On March 11, 2025, the Trump administration laid off half of the civil servants in the U.S. Department of Education. These were colleagues who I worked alongside, when I served as Director of the Department’s Center for Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships. I had relied on the breadth of their knowledge on how to protect religious freedom for students, including addressing antisemitism and islamophobia; I watched their dedication to helping students who had been bullied or denied access to education; and I had witnessed their care for firefighters, teachers, and other public servants as they helped them overcome the usurious burden of student loan debt. Those colleagues are no longer doing that work on behalf of the American people. Their roles are being terminated, as a result of the Trump administration’s illegal efforts to dismantle government from within.
In a democracy, the government is elected and funded by the people to meet their collective needs, serving as guarantor of their freedoms and providing critical services. But the Trump administration is forcing the government to abandon these obligations and seeking ways to wield it only as a weapon to maintain power. Instead of upholding students’ civil rights and civil liberties, for example, this administration paused urgent investigations into civil rights violations while exploiting faith communities’ civil rights concerns as a smokescreen for defunding educational institutions and targeting student activists.
A few months ago, when I served in the U.S. Department of Education, it went without saying that we must serve all of our nation’s students and work with all communities, whether we agreed with them on everything or not. Our job was to serve the people. This administration serves only itself.
While this administration robs students of resources and the help of dedicated public servants, it can feel like we are each powerless to stop it. But there is so much that all of us together, including our faith communities, can do to make a difference.
Even authoritarian systems are susceptible to changing course due to public outrage, so we can join together with others and be loud and clear about how cutting government services to communities harms them.
While this administration robs students of resources and the help of dedicated public servants, it can feel like we are each powerless to stop it. But there is so much that all of us together, including our faith communities, can do to make a difference.
Be vocal about how such policies are an affront to you, specifically as a person of faith, and if applicable, how such policies harm your faith community. Identify yourself visibly as a person of faith. Too often, bad actors try to use religion as a cover for bad policies. Do not allow anyone the opportunity to suggest that opposing harmful policies is anti-religious or immoral.
Whatever actions you pursue, make sure everyone knows about them! Reach out to members of the press, elected officials, your own communities, and the general public to share your concerns. Make clear that people of faith and conscience believe in governance that takes care of its people. Echo the voices of the prophets as you call out the travesty of robbing schools, healthcare, and other basic resources to line the pockets of billionaires. Read my example of speaking out from my position as a person of faith and a former official at the Department of Education.
Join local groups that are organizing. If you aren’t already part of a local organizing effort, there are many local faith groups like the affiliates and networks of Interfaith Alliance, Poor People’s Campaign, Faith in Action, and Faith in Public Life. There may be other local interfaith groups in your community who are mobilizing at this moment. Now is the time to seek them out.
Together, you can consider creative strategies to stop the dismantling of government services. Some of these organizing strategies include:
Direct actions like rallies, public vigils, walkouts, and more. Think about how to use sacred symbols and rituals in new ways to bring your community’s usual ministries to bear on the issue at hand, organize faith-based youth groups, showcase a children’s choir – get creative!
Advocacy with Members of Congress: Request meetings with their staff to demand that they hold the executive branch accountable and that they find creative ways of doing so.
Work withstate and local officials: Wherever possible, reach out to elected officials from governors to state legislators to school board members, and ask them to resist the harmful effects of federal policies and practices. The elimination of federal funds will mean state and local governments will be left with massive budget gaps. They will need your support organizing to get those resources back.
Hold corporations accountable: Don’t let corporations preemptively fall in line with an authoritarian regime or seek to benefit from it. Engage in boycotts to show your opposition or buy-ins to show support, show up to shareholder meetings, and speak out.
People will look to faith leaders to be the voices of moral courage during difficult times. As you are able, be outspoken in your calls for truth, for compassion, and for justice.
People will also look to you as sources of resilience when they choose to do the right thing. Publicly thank elected officials and other leaders who stand up for what is right, even if you disagree with them on other issues. Every action in support of our democracy takes courage and has great value. And for those leaders engaged in organizing alongside you, provide extra encouragement and support, knowing they may be targeted for their actions. Make sure all who stand up for justice know they do not do so alone.
Public servants across the federal government have faced harassment, illegal lawsuits, and a range of attacks from the Trump administration and from outside actors. To learn more about what civil servants can do to defend themselves, subscribe to Protect Democracy’s “Dear Civil Servant” newsletter and check out the resources they have already published.