Former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos now says the department she once headed should not exist, making the comment during an event in Tampa, Fla., over the weekend.
“I personally think the Department of Education should not exist,” 64-year-old DeVos, who served in the administration of former President Donald Trump, said Saturday during an event held by the conservative group Moms for Liberty.
DeVos went on to explain, that she believes that education decisions should be left to state and local school boards.
DeVos’ position at the helm of the Education Department was controversial even before her appointment was confirmed by the Senate (which came only after Vice President Mike Pence broke the 50-50 split vote among senators split on her confirmation).
Several blunders from her contentious confirmation hearings went viral, including one in which she cited potential grizzly bear attacks as a reason for allowing guns in schools.
During her former position, DeVos continued to face criticism, including for her desire to reopening schools amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Her appearance at the Tampa event comes as school board politics prove to be a continually hot topic, particularly in Florida, where renewed efforts to ban books have been energized by a conservative base and come amid a larger cultural debate about what is appropriate for the classroom.
A recent Florida Department of Education review led to the banning of more than 40% of the state’s math books due to prohibited topics. Gov. Ron DeSantis has accused the books of indoctrination.
Speaking at the same event as DeVos during a separate appearance, DeSantis spoke about the significance of school board elections.
“We have drawn a very clear line in the sand that says our school system is for educating kids, not indoctrinating them,” DeSantis said. “We have drawn a clear line in the sand that says parents have a fundamental role in the education of their kids.”
DeSantis has used similar rhetoric to endorse a controversial piece legislation that opponents have denounced as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill, which he signed into law in March.
The Parental Rights in Education law bans Florida teachers from talking to students in kindergarten through third grade about sexual orientation or gender identity. While sexual orientation and gender identity aren’t currently taught in kindergarten through third grades in Florida, DeSantis has argued that it is needed so that people cannot inject transgenderism into kindergarten, or have a woke gender ideology imposed in their curriculums.
So True! No com-pulse-a-ry (government enforced), education. Enough. Home school, Private and religious education I Want My Property Taxes to reflect such!l