With the Trump administration announcing changes to federal childcare programs on Monday that advocates said would worsen the affordability crisis, the grassroots organizing group Community Change Action said President Donald Trump’s attacks on the industry have made the push for a universal care system more urgent than ever as thousands of providers and parents joined the “Day Without Childcare” nationwide action.

“As families face a worsening affordability crisis and childcare costs are outpacing rent, providers have been shouldering the burden,” said Community Change Action. “We can’t wait a second longer to create the universal childcare system we deserve—one that actually works, lifts the burden off of families and providers, and invests in our youngest generation to give them the strongest start possible.”

The group said families and daycare providers are participating in at least 75 actions, including one-day center closures, across 28 states in its fifth annual Day Without Childcare (DWOCC)—an event that it said would “launch the nationwide campaign that will win universal childcare.”

Events planned for Monday include a rally at the New Jersey Statehouse in Trenton; a gathering of childcare providers and parents during working hours in Yakima, Washington; lobbying visits to state representatives in California; and an early closure of People’s Day Care in Gary, Indiana in solidarity with programs that have had to shut down “due to Indiana’s choice to not fund early care and learning.”

According to Meredith Loomis Quinlan, childcare lead for Community Change Action, more than 3,000 parents and providers around the country had committed to going on strike for the day.

In January, the Trump administration initiated a funding freeze targeting all states in what it said was a response to “fraud that appears to be rampant in Minnesota and across the country.” The attack came after a right-wing influencer posted a video of a Somali-owned daycare center in Minnesota and accused its owners of fraud at the behest of Republican lawmakers. A small number of members of the state’s Somali community were charged with defrauding the state’s social services system.

The White House later said it would slash $10 billion in childcare funding for five Democratic-led states—an attempt that was blocked by a federal court last month.

And as families joined childcare providers and advocates on Monday to demand universal care with fair wages for providers, Trump was announcing changes to the federal Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) that officials said would put “parents back in charge”—but would actually eliminate a 2024 rule that capped childcare copayments at 7% of household income for low-income families, according to analysts.

Loomis Quinlan told Common Dreams that the changes to CCDF will also end requirements that “direct services be provided through grants or contracts and [will pay] childcare providers in advance for their services,” as well as “requiring payment based on enrollment rather than actual attendance.”

“Every one of those things is a direct attack on our childcare system,” said Loomis Quinlan. “And they’re trying to frame it as advancements. But it is absolutely not that. These rules are… not going to make childcare more affordable. They’re not going to make sure that childcare providers are paid on time with consistency.”

The administration’s cuts and regulatory changes have come as families across the US are already facing rising grocery prices linked to the president’s tariff policies, gas prices have surpassed $4.50 per gallon due to the US-Israeli war on Iran, and the White House’s policies have worsened the already existing housing affordability crisis.

A report by Care.com found in 2024 that the average US family with young children was spending 24% of their income on childcare.

“Having this really big childcare bill for families is just untenable,” Loomis Quinlan said. “And on the flip side, we know that the childcare providers are not making much in take-home pay, averaging around $14 an hour. And so they also aren’t able to make ends meet.”

Community Change Action emphasized that while attacking childcare centers’ ability to keep their doors open, the Trump administration is also taking direct aim at many providers, more than 20% of whom are immigrants, through its mass deportation agenda. In Chicago last November, federal agents raided a daycare center and arrested a teacher in what one angry parent called an act of “domestic terrorism.”

“We’ve had our funds frozen, violent armed ICE agents show up at our childrens’ safe spaces and our places of work, and our Black and Brown communities scapegoated,” said the group, referring to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement. “It’s time to take bold, sustained action that starts with this year’s DWOCC.”

Loomis Quinlan said that while the Trump administration is waging war on the childcare sector, progressive leaders like New York City Democratic Mayor Zohran Mamdani are making strides toward securing a universal childcare program for all families in the US. Mamdani joined forces with New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, also a Democrat, to fund a universal childcare program for the city earlier this year.

“We really feel like it’s a moment to be clear about what families and providers need, which is a universal childcare program in this country,” she told Common Dreams. “We need more investment, not less. Deregulating isn’t the answer. The changes to the programs announced today by the Trump administration are not the answer. What we need, what we’re organizing for today, is universal childcare.”

Under the universal program proposed by the group, childcare providers would be paid “a wage that enables their own families to thrive, receive healthcare, paid leave, retirement, and other benefits, and be compensated on par with educators in their state’s K-12 system.” It would also invest public resources to cover the true cost of care and professional development of the workforce, and protect against corporate profiteering.

Progressive US Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) has long advocated for a universal program, which he’s said should be funded by taxing the wealth of the top 0.1% richest Americans.

Loomis Quinlan emphasized that once a publicly funded universal childcare system is a reality, “it’s going to be so evident that this is something we always should have had in this country.”

“Can you imagine what it felt like when we were setting up the K-12 public education system in this country?” she said. “People probably thought that this was just ‘pie in the sky.’ And here we are, we have a great public education system in this country.”

“It’s hard sometimes in our current political climate to imagine, but I think it’s more important than ever for us to be imagining, because families cannot continue to be squeezed like this,” said Loomis Quinlan. “We need to start envisioning what it really looks like for our country to set families and kids up to prosper and thrive.”


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