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Every Student Succeeds Act

Can Betsy DeVos Make Shift From Divisive Nominee to Effective Leader?

By Alyson Klein 鈥 February 10, 2017 6 min read
Betsy DeVos, recently confirmed as U.S. Secretary of 91制片厂视频, waits on stage to be introduced before addressing staff at the Department of 91制片厂视频 in Washington on Feb. 8.
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U.S. Secretary of 91制片厂视频 Betsy DeVos finally took the helm of her agency this week after a bitter and tumultuous confirmation process unlike any other in the U.S. Department of 91制片厂视频鈥檚 more than three-decade history.

Now, it鈥檚 an open question whether DeVos can make the transition from highly divisive nominee to effective leader.

Also unclear: whether the who called their senators urging them to vote against DeVos will try to find common ground with her鈥攐r continue to make their case against her.

DeVos struck a conciliatory tone in her first speech to agency employees this week.

鈥淭he obstacles between our nation鈥檚 students and their pursuit of excellence can all be overcome,鈥 the day after she was confirmed. 鈥淎ll too often, adult issues can complicate and get in the way of a focus upon those we serve. The good news is: We can all work together to find solutions and make them happen.鈥

And she tried to reassure those who worry that the department might back away from its civil rights mission during her tenure.

鈥淭he department also has a unique role in protecting students,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e believe students deserve learning environments that foster innovation and curiosity and are also free from harm.鈥

So far, DeVos and the White House have yet to fill key staff positions at the department, including the deputy secretary, the No. 2 position. DeVos also has yet to lay out details of her policy priorities going forward, beyond a general focus on school choice and local control.

Confirmation Storm

Right up until the moment the Senate confirmed her Feb. 7, DeVos鈥攁 billionaire school choice advocate whose family has donated tens of millions of dollars to Republican candidates and causes鈥攚as at the center of a firestorm of opposition.

Demonstrators hit the streets in multiple cities to protest DeVos鈥 qualifications. She was spoofed on 鈥淪aturday Night Live.鈥 Opponents slammed her on social media and jammed the phone lines on Capitol Hill. And Democrats held the Senate floor for 24 hours of speeches calling DeVos unfit for the job.

The chamber deadlocked 50-50 on her nomination. For the first time in history, the vice president, Mike Pence, .

Vice President Mike Pence, right, swears in 91制片厂视频 Secretary Betsy DeVos in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building in Washington on Feb. 7. DeVos' husband, Dick DeVos, is at center.

The intense opposition had begun to build after an underwhelming confirmation hearing last month in which DeVos seemed confused about core issues in K-12 policy, including federal special education laws and measuring student performance.

Her performance at the hearing hypercharged already existing concerns about DeVos鈥 depth of knowledge when it comes to public education. She is the first secretary who hasn鈥檛 been either a public school student or parent. And, unlike most of her predecessors, she has never worked professionally on education at the state, district, or university level. Democrats also warned, again and again, of potential financial conflicts of interest stemming from her investments.

Even though the campaign was ultimately unsuccessful at preventing DeVos from taking the reins at the department, it had some effect: Two Republican senators鈥擜laska鈥檚 Lisa Murkowski and Maine鈥檚 Susan Collins鈥.

The close vote may not bode well for some of the school choice initiatives that DeVos鈥攚ho has spent much of her career supporting candidates who embrace vouchers and charters鈥攃ould propose. Such an initiative may need 60 votes to clear procedural hurdles, and support from Democrats, and even some Republicans, doesn鈥檛 appear to be forthcoming.

And Sen. Patty Murray of Washington state, the top Democrat on the Senate education committee who led the fight against DeVos, said ahead of the vote that the secretary will enter the agency as a hobbled leader.

鈥淪he would start her job with no credibility inside the agency she is supposed to lead,鈥 Murray said. 鈥淲ith no influence in Congress. As the punchline in a late-night comedy show鈥攁nd without the confidence of the American people.鈥

But Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., the education committee chairman, who helped shepherd DeVos鈥 nomination through the chamber, said she would be an effective leader鈥攁 champion for both school choice and local control.

鈥淪he will implement our law replacing No Child Left Behind the way we wrote it,鈥 Alexander said during debate. 鈥淪he has worked tirelessly to give low-income children more of the same kind of choices that wealthy students have.鈥

DeVos hasn鈥檛 been specific about her agenda and didn鈥檛 get into the details during her speech to department employees. But President Donald Trump pitched a $20 billion initiative during the campaign that would enable public funds to follow children to the schools of their choice, including private schools. That proposal would have to go through Congress.

Working With Critics

Hundreds of education organizations鈥攆rom teachers鈥 unions, to civil rights organizations, and even some charter school supporters, 鈥攕ent letters to Capitol Hill in the past few weeks either urging senators not to support DeVos鈥 nomination as education secretary or raising concerns about her.

Some of those groups say they now stand ready to work with DeVos on areas of common interest.

A group of protesters gather outside the U.S. Department of 91制片厂视频 in Washington before Betsy DeVos, recently confirmed as Secretary of 91制片厂视频, was scheduled to speak to the department staff on Feb. 8.

Kati Haycock, who recently announced she鈥檚 stepping down as the leader of the 91制片厂视频 Trust, which advocates for poor and minority children and opposed DeVos鈥 nomination, said of the new secretary, 鈥淚 think she鈥檚 a grown-up. We have always managed to work with folks on things we agree on and to oppose them on things that we don鈥檛.鈥

But Lily Eskelsen Garc铆a, the president of the National 91制片厂视频 Association, which vehemently opposed DeVos, told Politico recently that she doesn鈥檛 see an opening.

And civil rights advocates wasted no time in letting DeVos know that they鈥檒l be watching her closely.

鈥淭he fact that her confirmation vote was the first in American history to require a tie-breaking vote by the vice president speaks to the widespread concern about her qualifications raised by the civil rights community, concerned parents and educators from across the country,鈥 said Wade Henderson, the president and CEO of the 91制片厂视频 Conference on Civil and Human Rights in a statement released shortly after the vote. 鈥淲orking with partners at the federal, state, and local level, we will hold this new secretary accountable to faithfully executing our nation鈥檚 education and civil rights laws.鈥

Wooing Educators?

The Every Student Succeeds Act has stripped away many of the department鈥檚 powers, making the secretary鈥檚 bully pulpit鈥攁nd credibility within the education community鈥攁ll the more important.

Jeanne Allen, the founder and CEO of the Center for 91制片厂视频 Reform, which supports vouchers and other forms of choice, suggested DeVos start by convening small groups of teachers, parents, school choice advocates, home school proponents, state chiefs, school board members, and faith-based organizations and listening to what they have to say.

鈥淵es there鈥檚 been a firestorm of people writing and yelling and screaming, but it鈥檚 the rank and file parents and teachers that I think that she should spend her first hundred days talking to,鈥 Allen said.

Getting some of that rank and file on board may be a tall order.

鈥淚 have a fundamental objection, like a deep-in-my-core objection, that somebody who is so grossly unqualified and incompetent is going to be the leader of our nation鈥檚 schools,鈥 Nate Gibbs-Bowling, Washington state鈥檚 teacher of the year, said recently on a panel sponsored by the Council of Chief School Officers and the Aspen Institute.

State chiefs generally didn鈥檛 take public stances for or against DeVos.

But Pedro Rivera, the education secretary in Pennsylvania, harkened back to his teaching career in describing what it might be like to work with her.

鈥淎s a classroom teacher, I鈥檝e worked with principals that I didn鈥檛 necessarily care for and [under] school policies that I didn鈥檛 like, but ... at the end of the day, we鈥檙e in this role because we care about kids, and nothing that happens above us is going to change that.鈥

A version of this article appeared in the February 15, 2017 edition of 91制片厂视频 Week as DeVos Takes Reins at Ed. Department, While Anxieties Persist

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