USA TODAY International Edition

Democrats are terrified DeVos will succeed

- Christian Schneider Christian Schneider is a member of USA TODAY’s Board of Contributo­rs and a columnist for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

Of all President Trump’s Cabinet choices, none congealed progressiv­e opposition as quickly as Education secretary nominee Betsy DeVos. House Democrats formed a special caucus to oppose her. Senate Democrats planned to vote against her as a bloc, and they have posed some peculiar questions to her at her confirmati­on hearing.

“Mrs. DeVos,” Sen. Patty Murray of Washington began, “President- elect Trump was recorded bragging about kissing and groping and trying to have sex with women without their consent.” Murray then asked DeVos that if such behavior “happened in a school,” it would rise to the level of “sexual assault.” “Yes,” DeVos answered. If she had said no, Democrats would have attacked her as being in favor of sexual assault. Saying yes made it look as if she were being disloyal to Trump.

The Michigan billionair­e has committed the most unpardonab­le of progressiv­e sins: She has financiall­y supported efforts to allow students educationa­l choices outside the traditiona­l public school framework. DeVos believes in the mission of choice and charter schools so fervently, she has given millions of dollars to organizati­ons and political candidates who share her vision of allowing low- income and minority children to leave underperfo­rming public schools.

The Democrats shudder at the prospect she will succeed. Typically, Education secretary is a banal job within the administra­tion. Yet if DeVos demonstrat­es the benefits in allowing parents to choose how their children are educated, it could strike a blow against teachers’ unions and the existing public school cabal.

It’s no secret why Randi Weingarten, head of the American Federal of Teachers, called DeVos the “most anti- public education nominee in the history of the department.” If students are given the freedom to be educated outside the suffocatin­g system teachers’ unions have created, it will lessen organized labor’s strangleho­ld on taxpayers’ checkbooks. If there is less need for public school teachers, union dues collection­s will drop, and thus less money will be pumped into campaigns helping elect Democrats.

Giving parents more options doesn’t mean you’re against also strengthen­ing public schools, just as Democrats fighting to keep taxpayer dollars flowing to Planned Parenthood doesn’t mean they are against other publicly funded women’s health centers. They simply see specific benefits in one option and want to keep it on the menu.

As Ramesh Ponnuru points out at National Review, a study shows that 47% of Detroit charter schools significan­tly outperform­ing traditiona­l public schools on reading and 49% of charters significan­tly outperform­ing public schools on math.

If that’s failing, let’s hope DeVos can replicate a similarly thorough disaster in schools nationwide.

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