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June 2, 2026

Supreme court clears way for Trump to gut education department – live updates | Trump administration

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Supreme court clears way for Trump to gut education department

The supreme court has cleared the way for Donald Trump’s administration to resume dismantling the Department of Education, part of his effort to shrink the federal government’s role in education in favor of more state control.

In the latest high court win for Trump, the justices lifted a federal judge’s order that had reinstated nearly 1,400 workers affected by mass layoffs at the department and blocked the administration from transferring key functions to other federal agencies.

A legal challenge is continuing to play out in lower courts. The court’s action came in a brief, unsigned order. Its three liberal justices dissented.

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Key events

The day so far

  • Trump’s Maga base remains in a state of flux over his administration’s handling of the Epstein files – with his deputy FBI director, Dan Bongino, so fuming he’s somewhat at large over the row. It follows the justice department’s claim last week that it didn’t have a list of Jeffrey Epstein’s alleged clients, and its finding that the convicted sex offender wasn’t murdered – both of which have caused uproar among rightwing commentators and influencers, who usually worship Trump’s every move. Attorney general Pam Bondi – who suggested in February that the client list was on her desk – has been the subject of particular ire, with Magaworld figures clamoring for her to be fired (Bongino is reportedly so “out-of-control furious” with her that he’s threatened to resign if she doesn’t go). Trump has defended Bondi and hit out at her critics, and sources have told CNN that whether he’s already resigned or not Bongino’s position with the White House has become untenable.

  • Maga heavyweight Tucker Carlson – who recently also questioned Trump over his decision to bomb Iran – led the calls for transparency, telling NBC News this morning that he now believes the justice department doesn’t actually have “much relevant information about Jeffrey Epstein’s sex crimes”. “Rather than just admit that, Pam Bondi made a bunch of ludicrous claims on cable news shows that she couldn’t back up, and this current outrage is the result,” Carlson said.

  • Politicians in Kyiv welcomed Trump’s announcement that billions of dollars worth of US military equipment will be sent to Ukraine, while officials in Moscow officials dismissed his threat of sanctions against Russia as hot air. In a meeting earlier with the Nato secretary general, Mark Rutte, at the White House, Trump said the US would send Patriot anti-aircraft batteries and interceptor missiles, paid for by European allies. He promised that additional Patriot systems would arrive within days, funded by Germany and other Nato partners, which would be a significant step in helping Ukraine to defend itself. Kyiv is believed to have only six functioning Patriot batteries. Russian officials and pro-war bloggers largely dismissed Trump’s threats, portraying them as far less serious than anticipated.

  • Former president Joe Biden denied claims that his circle of aides acted without his knowledge when he granted a slew of pardons and commutations in the final days and hours of his presidency. “I made every single one of those,” the former president told the New York Times in an interview published yesterday when asked about claims that he was incapacitated and unaware of clemency decisions. Biden called the people making those claims “liars”, adding: “They know it.”

  • The notorious new “Alligator Alcatraz” immigration jail in the Florida Everglades contains hundreds of detainees with no criminal records or charges, it was disclosed yesterday, as lawmakers decried “inhumane” conditions inside after touring the facility. At least one detainee shouted out to politicians during Saturday’s visit that he was a US citizen, the Democratic Florida congressman Maxwell Frost said. And the Miami Herald obtained and published a list of 700 people held in cages showing that at least 250 had committed no offense other than a civil immigration violation.

  • A coalition of mostly Democratic-led states filed a lawsuit today challenging a move by Trump’s administration to withhold about $6.8bn in congressionally approved federal funding for K-12 schools. Attorneys general or governors from 24 states and the District of Columbia sued in federal court in Providence, Rhode Island, arguing that the US Department of Education and the office of management and budget threw schools nationwide into chaos by unconstitutionally freezing funding for six programs approved by Congress.

  • King Charles has invited Trump for an unprecedented second state visit in September, scheduling the trip for three days when UK parliament is not sitting and removing the possibility of the US president addressing parliament.

  • Trump continued his attacks on Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell today, calling him a “stupid guy” and a “knucklehead” as he called once again for interest rates to be lowered to 1% or less.

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