Los Angeles Times

Biden makes his Education choice

Connecticu­t schools chief who pushed to reopen campuses is pick for Education job.

- By Evan Halper Times staff writer Sameea Kamal in Los Angeles contribute­d to this report.

A schools chief who called for campuses to reopen is tapped for Cabinet post.

WASHINGTON — Joe Biden is poised to nominate Miguel Cardona as secretary of Education. The schools chief in Connecticu­t pushed to reopen campuses during the COVID- 19 pandemic and emerged as a consensus choice for the federal post with the backing of teachers unions and Latino activists.

The president- elect’s choice of Cardona, who is of Puerto Rican descent, would place a third Latino in a prominent position in Biden’s Cabinet as he works to make good on his promise to have a leadership team that ref lects the diversity of the country. He earlier nominated California Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra, who is Mexican American, to lead the Department of Health and Human Services. Cubanborn Alejandro Mayorkas was picked by Biden to lead the Department of Homeland Security.

The Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus had promoted Cardona’s candidacy for the job, and the National Assn. of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials applauded the choice.

“In Miguel Cardona, America will have an experience­d and dedicated public school teacher leading the way at the Department of Education — ensuring that every student is equipped to thrive in the economy of the future, that every educator has the resources they need ... and that every school is on track to reopen safely,” Biden said in a statement.

Vice President- elect Kamala Harris added that Cardona will help “build a public education system that lifts up all Americans, regardless of race, background or ZIP code.”

Biden and Harris plan to introduce Cardona to the public at a televised event Wednesday.

Cardona stands out in the education world for his ability to navigate its contentiou­s politics defined by heated and sustained battles over resources, testing, privatizat­ion and — more recently — the expectatio­ns placed on public schools amid a pandemic.

He has earned the respect of teachers groups and centrist organizati­ons not always aligned with them. A product and longtime champion of public schools, Cardona has a life experience and career that contrast sharply with that of Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, a billionair­e detested by education unions who has spent her tenure pushing school privatizat­ion.

Cardona’s career mirrors that of many other Biden nominees, who trend centrist. His biography and approach to governing closely resemble those of Becerra.

Like Biden, Cardona and Becerra came from humble background­s with parents who they say instilled in them an appreciati­on for the dignity of work and the prospect of upward mobility. They excelled in their careers not by aligning with the most strident activists but often by listening patiently to all sides. They distinguis­hed themselves as coalition builders.

Cardona was born in a housing project in Meriden, Conn. His grandfathe­r was a tobacco farmer with a second- grade education who moved the family to Connecticu­t from Puerto Rico. When Cardona entered elementary school, he spoke no English. But his later rise through the education system was dramatic.

During vocational school, Cardona attended college prep classes in which he was often the only Latino in the room, he told the Connecticu­t Mirror in 2019. After college, he started teaching in his hometown and by 28 was the youngest school principal in the state.

In Connecticu­t, the same teachers who clashed with Cardona over his push to keep schools open during the pandemic enthusiast­ically embraced the possibilit­y he would lead the Education Department.

“He has been tested by the unpreceden­ted upheaval caused by the pandemic,” said a statement from a coalition that included 60,000 Connecticu­t teachers and other unionized school officials. “While this challenge has been a rocky road — and many issues remain unresolved — teachers and school support staff have appreciate­d his openness and collaborat­ion. If selected as Secretary of Education, Dr. Cardona would be a positive force for public education — light years ahead of the dismal Betsy DeVos track record.”

Cardona would be taking the helm of the department at a time the virus has pushed school districts into crisis and Biden will be championin­g a vastly expanded federal government role for them.

The president- elect has called for all public schools to resume in- person learning within his first 100 days in office. And he has promised to substantia­lly boost federal funding for struggling public schools, with money targeted at expanding the number of social workers and psychologi­sts in schools, building new infrastruc­ture and improving special education programs.

In Connecticu­t, Cardona pushed to keep schools open as unions objected based on safety concerns. He argued that school could remain safely in session with adequate staffing. Keeping public schools closed was particular­ly concerning to Cardona, who spent much of his career focused on expanding opportunit­y for children in low- income and marginaliz­ed communitie­s like the one he came from.

During the pandemic, he has pushed to expand access to such children not just by keeping school doors open, but also by getting them the tools they need.

Connecticu­t announced earlier this month it was the first state to provide a digital device and reliable at- home internet connection to every student in need.

The battles Cardona would be stepping into at the federal level are intense. The clashes extend beyond when and how to reopen all public schools to long- standing tensions over the role of charter institutio­ns in public districts, the extent to which students should be tested, and the push for more culturally literate classes. There is also the national movement — which Biden supports — to erase large amounts of student debt and provide tuitionfre­e public college.

Cardona has moved cautiously through the roughand- tumble politics of education. He told lawmakers in Connecticu­t that he saw charter schools as a “viable option” for parents seeking choice but that his focus would be on making traditiona­l public schools better. He has expressed some concern that there is too much reliance on testing, a position that endears him to organized labor. And he champions Black and Latino studies courses. In June, Connecticu­t became the f irst state requiring high schools to offer them.

Beyond the raging battles over public schools, the job in Biden’s Cabinet would also place Cardona in the middle of a partisan f ight over how colleges and universiti­es should handle reporting of sexual assault.

The Trump administra­tion worked to water down some of the Title IX victims’ rights measures that had been strengthen­ed during the Obama era. Biden has promised to revive the more aggressive Title IX rules that DeVos scrapped, an undertakin­g that would fall to Cardona.

 ?? Devin Leith- Yessian Berlin Citi zen/ Record Journal ?? I F CONFIRMED, Miguel Cardona would take the helm of the Department of Education and be tasked with getting students nationwide back in the classroom.
Devin Leith- Yessian Berlin Citi zen/ Record Journal I F CONFIRMED, Miguel Cardona would take the helm of the Department of Education and be tasked with getting students nationwide back in the classroom.

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