Trump Administration Relocates Education Department, Plans Signature on Currency
The Facts
The Trump administration announced that the Education Department will relocate from its Washington headquarters building, which will be handed over to the Department of Energy. The Treasury Department also announced plans to print President Trump's signature on new U.S. paper currency alongside Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent's signature. This would mark the first time a sitting president's signature has appeared on U.S. currency.
How different outlets are framing this
American outlets are contextualizing these moves differently based on their typical editorial positions. The Washington Post frames the Education Department relocation as "the latest and most visible move toward eliminating the Education Department altogether," emphasizing the broader dismantling effort. Similarly, ABC News describes it as occurring "amid dismantling of agency," while the Associated Press mentions "mass layoffs" and connects it to Trump's efforts to dismantle the agency. USA Today takes a more neutral, almost playful approach with its headline "Take it to the bank," focusing on the factual nature of the currency change.
International outlets appear more focused on the symbolic aspects of Trump's actions. Al Jazeera explicitly characterizes the currency move as "the latest example of Trump literally stamping his name on US institutions," framing it as part of a pattern of self-promotion. The BBC maintains a more straightforward factual tone, simply noting it's a first for a sitting president. The Associated Press, serving a global audience, provides the most comprehensive factual coverage of both stories while noting the historical precedent aspect of the currency decision.
Source Articles
- Al Jazeera27 Mar, 03:49Trump’s signature to appear on US currency in first for sitting president
Announcement is the latest example of Trump literally stamping his name on US institutions.
- BBC News27 Mar, 02:07Trump's signature to appear on US bank notes in first for sitting president
The US president's signature will appear on new paper currency alongside Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.
- ABC News27 Mar, 01:21Dept. of Education headquarters being relocated amid dismantling of agency
Dept. of Energy employees will move into the current Education Dept. building.
- USA Today26 Mar, 22:57Take it to the bank: Treasury will put Trump's signature on dollar bills
The Treasury Department announced President Trump's signature will appear on all future US paper currency, a first for a sitting president.
- Associated Press26 Mar, 21:56Education Department to relocate to another Washington building
The Education Department will relocate from its Washington headquarters as part of the Trump administration’s dismantling of the agency, officials said Thursday. The agency has seen its ranks thinned by mass layoffs since President Donald Trump took office an…
- Associated Press26 Mar, 21:49US Treasury working to put Trump's signature on new paper currency in first for sitting president
The Treasury Department is drawing up plans to print President Donald Trump’s signature on every new U.S. paper bill. Treasury announced the idea Thursday. Treasury says it would mark the first time a sitting president’s signature appears on new currency. The…
- Washington Post26 Mar, 21:46Education Dept. to hand headquarters building to Department of Energy
Abandoning the D.C. headquarters is the Trump administration’s latest and most visible move toward eliminating the Education Department altogether.