The Senate has confirmed that former World Wrestling Entertainment CEO Linda McMahon will serve as President Donald Trump’s Secretary of Education and is heading the division that is expected to close “quickly.”
The Senate won the floor votes Monday evening, confirming McMahon 51-45 along the party line.
McMahon, who co-founded WWE with her husband Vince McMahon, served as administrator for the Small Business Administration (SBA) during Trump’s first term, but ended his post early in 2019 to return to the private sector.
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The Senate gave a full floor vote on whether McMahon would confirm his role as Secretary of Education. (Getty Images)
In November, the president tapped McMahon to work for another top post in his second term. However, this time he told her he wanted her to “get out of work.”
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“It’s a big fraudulent job,” the president said of the education sector. “They are ranked among the top countries in the world. We are ranked 40th, but we are ranked 1st in one category. Cost per student. So they cost more per student than any other country in the world, but they are ranked 40th.”
President Donald Trump shakes hands with Linda McMahon, a retired manager of small business management, as he sits by his side at Trump’s Mar Lago Estate in Palm Beach, Florida on March 29, 2019.
In a letter to the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (help) (help) Democrats (help) on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, McMahon said she “heart-heartedly” agreed to Trump’s plan to abolish the department.
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“President Trump believes that Washington’s bureaucracy should be abolished so that education can be returned to the states it belongs to. I sincerely support and agree with this mission,” McMahon wrote.
President Donald Trump’s Secretary of Education candidate Linda McMahon arrives in Washington on Thursday, February 13, 2025 for a Health, Education and Labor Commission hearing on her appointment. (Jacqueline Martin)
In her opening remarks at the beginning of her confirmation hearing, McMahon said, “Many Americans today are experiencing a declining system,” but “the opportunity for our previous four years is important.”
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“If I’m confirmed, the department will not stand vaguely while Jewish students are attacked and discriminated against,” McMahon said in her opening remarks, which she first shared with Fox News Digital. “We will stop enforcing schools to enter boys and men into women’s sports and spaces, and protect the rights of parents to direct their children’s moral education.”
Aubrie Spady is a writer for Fox News Digital.
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