Trump Nominates 'True Enemy' of Public
Schools for Education Secretary
President-elect
Donald Trump has tapped for U.S. Education Secretary "a 'reformer' who
does not hide her contempt for the public schools," according to historian Diane Ravitch.
Of
conservative billionaire Betsy DeVos, a longtime supporter of
charter schools and vouchers for private and religious schools,
National Education Association president Lily Eskelsen García said,
"her efforts over the years have done more to undermine public education
than support students."
"She
has lobbied for failed schemes, like vouchers—which take away funding and local
control from our public schools—to fund private schools at taxpayers'
expense," García continued.
"These schemes do nothing to help our most-vulnerable students while they ignore or exacerbate glaring opportunity gaps. She has consistently pushed a corporate agenda to privatize, de-professionalize, and impose cookie-cutter solutions to public education. By nominating Betsy DeVos, the Trump administration has demonstrated just how out of touch it is with what works best for students, parents, educators, and communities."
Similarly,
American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten called DeVos "the most ideological,
anti-public education nominee put forward since President Carter created a
Cabinet-level Department of Education."
"In
nominating DeVos," Weingarten said, "Trump makes it loud and clear
that his education policy will focus on privatizing, defunding, and destroying
public education in America."
Indeed, Chalkbeat earlier this week listed "a few things we could
reasonably surmise from a DeVos pick." Among them was that Trump is now
likely to go through with his plan "to use federal funds to encourage
states to make school choice available to all poor students, including through
vouchers that allow families to take public funding to private schools."
"That's
exactly what DeVos has zealously worked to make happen on a state-by-state
basis for decades," the outlet wrote.
"In
2000, she helped get a ballot measure before Michigan voters that would have
enshrined a right to vouchers in the state's Constitution. After the measure
failed, she and her husband formed a political action committee to support
pro-voucher candidates nationally. Less than a decade later, the group counted a 121-60 win-loss record."
Wealthy
DeVos—who served as head of the Michigan Republican Party from 1996 to 2000 and
again from 2003 to 2005—is "a Michigan power broker and major donor to the
GOP and its candidates around the country," the Washington Post reports.
She leads the American Federation for Children, described by teacher and education commentator Peter
Greene as "a dark money group that works [for] school privatization,"
and is married to Dick DeVos, an heir to the Amway
fortune.
"The
DeVos family has been using their deep pockets to influence the Michigan
legislature for years and it looks like they have finally bought their way into
a presidential administration as well,"
Progress
Michigan said in a statement. "The DeVos
family education plan has been a disaster for Michigan and we are truly
saddened that Trump decided to import their failed ideas to Washington,
D.C."
Meanwhile,
the Post adds, DeVos'
brother "is Erik Prince, the founder of Blackwater, one of the most profitable
private security firms during the Iraq War."
As
Jeremy Scahill, author of Blackwater:
The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army, wrote at The
Intercept just last week:
The
Prince and DeVos families gave the seed money for what came to be known as the
Republican Revolution when Newt Gingrich became House speaker in 1994 on a
far-right platform known as the Contract with America.
The
Prince and DeVos clans also invested heavily in a scheme developed by [Focus on
the Family's James] Dobson to engage in back-door lobbying activities by
forming "prayer warrior" networks of people who would call
politicians to advocate for Dobson's religious and political agenda. Instead of
lobbying, which the organization would have been prohibited from doing because
of its tax and legal status, they would claim they were "praying" for
particular policies.
The
Princes consistently poured money into criminalizing abortion, privatizing
education, blocking gay rights, and other right-wing causes centered around
their interpretation of Christianity.
The
family, especially Erik, was very close to Richard Nixon's "hatchet
man," Watergate conspirator Charles "Chuck" Colson.
The
author of Nixon's enemies list, Colson was the first person sentenced in the
Watergate scandal, after pleading guilty to obstruction of justice in the
investigation of the dirty tricks campaign against Daniel Ellsberg, the
whistleblower who leaked the Pentagon Papers during the Vietnam War.
Colson
became a born-again Christian before going to prison, and after his release, he
started the Prison Fellowship, which sought to convert prisoners to
Christianity to counter what Colson saw as the Islamic menace in U.S. prisons.
Erik Prince funded this as well and went on prison visits with Colson.