Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Stepping down

Education secretary to resign post after seven years.

- JOSH LEDERMAN AND KATHLEEN HENNESSEY

WASHINGTON — Arne Duncan announced Friday he will step down after a seven-year tenure as President Barack Obama’s education secretary.

Obama tapped a senior bureaucrat to run the department while leaving the role of secretary vacant for the remainder of his presidency.

One of the longest-serving Cabinet members, Duncan is among the few who have formed close personal relationsh­ips with the president. After Duncan’s departure in December, Agricultur­e Secretary Tom Vilsack will be the sole member of Obama’s Cabinet still in his original role.

Obama described Duncan as one of the most consequent­ial secretarie­s in the department’s history and said Duncan delivered at every stage of learning. During his tenure, more than 30 states increased their investment in early childhood education, states raised standards for teaching and learning, and high school graduation rates reached an all-time high, Obama said.

“Arne’s done more to bring our educationa­l system, sometimes kicking and screaming, into the 21st century than anybody else,” Obama said.

Duncan plans to return to Chicago, where his family is living, with his future plans uncertain.

“Being apart from my family has become too much of a strain, and it is time for me to step aside and give a new leader a chance,” Duncan said in an email to staff members obtained by The Associated Press.

Duncan joined Obama at a news conference at the White House to announce the move. He choked up when talking about his parents, who were both educators in Chicago.

“All our life, we saw what kids could do when they were given a chance. That’s why we do this work today,” Duncan said.

In an unconventi­onal move, Obama asked John King Jr., a senior Education Department official, to oversee the Education Department, but he declined to nominate him to be secretary, which would require confirmati­on by the Republican-run Senate. Elevating King in an acting capacity spares Obama a clash with Senate Republican­s over his education policies as his term draws to a close.

“We do not intend to nominate another candidate,” said a White House official who wasn’t authorized to comment by name and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Republican­s pointed out that Obama previously has complained that acting secretarie­s cannot fulfill all the duties of Senate-confirmed agency heads.

Duncan’s tenure coincided with a roiling debate about perceived federal overreach into schools that remains a potent issue as he leaves office. Duncan sought to use the federal government’s leverage to entice states to follow Washington’s preferred approach to higher standards, prompting resistance from all sides.

On the right, Republican­s and state leaders accused Duncan of a heavy-handed federal approach that sidesteppe­d lawmakers and enforced top-down policies on local schools. Critics blasted the department for linking federal dollars to state adoption of standards such as the Common Core, a controvers­ial set of curriculum guidelines. His signature initiative was Race to the Top, in which states competed for federal grants with strings attached.

On the left, Duncan clashed over policy with teachers unions, including the largest, the 275,000-member National Education Associatio­n, which once called on Duncan to resign. Traditiona­lly reliable Democratic allies, labor leaders bristled at his strong support for charter schools and the use of student test scores to evaluate teachers.

Throughout his tenure, Duncan stood firmly behind federal standardiz­ed testing requiremen­ts, even as he readily handed out waivers exempting states from George W. Bush-era requiremen­ts under No Child Left Behind. Duncan cast the federal testing as a civil-rights issue, critical to making schools ensure that students of all races and background­s succeed. The Education Department pointed to statistics showing the high school graduation rate under Duncan hit a new high of 81 percent.

Occasional­ly flashing impatience with criticism, Duncan angered some in 2014 when he cast opponents as “white suburban moms who — all of a sudden — their child isn’t as brilliant as they thought they were.” He later said he regretted the “clumsy phrasing.”

Part of the Chicago cohort that converged on Washington after Obama’s election, Duncan previously ran the Chicago public school system, although he never worked as a teacher. A basketball player who played profession­ally in Australia, Duncan was once a regular in Obama’s weekend games.

“Arne Duncan was one of the president’s best appointmen­ts,” said Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., who frequently clashed with Duncan as chairman of the Senate’s education panel. He added that they disagreed on the issue of federal versus local control of schools.

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 ?? AP/MANUEL BALCE CENETA ?? President Barack Obama joins Education Secretary Arne Duncan as he announces his resignatio­n. Senior Education Department official John King Jr. (left) will oversee the department.
AP/MANUEL BALCE CENETA President Barack Obama joins Education Secretary Arne Duncan as he announces his resignatio­n. Senior Education Department official John King Jr. (left) will oversee the department.

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