US Education Dept to Leave Current Headquarters as Dismantling Continues Under Trump

WASHINGTON, March 26 (Reuters) – President ⁠Donald ⁠Trump’s administration said ⁠on Thursday the U.S. Education Department will leave ​its headquarters in Washington and relocate to a smaller office ‌in the U.S. capital as ‌the government continues efforts to dismantle the agency.

“The ⁠U.S. Department ⁠of Education will move out of the Lyndon B. ​Johnson headquarters building,” the Trump administration said, adding the Education Department headquarters building has been 70% vacant.

“The U.S. Department of Energy ​will move out of its outdated James V. Forrestal building ⁠and assume ⁠the lease on ⁠the ​Lyndon B. Johnson building,” the joint statement from the Education and ​Energy Departments added.

The ⁠federal government cast its actions as a cost-saving move. It said the Energy Department’s move to the Education Department headquarters will save taxpayers over $350 million in deferred maintenance costs.

Trump ⁠promised during his 2024 election campaign to dismantle the Education Department ⁠as part of a bid to shrink the federal government’s role in education in favor of more control by the states. The Trump administration has gutted staffing at the agency.

Late last year, the Education Department announced new partnerships with four other federal departments – Labor, State, Interior and Health and Human Services – to ⁠share or transfer some of the functions it performed.

Last week, the Trump administration said the Education Department was handing off a portion of its student loan portfolio ​to the Treasury Department.

(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in ​Washington; Editing by Chris Reese)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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