Virtaully all US rail has been for the last two decades.
And plenty of rail wheels / axles too e.g. Luccihini from EAF in the factory on the website landing page in Sebino:
We develop and supply forged steel solutions for railway market such as Wheel, Axle, Wheelset, Tyre - Lucchini RS
lucchinirs.com
Steel from EAF can be used for low quality purposes with no post processing afterwards unlike pig iron that comes out of a blast furnace (hence the start of wide spread repeated confusion) or for middle and high end you need to post process e.g. Vacuum Arc Degassing (VAD), Vacuum Oxygen Decarburisation (VOD) and other Vacuum based processes that are equivalent to the later stage BOS processes in traditional steel making. The misinformation about EAF come from people not knowing about the post processing or deliberately ignoring it because they have other agendas.
The steel unions in the UK have generally been very against EAF until very recently as it meant much lower employment levels and lower union membership to the extent of even getting successive governments of different colours to be pro-blast furnace and anti-EAF until recent years.
As an example of what is possible with EAF - Sheffield Forgemasters moved to EAF and using recycled steel in 1968 and have made lots of reactor parts including the RN sub reactor pressure vessels, large power station alternator shafts, the Iraq super gun and lots of artillery barrels at the moment in the 57 years since then. All of what they make is post processed...
It would still be wise to retain 1 blast furnace for a while though.
Why? You do realise that the preferred way of making Manganese/Mangalloy/Hadfield Steel **including in the UK** has been EAF for decades? E.g. Progress Rail (formerly Edgar Allen) and until recently NR's largest supplier of Manganese Steel products has two EAFs at its South Queensferry foundry for making Managanese Steel.