The order affects several federal departments and is aimed at freeing up government funding to expand school choice programs.
Trump's executive order could expand school choice. Critics warn it could divert funds from public schools and worsen inequality.
President Donald Trump has signed an executive order to restrict gender-affirming care for people under the age of 19.
President Trump is expected to sign an executive order to prioritize and free up federal funding for school choice programs, CBS News has learned.
The largest union for government employees sued the Trump administration to block an executive order that strips federal workers of job protections.
The order sparked uncertainty over a crucial financial lifeline for states, schools and organizations that rely on trillions of dollars from Washington.
Trump stopped a program that had been in the works and was intended to give Medicare recipients access to more than 100 generic drugs for $2 a month, according to another executive order signed on Trump's first day in his new term.
The order reinstates a policy from Trump's first term that prohibited trans people from enlisting and barred those already in the military from transitioning.
The Trump administration is being sued over a transgender military executive order, signed late Monday, by six military servicemembers.
The Boston university's webpage formerly titled, "The Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion," is now "Belonging in Northeastern."
Last week, the organization learned of Mr. Trump's executive order pausing the grant money that keeps the help desk running late.