USA TODAY US Edition

DeVos: Jan. 6 riot ‘not defensible in any way’

She says education agenda lost to election obsession

- Ingrid Jacques Ingrid Jacques is a columnist for USA TODAY Opinion. You can contact her at ijacques@usatoday.com or on Twitter: @Ingrid_Jacques

Former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos says she watched with horror as the events of Jan. 6, 2021, unfolded at the nation’s Capitol. She could no longer stand by the president, whom she believed was culpable in the violence that day through his actions – and inaction.

So the next day, DeVos submitted her resignatio­n letter to then-President Donald Trump.

In an exclusive interview ahead of the release of her upcoming book, the Michigan billionair­e and major Republican Party donor told me that she hasn’t had any contact with Trump since.

This is the first time DeVos has spoken publicly about what led to her decision to resign, and what transpired in the final weeks of the presidency. She blames Trump’s inability to accept the results of the 2020 election for blocking what she saw as her best chance to get a major piece of her school choice agenda through Congress.

‘Line in the sand’

In “Hostages No More: The Fight for Education Freedom and the Future of the American Child,” DeVos writes: “To me, there was a line in the sand. It wasn’t about the election results. It was about the values and image of the United States. It was about public service rising above self. The president had lost sight of that.”

Many Americans will revisit Jan. 6 this week, with the U.S. House select committee investigat­ing the riot scheduled to hold its first public hearing Thursday during prime time.

DeVos was one of the first prominent members of the Trump administra­tion to resign after the riot.

Transporta­tion Secretary Elaine Chao announced her resignatio­n just hours before DeVos.

While DeVos stops short of putting

blame directly on Trump for instigatin­g the storming of the Capitol, she thinks the president could have – and should have – done much more to stop the mob.

“I went to Washington to do a job on behalf of the American people and particular­ly for students, and a lot of what happened after the (2020) election sort of put roadblocks in the way of doing any major additional work, so I really felt that everything I could accomplish in office had been accomplish­ed based on that reality and that dynamic,” the former Cabinet member told me.

“And then when I saw what was happening on Jan. 6 and didn’t see the president step in and do what he could have done to turn it back or slow it down or really address the situation,” DeVos says, “it was just obvious to me that I couldn’t continue.

“I was thinking about the kids I was there to represent, and what they are seeing and what they are taking away from this – it was not defensible in any way.”

DeVos says she was shocked when Trump turned on his loyal Vice President Mike Pence, who was committed to his duty of certifying the 2020 presidenti­al election.

This was a major reason that before resigning, DeVos first wanted to know whether invoking the 25th Amendment to remove Trump was a viable option. That Jan. 7, she spoke with other Cabinet members to gauge their thoughts – and she also talked to Pence, who’d have to be on board to remove the president.

“I spoke with the vice president and just let him know I was there to do whatever he wanted and needed me to do or help with, and he made it very clear that he was not going to go in that direction or that path,” DeVos says. “I spoke with colleagues. I wanted to get a better understand­ing of the law itself and see if it was applicable in this case. There were more than a few people who had those conversati­ons internally.”

Once she understood that removing the president was pretty much impossible, DeVos resigned later in the day.

Until everything culminated that Jan. 6, DeVos had thought staying the course was worth it, even in light of the president’s increasing­ly erratic behavior after the election.

Anyone who knows DeVos understand­s that advocating for school choice is what she’s most passionate about, and she didn’t want to leave office until she had done everything in her power to help create a federal tax credit program to encourage states to fashion scholarshi­ps – and more choice – for students.

DeVos says that toward the end of 2020, there had been a growing bipartisan consensus in Congress around school choice given the pandemic’s negative effects on schools.

And she thought there was a good chance that the School Choice Now proposal would be attached to the second major COVID-19 relief bill.

It soon became clear, however, that she had lost Trump’s support and attention in light of his obsession with the election results.

No regrets about taking the job

“It was about public service rising above self. The president had lost sight of that.” Betsy DeVos From “Hostages No More: The Fight for Education Freedom and the Future of the American Child”

“It was increasing­ly obvious the president’s mind was elsewhere,” DeVos says. “Most of the staff in the White House was trying to respond and react and deal with that, and it became more and more difficult to do anything positive or advance anything positive.

“I went there to serve the American people, and I felt I had to see this through and do everything I could to ensure that my job was done to the best of my ability. But it became increasing­ly untenable. And obviously the events of Jan. 6 put an exclamatio­n point on that.”

Despite the chaos at the end, DeVos says she has no regrets about taking the job to lead the Education Department.

And even if she wasn’t able to get the school choice legislatio­n through Congress, she points to other accomplish­ments during her tenure and believes she started a conversati­on that’s still resonating around the country.

“I went there to serve kids, I went there to serve the American people – not an individual,” she says.

 ?? SAUL LOEB/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos meet with teachers, school administra­tors and parents in 2017.
SAUL LOEB/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos meet with teachers, school administra­tors and parents in 2017.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States