Michael Moore Calls for Mass Opposition to Betsy DeVos as Pushback Against Trump's Education Pick Grows |
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=24201"><span class="small">Valerie Strauss, The Washington Post</span></a> |
Saturday, 21 January 2017 15:38 |
Excerpt: "Filmmaker Michael Moore told the crowd assembled for the Women's March on Washington Saturday morning that they should make their top priority opposing the confirmation of President Trump's nominee to run the Education Department, Betsy DeVos."
Michael Moore Calls for Mass Opposition to Betsy DeVos as Pushback Against Trump's Education Pick Grows21 January 17
“On Monday, call (202) 225-3121. Call your representative and your two Senators, and number one we do not accept Betty DeVos as our secretary of education,” Moore said. “That’s day one. Make it part of your daily routine.” After a highly contentious Senate confirmation hearing Tuesday, during which she displayed a lack of understanding of basic education issues, DeVos is facing growing opposition to her nomination as President Trump’s education secretary — including from groups that largely support the same issues she does. And now she will have to wait longer than expected for the Senate education committee to decide on her confirmation: Shortly after her ethics review was made public Friday, Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.), moved the vote back one week amid calls from Democrats for more time to vet her. Opposition to DeVos’s nomination has been growing since her Jan. 17 Senate committee confirmation hearing, where, under tough questioning, she raised concerns among Democrats with her answers about special education funding, guns in schools, and her position on whether to continue the department’s aggressive stance against sexual assault. A handful of petitions have been gathering a mountain of signatures against her confirmation, including one by the social change organization CREDO, which has garnered more than 1 million — or, as of Friday night, 1,115,915 of its goal of 1,250,000. A petition on moveon.org has more than 30,000 signatures. Alexander announced via statement late Friday that the committee vote originally scheduled for Tuesday, Jan. 24, will now be held on Tuesday, Jan, 31, so that panel members can probe a new agreement she made with the U.S. Office of Government Ethics detailing steps she agreed to take to avoid conflicts of interest. The newly released ethics documents say that DeVos agreed to get rid of interests she holds in more than 100 companies and that she has resigned positions with school choice advocacy groups. But one of the telling things about the growing opposition to her nomination is that some choice advocates who are on the same school choice page as she is still don’t want her confirmed. Shavar Jeffries, the president of Democrats for Education Reform, a pro-school choice organization that has made political allies out of Republican choice proponents, issued a statement several days after the hearing saying in part:
The Massachusetts Charter Public School Association sent a letter to Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) — who sits on the Senate education committee — expressing reservations about her nomination, saying in part: Meanwhile, the Los Angeles Times editorial board wrote in a scathing editorial:
During an appearance Wednesday morning on “Fox & Friends,” Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway defended DeVos’s performance at her confirmation hearing and criticized Democrats for trying to score political points. “This idea of humiliating and trying to embarrass qualified men and women who just wish to serve this nation is reprehensible, and not one child who needs a better education benefited from any of those incendiary questions yesterday, but of course Mrs. DeVos held herself with the grace and elegance that we know her to have,” Conway said. |