Editorial: Biden’s Win Means Betsy DeVos’ Departure, and Teachers Everywhere Are Celebrating

Of all the Trump Cabinet members who will lose their jobs when Donald Trump leaves the White House, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos is one whose departure is eagerly anticipated, and already celebrated, by those for whom she is supposed to be an advocate. When Joe Biden won the 2020 presidential election, American educators everywhere cheered and drank toasts, because it also meant that Betsy DeVos’ tenure (some have called it “a reign of terror”) will come to an end. 

DeVos, continually ranked the most unpopular Cabinet secretary of the Trump administration, (and scoring the moniker, “Cruella DeVos”), has never been a teacher, and has no work experience in a classroom or in a school, public or private, yet she was appointed to run the agency that governs schools in the U.S. Many Republicans saw DeVos’ job inexperience as an asset, because they believed it would prevent her from being influenced by teachers’ unions. But DeVos’ lack of experience has brought with it a dearth of understanding of American education systems, as well as a profound lack of empathy for educators and students alike. 

“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,” said said Lily Eskelsen Garcia, president of the National Education Association, upon DeVos’ nomination. 

During her confirmation hearing, DeVos demonstrated the depth of her lack of knowledge of education policy in her struggle to answer even basic questions. She has consistently shown a profound lack of comprehension and a disregard for federal laws governing the education of students with disabilities, and other marginalized students. 

Billionaire Betsy Devos has not been a friend of the public schools. Her agenda as Secretary of Education has included expanding school choice, including private school choice; increasing privatization and deregulation of charter schools; and promoting the use of taxpayer dollars to fund private and in particular, Christian schools. Her vision has also included education reform, which, carried out by expanding school choice and school vouchers, would, in her words, “advance God’s Kingdom.” 

In an interview on 60 Minutes, DeVos admitted that she intentionally hadn’t visited any low-performing public schools in her home state of Michigan, although she’s spent millions of dollars in Michigan in her attempts to expand school choice.

DeVos maintains that “public schools have ‘displaced’ the Church as the center of communities,” and her goal has been to “reverse that troubling trend.”

Betsy Devos’ goals might be admirable if she were Secretary of Education in a theocracy. She might be considered successful if she ran such an agency in an alternative universe where a leader was not expected to know what she was doing, where there were no special needs students or poor students, and where everyone shared the goal of “advancing the kingdom.” But Betsy Devos leads an agency in a country where the agency’s leader is expected to understand and care more about concepts such as “competency,” “growth,” and “student and teacher advocacy” than about “deregulation” and “advancing God’s kingdom.” 

It’s not just K-12 teachers who have been rejoicing at the imminent departure of Betsy Devos as Education Secretary. The entire educational system she oversees— the higher education community, as well as K-12 principals, school administrators, and parents, along with national teachers unions and their local affiliates all heaved sighs of relief when the presidential election was called for Joe Biden in November. 

The Chicago Teachers Union’s tweet, “Bye Betsy,” was retweeted over and over on Twitter following Joe BIden’s win. 

Under DeVos’ oversight, the U.S. Department of Education has been the subject of a record number of lawsuits. DeVos gained a reputation for frequent contention between herself and career employees of her agency, and for sparring with the agency’s union. Like her boss, Donald Trump, she takes no responsibility for what hasn’t gotten done on her watch, but instead blames the bureaucrats at her agency. 

DeVos has been the target of much criticism from educators— even former education secretaries—for failing to advocate for and do enough to improve education for most students. She has also been widely criticized for failing to provide concrete guidance to schools for how to operate during the coronavirus pandemic, simply insisting that they needed to be open. 

Betsy Devos considers one of her great accomplishments as Education Secretary to be her changes to Title IX rules that govern sexual assault and misconduct in schools and colleges. DeVos’ overhaul Title IX expands the rights of the accused in a sexual assault or misconduct case by giving the accused the right to a live hearing with multiple panel members, as well as the right to cross examine accusers. It also narrows the definition of sexual harassment.

Other achievements that Betsy Devos will be remembered for include rolling back or revising numerous Obama-era regulations, including those that protect transgender students. And who could forget her revocation of regulations aimed at protecting and discharging the debt of students who were defrauded by for-profit colleges? Or her revocation of Obama-era guidance meant to stop the “school-to-prison pipeline” by reducing the number of school suspensions and expulsions, especially for students of color, whose rate of receiving disciplinary actions is disproportionately high? 

No one with a stake in the American education community, and no one who cares about the civil rights of their fellow humans, will forget Betsy Devos’ legacy. They are hopeful and optimistic, however, that, with Joe Biden as president, and Dr. Jill Biden, herself an educator, as First Lady, the voices of the education community—and not just those of the private school community or the “Kingdom of God,” will be heard, honored, and respected again. Joe Biden’s nominee for Education Secretary will be welcomed, but Betsy Devos’ departure will be just as welcome. 

Bye Betsy – meaning of the new teachers meme due to Devos leaving from Secretary post! Scamadvisor [2020-11-07]

Teachers React to Donald Trump & Betsy DeVos on Education and Schools |
Joe Biden [2020-10-25]

The United States Electoral College Says Joe Biden is President-Elect. Will the GOP Still Refuse To?

On Monday, December 14, the United States Electoral College made it official: Joe Biden will be the 46th president of the United States. It was California’s 55 electoral votes that put president-elect Biden over the top, giving him more than the required 270 electoral votes to secure his win. Donald Trump’s supporters, including his base and most Republican members of Congress, have refused to recognize the legitimacy of Biden’s win. With the official vote of the United States Electoral College granting Joe Biden the victory, will more Republicans come around to recognizing it? 

Though faithless electors are rare in any American presidential election, this year, many Americans held their breath in hopes that none of the electors who were designated to cast their votes for Biden would have succumbed to pressure from Donald Trump to change their votes in favor of Trump. It turns out that the electors, as they pledged to do, have done the right thing and represented the will of the people, and not the unlawful will of Donald Trump.

Americans as a whole don’t usually watch nervously for the results of the electoral college’s votes, either, but this year is different. During the 2020 election cycle, the Republican Party, now the cult of Donald Trump, has gone to increasingly absurd lengths to delegitimize Joe Biden’s presidential win. 

First, following the November 7 Associated Press declaration of Joe Biden as the winner, there was the refusal by all but 22 Republican lawmakers to acknowledge Biden’s victory. Had Donald Trump not repeatedly falsely proclaimed himself the winner in social media, on TV news shows, and during rallies over the ensuing six weeks since the election, it’s probable that none of them would have had so much difficulty agreeing with reality. Never in our country’s history has a body of lawmakers refused to acknowledge the results of a free and fair election. But, as we’ve seen for four years, the GOP is afraid of crossing Donald Trump. They need his support, and they fear his verbal abuse, and so, no matter how preposterous his behavior, the GOP remains behind their man. 

When Trump and his lawyers filed lawsuit after frivolous lawsuit baselessly challenging the secure election processes in various states, the GOP found a convenient way to refrain from either agreeing or disagreeing with the 2020 election results— they could say they couldn’t be sure who was the winner until the legal challenges went through the courts. This allowed them not to commit to an ethical and lawful position that would ire Donald Trump, and it also allowed them not to openly commit to supporting a position not founded in reality or based on law. 

Of the more than 50 lawsuits filed by the Trump legal team and/or Trump loyalists in attempts to overturn the election results, more than 40 have been rejected, dismissed, withdrawn, or settled. Trump and his team, however, vow to continue bringing lawsuits until Joe Biden is inaugurated. 

The U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear both lawsuits Republicans brought before them in attempts to overturn Biden’s victory, including one by Republican Representative Mike Kelly. Kelly’s lawsuit disputed the constitutionality of universal mail-in voting in Pennsylvania, and asked that Pennsylvania mail-in ballots be thrown out. 

In response, SCOTUS issued this brief order: “The application for injunctive relief presented to Justice [Samuel] Alito and by him referred to the Court is denied.” There was apparently no dissent among the nine justices.

Texas attorney general Ken Paxton, backed by Trump, filed a second lawsuit attempting to reverse Joe Biden’s victory. Paxton’s lawsuit sought to negate Biden’s wins in the four key swing states of Pennsylvania, Georgia, Michigan, and Wisconsin. Abandoning their core principle of “states’ rights” (including that a state has no right to govern another state’s election laws and process), more than 120 Republican members of Congress, and more than a dozen states where Trump won the popular vote, filed briefs supporting Texas’ lawsuit. 

Again, SCOTUS issued a brief order rejecting the case, saying that Texas does not legally have the right to sue the states because it “has not demonstrated a judicially cognizable interest in the manner in which another State conducts its elections.”

The U.S. Supreme Court includes three Trump-appointed justices. Trump, it appears, had been confident that “his” Supreme Court would help him out. Before the November 3 election, and after setting up his base to expect voter fraud, should he not win, Trump expressed that he believed the race would be decided by the Supreme Court. He was disappointed. 

“The Supreme Court really let us down,” Trump tweeted on December 11. “No Wisdom, No Courage!” 

Wisdom and courage, however, seem to be in short supply, not in the U.S. Supreme Court, who were doing what they were appointed to do— interpreting the law— but in GOP lawmakers. The party who consider themselves “patriots” are supporting Donald Trump’s refusal to concede, and his increasingly irrational proclamations that he has won the 2020 election. Apparently, “patriotism,” to them, is not about honoring a secure election, but instead, dishonorably defying it.  

Many in the GOP like to think of themselves as “constitutional conservatives,” but it has become unclear which “constitution” they are referring to. 

“This is the time for the ‘constitutional conservatives’ to acknowledge that when the electoral college elects the president-elect, he is president-elect,” noted CNN White House correspondent Abby Phillip. 

With legal actions unraveling, especially now that the U.S. Supreme Court has roundly rejected two flimsy and evidence-devoid lawsuits, a few more GOP lawmakers have come around to admitting that it looks increasingly like Joe Biden is the legitimate president-elect. Unwilling to completely let go of their support of Trump and his fantasy re-election, but nevertheless seeing the walls of their refusal closing in, some are creeping closer to publicly acknowledging Joe Biden as president-elect. Some, such as Republican Senator John Cornyn of Texas, still feel the need to add a statement like, “subject to whatever additional litigation is ongoing,” to their declarations.” 

Other Republicans still seem astonished that Trump hasn’t been successful at overturning the results of the election. With the likelihood looking increasingly bleak, they have been putting their faith in the December 14 electoral college vote. 

“Certifications are really just a procedural step,” said Lara Trump on Dec. 2. “The reality is the electors do not vote in each state until Dec. 14. The state legislatures each have the opportunity to delegate, you know, where they want those electoral votes headed.”

Trump campaign senior legal advisor Jenna Ellis said, “Let’s remember that the electoral college, which is our constitutional process, does not vote until December 14. We have plenty of time to pursue all legal options.”

Perhaps Republicans were hoping for Trump to pull a trick out of his sleeve on December 14. The electoral college vote has taken place, however. Joe Biden has been confirmed by “our constitutional process” as the winner.

In the days to come, will more Republicans return to their “constitutional conservative” roots and recognize that acknowledgement of Joe Biden as the president-elect will be what allows democracy and the constitution to work as designed, or will they continue to seek one more “official” day, one more lawsuit, one more magical victory that hasn’t happened yet?

Electoral College Votes To Make Biden Win Official | NBC Nightly News
NBC News [2020-12-14]

It’s Over: Watch MAGA Elector Confronted By Certified Vote On Live TV | The Beat With Ari Melber [2020-12-14]