
Have you been watching or following this and how likely could that commitment go away?
Well, we haven't seen that be threatened, at least not yet. So I don't necessarily
think that's specifically on the chopping block, but I would never rule it out. It could
be. I mean, I think you have to ask the question if they're saying essentially that, for instance,
affinity groups, say like a group that gathers people together
with a certain identity for support and socializing and maybe frank conversations, that they essentially
are arguing that these are contrary to federal law because they're exclusionary based on
race. So does that same argument get made for an HBCU? I don't think so. HBCUs admit
people of all races, even if they are focused on one. So they're certainly not violating
federal law, but it's kind of in a similar neighborhood to what we're hearing.
Yeah, it just complicates the conversation because if you're asking an HBCU to be compliant against federal mandates
around DEI, for example, and it's tied to funding, it just puts all educational institutions
in a really precarious bind as it relates to the curriculum that they're setting for
through their students.
Well, 100%. And that I think is sort of the idea
here. They want everybody to be questioning everything they do. One thing that struck
me during Linda McMahon's confirmation hearing is she was asked, would a Black History Month
celebration be okay? And she said, yes, it would be. And she said, an event on Martin
Luther King Day, that would be all right as well. But then she was asked, well, what about
a Black History course? And she said, well, I don't know. I'd have to
see the details. And now there are black history courses at schools all over the country. So
I thought that was a somewhat of a red flag. My eyes, you know, perked up when I heard
that, if eyes can perk up. And when I heard that, when she said that, because
I was like, well, a black history class might be contrary to federal law. That's a new idea.
It just opens up a lot of things. An indigenous history class. America is, quote unquote,
a melting pot of so much and the history is so rich, it just opens up everything.
Danielle Pletka The thinking of the administration is that,
you know, we shouldn't be separating people out by race. So are these departments doing
that? Is this contrary to their interpretation of federal law? We had the Department of Education's
Office for Civil Rights issue a letter, what's called a Dear Colleague Letter, which was
their interpretation of the Students for Fair Admissions case against Harvard a couple of
years ago, which had to do with affirmative action and admissions. And they wrote this
letter though very broadly suggesting that essentially any consideration of race in any way, in any program at a university or a K-12
school could be contrary to federal law. And this letter had people scrambling, like, what
does this mean? And then they issued a follow-up which somewhat narrowed it. But all of this
confusion that we're talking about throughout this whole conversation, we're talking about confusion, we're talking about general ideas that then get seemed to
applied in somewhat shocking ways such as all of a sudden Columbia University losing
$400 million in funding or a grant program that had a lot of bipartisan support just
sort of disappearing or people losing their jobs.
All of this stuff is extremely destabilizing and I actually think is sort of disappearing, you know, or people losing their jobs. Like all of this stuff is extremely destabilizing. And I actually think is sort of part of the
plan in some ways because they want people and universities and school districts to think
twice before they do any of this stuff.
You know, I'm just curious. I mean, calls for education reform, I mean, they've been happening really since even before
the formation of the Department of Education.
So this is not necessarily something that feels new or novel.
I mean, there is a desire from both sides, it's bipartisan, to really look and streamline
and provide a better way for educational opportunity
in the United States. And some see some of the roadblocks and the bureaucracy as a block
to that.
Danielle Pletka For sure. I mean, I don't think anybody really
disagrees that we want kids to have the best possible start in life and have the most opportunities. I think that's
very true. And there has been in recent years some more conversation about the actual substance,
about how do we achieve that? For instance, there's been a deep conversation about how
reading is taught and promotion of something called the science of reading, which is something
that incorporates phonics much more directly than we've had in recent years.
And that's like a conversation about the real heart of education, like how do we actually
improve outcomes for kids? How do we get them on a firmer footing? There also is more...
There actually is bipartisan support for things like apprenticeships and, you know, more robust
and more effective career and technical education in high schools for
kids who are not gonna maybe end up going to college.
So there are things out there to talk about the actual education of it all as opposed
to the rest of this, which is very much about politics and culture and the like.
Laura Meckler, thank you so much for your reporting and your time.
Thanks so much for having me.
Laura Meckler is a national education writer for The Washington Post.
Our conversation was recorded yesterday.
Coming up, TV critic David Bianculli reviews A Thousand Blows, the new historical drama
series from Peaky Blinders creator Stephen Knight.
This is Fresh Air.
Stephen Knight, creator of the long-running, much-acclaimed British TV series Peaky Blinders,
has a new period drama that's come to the United States.
It's called A Thousand Blows, and it's about tough yet vulnerable characters trying
to survive and thrive in Victorian-era East End London.
Our TV critic David Bianculli has this review.
In the last couple of years, British writer-producer Stephen Knight has been responsible for some
really thoughtful, very entertaining TV miniseries.
The modern spy drama The Veil, starring Elizabeth Moss.
The World War II drama, All the Light We Cannot See,
starring Mark Ruffalo.
And set in the early 19th century,
a vibrant adaptation of the Charles Dickens novel,
Great Expectations, with the marvelous Olivia Coleman
as Miss Havisham.
But before that, from 2013 to 2022,
Stephen Knight created and wrote and directed
many episodes of one of the best TV series
so far in this 21st century, Peaky Blinders,
showcasing the talions of Killian Murphy
long before he played the title role
in the hit movie Oppenheimer.
Peaky Blinders was a brilliant character study
of someone striving to outwit, outplay, and
outlast all competing criminal elements while simultaneously navigating potential roads to
prominence and respectability. That's what Stephen Knight's new series, A Thousand Blows,
is about as well. But this new Hulu series, set on the tough east side of London in the Victorian era, focuses intently not just on one scrappy character but on three. And Knight, as
creator and lead writer of A Thousand Blows, has done what David Milch did on
his HBO series Deadwood. Knight, like Milch, bases his central characters on
actual figures from history, then builds a totally believable,
depressingly seedy environment and populates that with fictional characters to interact
with the real ones.
The actual historical record is used more as inspiration than blueprint, but the seeds
are there.
Basically, A Thousand Blows is set against the boxing world, which, at that time in London
in the 1880s, was a tale of two cities.
There's the East End of London, where vicious bare-knuckles fights were staged in back rooms
of neighborhood pubs.
And there's the West End, where boxing matches were more gentlemanly affairs in men's clubs,
with boxing gloves and strongly enforced rules of engagement.
Stephen Graham, who played Hayden Stagg
in the final season of Peaky Blinders,
portrays Sugar Goodson, an East End pub owner
and furious fighter.
Aaron Doherty, who played Princess Anne
in the middle seasons of The Crown,
portrays Mary Carr, the leader of the 40 Elephants.
That's a gang of opportunistic pickpockets,
shoplifters, and thieves, all women.
And interacting with both of those
fact-based colorful characters is a third.
Jamaican immigrant Hezekiah Mosco,
played with Killian Murphy type intensity
by Malachi Kirby, who starred as Kuntekinte
in the recent remake of Roots.
Eventually, Hezekiah steps into the boxing ring on both sides of London.
But when he arrives in England, fresh off the boat at the London docks
and accompanied by his childhood friend Alex, he's pursuing a different dream entirely.
One of the first people he meets on the bustling streets of London is Mary Carr,
the gang leader thief who, while talking
to Hezekiah about his future, also is picking his pocket.
All right, so tomorrow I'm going to the East London Zoological Gardens. Have you ever been there?
Actually, yes. We go there often, especially when we know there'll be a crowd.
Have you seen the lions there?
What do you want to see a lion for?
I don't want to see a lion. I want to see a moon.
You're a lion, Taima.
Not yet, but I will be.
You're not serious.
I'm not from London, so when I say something, that is what I mean.
When their conversation is over and Hezekiah politely asks for his stolen two shillings to be returned, the two begin
a friendship that takes them across London, from grimy streets to royal mansions.
A Thousand Blows arrives on Hulu with all six episodes dropped at once.
But it finishes with a to-be-continued ending and even includes some teaser scenes from
future episodes.
More of this story clearly is coming. But what's here
is gripping on its own and full of surprises. The boxing sequences, like the royal dinners,
are impressive in their detail and in their very different types of intensity. And while
A Thousand Blows is not, so far, quite up to the level of Peaky Blinders, it does achieve one thing that TV series did
so brilliantly.
It introduces us to characters and performances that linger long after the show is over.
David Bianculli is a professor of television studies at Rowan University.
He reviewed A Thousand Blows, now streaming on Hulu.
Tomorrow on Fresh Air, we remember South African playwright
Apple Fugard whose plays were about the emotional and psychological consequences of apartheid.
And we remember songwriter and singer Jerry Butler who sang with Curtis Mayfield and the
impressions before going solo. I hope you can join us. Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller.
Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham.
Our managing producer is Sam Brigger.
Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Anne Marie Baldonado,
Lauren Krenzle, Teresa Madden, Monique Nazareth, Thea Challener, Susan Yacundi, and Anna Bauman.
Our digital media producer is Molly C.V. Nesper.
Roberta Shorrock directs the show.
With Cherry Gross, I'm Tanya Mosley.
There's a lot going on right now.
Mounting economic inequality, threats to democracy,
environmental disaster, the sour stench of chaos in the air.
I'm Brooke Gladstone, host of WNYC's On the Media.
Want to understand the reasons and the meanings of the narratives that led us here and maybe
how to head them off at the pass?
That's On the Media's specialty.
Take a listen wherever you get your podcasts.
On Throughline from NPR. The consequences for the country would have been enormous. podcasts.