The News (New Glasgow)

DeVos confirmed as U.S. education secretary

Vice-president breaks tie in vote

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The U.S. Senate on Tuesday confirmed school choice advocate Betsy DeVos as education secretary by the narrowest of margins, with Vice-President Mike Pence breaking a 50-50 tie in a historic vote.

Two Republican­s joined Democrats in the unsuccessf­ul effort to derail the nomination of the wealthy Republican donor. The Senate historian said Pence’s vote was the first by a vice-president to break a tie on a Cabinet nomination.

Democrats cited her lack of public school experience and financial interests in organizati­ons pushing charter schools. DeVos has said she would divest herself from those organizati­ons.

Republican­s Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska fear that DeVos’ focus on charter schools will undermine remote public schools in their states.

Despite the win, DeVos emerges bruised from the highly divisive nomination process. She has faced criticism, even ridicule for her stumbles and confusion during her confirmati­on hearing and scathing criticism from teachers unions and civil rights activists over her support of charter schools and her conservati­ve religious beliefs.

But President Donald Trump remained uncompromi­sing and accused Democrats for seeking to torpedo education progress. In a tweet before the vote, he wrote “Betsy DeVos is a reformer, and she is going to be a great Education Sec. for our kids!”

After an all-night speaking marathon by Democrats, Sen. Patty Murray of Washington state, the top Democrat on the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee urged her Republican colleagues to vote against DeVos, calling her unqualifie­d and saying that she will be a poor advocate for low income families and students with disabiliti­es who rely on public education.

“We are just within one vote of sending this nomination back and asking the president to send us a nominee that can be supported by members on both sides of the aisle, that can set a vision that can fight for public schools, that can be that champion,” Murray said.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said DeVos will seek to empower states, not federal bureaucrat­s, to make important education decisions.

“I know that she is committed to improving our education system so that every child – every child – has a brighter future,” McConnell said ahead of the vote.

Emotions ran high ahead of the vote as constituen­ts jammed senators’ phone lines with calls and protesters gathered outside the Capitol, including one person in a grizzly bear costume to ridicule DeVos’ comment during her confirmati­on hearing that some schools might want guns to protect against grizzlies.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? The U.S. Senate confirmed Betsy Devos as education secretary by the narrowest possible margin.
AP PHOTO The U.S. Senate confirmed Betsy Devos as education secretary by the narrowest possible margin.

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