Posted on 03/15/2016 6:54:04 AM PDT by MarvinStinson
The Senate voted 49-40 Monday evening to confirm John B. King Jr., President Barack Obamas nominee, as secretary of education.
A total of 11 senators did not vote on Kings confirmation, while those who voted against him cited his loyalty to the system and support for Common Core education standards.
King, 41, has been the acting secretary of the Department of Education since January, after Arne Duncan stepped down from the Cabinet post at the end of last year.
Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., secretary of education under President George H.W. Bush, spoke in support of King on the Senate floor.
But Sens. James Lankford, R-Okla., and Mike Lee, R-Utah, spoke against confirming Kings nomination.
The problem is not that Dr. King lacks experience, Lee said, adding:
"After three years as a teacher and a brief stint managing charter schools, Dr. King has risen through the ranks of the education bureaucracy, climbing from one political appointment to the next.
"But do we really think that someone who has spent more time in a government agency than in a classroom is best suited to oversee federal education policy?"
The eight Republicans who did not vote were Ted Cruz of Texas, Jeff Flake of Arizona, Mark Kirk of Illinois, John McCain of Arizona, Rob Portman of Ohio, Marco Rubio of Florida, Jeff Sessions of Alabama, and Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania.
The two Democrats who did not vote were Sherrod Brown of Ohio and Mark Warner of Virginia.
Vermonts Bernie Sanders, an independent, also did not vote.
Only one Democrat, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, voted no on King.
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and six other Republicans voted yes: Alexander, Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, Thad Cochran of Mississippi, Susan Collins of Maine, John Cornyn of Texas, and Orrin Hatch of Utah.
Alexander is chairman of the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, which last week voted 16-6 in favor of King, sending his nomination to the full Senate.
Alexander said an education secretary needs to be in place to provide proper accountability. He specified implementation of the bipartisan Every Students Succeed Acts, a rewrite of the No Child Left Behind education law.
After the committee vote, Alexander said in a prepared statement:
I urged the president to send the Senate a nominee for education secretary, and after todays vote, we are a step closer to having a confirmed secretary who will be accountable to Congress as we work together to ensure the new law is implemented just as Congress wrote itreversing the trend toward a national school board and restoring to those closest to children the responsibility for their well-being and academic success.
Patty Murray, D-Wash., ranking member of the committee, called King a strong nominee.
Obama announced his intent to nominate King in mid-February, calling him an accomplished, lifelong educator.
King has been a public school teacher, a principal, and co-founder of a charter school.
He served as commissioner of the New York State Education Department from 2011 to 2015. During his tenure, he supervised implementation of the hotly debated Common Core State Standards.
In his floor remarks, Lee also said:
Look closely at his recordespecially the three and a half years he spent as New Yorks education commissioner, where he forced on an unwilling school system unpopular Common Core curriculum and standards, an inflexible testing regime, and a flawed teacher evaluation system.
All of this proves that Dr. King is the standard bearer of No Child Left Behindthe discredited K-12 regime that has become synonymous with dysfunctional education policy in classrooms and households across America.
This isnt just my opinion; it was the opinion of New Yorks parents, teachers, legislators, school board members, and superintendentsthe vast majority of whom opposed, and protested against, Dr. King and the policies he championed while at the helm of the states education department.
In his remarks, Lankford said:
I shared with Dr. King that, in the view of many legal experts and school officials across the country, the Department of Education has been bullying schools to comply with policies that simply do not have the force of law. This use of power, however well intentioned, is wrong and its unlawful. Leadership requires making those sure within the department conduct themselves in full compliance with the law.
Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., who voted no in committee and in Mondays vote, said in a statement last week that King is clearly the wrong person for the job.
We need someone who will listen to teachers and parents, Burr said, adding:
John King has demonstrated that he is not that person. While serving as state education commissioner in New York, he made education worse by forcing big government Common Core standards on teachers and students, and pushing policies that violated student privacy. In addition to promoting bad policy, King exhibited poor judgment as a managerknowingly allowing lawbreakers to continue serving in senior positions without penalty.
Thanks for the update. A testy e-mail has been sent to Sen. Toomey by one unhappy PA voter.
Don’t forget the 8 R’s who abstained, which was an effective ‘yes’. (Had they and one more traitor voted ‘no’, he would not have been approved.)
The hell happened to his face?
I bear no greater disdain than for those who send their kids to the government to be “educated”.
These parents are the root and seed of what ails this country.
The root and seed.
Murkowsky voted ‘no’? What do you know about that?
Bravo Ms. Murkowsky. We give credit where credit is due.
I missed that .... Trump affect
Toomey voted against
I really enjoyed voting against Kirk yesterday.
L
But they collected their paycheck. Why go to work when you get paid for not going to work. That’s even worse than welfare. That’s just plain stealing.
Exactly.
“Once again, Rubio and Cruz are looking out for their own interests than those of the Americans who elected them...”
Jeff Sessions? was he out campaigning for the Donald? that’s okay.
I am ashamed to have Lamar Alexander as one of our senators! (TN)
49 YES votes?
Does he get the appointment?
The following need to be crucified:
“Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and six other Republicans voted yes: Alexander, Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, Thad Cochran of Mississippi, Susan Collins of Maine, John Cornyn of Texas, and Orrin Hatch of Utah.”
[Jeff Sessions? was he out campaigning for the Donald? thats okay.]
Sessions isn’t running for POTUS, thus not need to prove he can do his job. He also doesn’t have a piss-poor voting record as Cruz and Rubio do.
[Jeff Sessions? was he out campaigning for the Donald? thats okay.]
Sessions isn’t running for POTUS, thus not need to prove he can do his job. He also doesn’t have a piss-poor voting record as Cruz and Rubio do.
I thought Toomey didn’t vote?
No objections to this? This man has almost a full year before Obama leaves office to wreak all kinds of havoc and you have no objections to this?
Shame on Ted Cruz for missing this key vote. Shame on his supporters for making excuses for him, too. King is a disaster and no republican, certainly no conservative, should have voted for or missed this vote.
To me, Trump now stands alone as the only candidate against common crap.
Unfortunately, we're stuck with him for another 4 1/2 years. He'll break out his cowboy boots and "conservative principles" in time for the primary in 2020.
I was wavering on Toomey up for re-election ... now it's settled ... looking for another candidate
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