Protest or engage: What should Betsy DeVos opponents do next?
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In the face of historic opposition, Betsy DeVos has been confirmed as President Trump鈥檚 secretary of Education. Some of the groups who opposed her stances on school choice and other issues haven鈥檛 let up.
On Friday morning, Ms. DeVos at Jefferson Middle School Academy, a public school in Washington, DC, where she was to make her first school visit as secretary of Education. Protesters blocked the school鈥檚 entrance and forced her to return to her SUV before the visit could resume.
But some public school teachers think visits like these can change DeVos鈥檚 stance towards public schools. Writing in the Monitor鈥檚 EqualEd section, Colorado teacher Jessica Moore urged the secretary to 鈥渧isit our schools, observe, and listen as much as possible.鈥
These differing stances highlight a dilemma facing DeVos鈥檚 opponents now that she has been confirmed as Secretary of Education: Should they continue to face her with megaphones and picket signs, or engage with her in the hopes of moderating her policies?
Similar questions have already cropped up elsewhere in the Trump administration. Faced with sharp criticism for serving on the Presidential Advisory Forum, Elon Musk insisted on the value of staying engaged.
"Attending [the Forum鈥檚 meetings] does not imply that I agree with actions by the Administration,"聽. "I believe at this time that engaging on critical issues will on balance serve the greater good.鈥
Farther down the federal totem pole, career civil servants have been viewed as a moderating force. In December, the Monitor鈥檚 Zack Colman described the EPA鈥檚 staff as 鈥15,000 or so counterweights鈥 who can continue to carry out vital environmental research and enforcement, even as the agency is led by longtime fossil-fuel advocate Scott Pruitt.
Some observers have already expressed hope that the Department of Education鈥檚 bureaucrats will play a similar role under DeVos, especially with regards to the research and civil-rights data the DoE collects. As Ruth Curran Neild, a former designated director of the department鈥檚 Institute of Education Sciences, :
I think that research and practice being brought together in new ways has staying power in the field. I'd be very surprised if that changed. At IES, there's a lot of strength at the everyday civil-servant level.... Now, could someone come in and change that? Yeah, [but] those cultures can last...
DoE staff members 鈥 and public school advocates outside the department 鈥 could also try to sway DeVos鈥檚 handling of , such as discrimination complaints filed against universities, and investigating sexual assaults on college campuses under Title IX.
But on the whole, DeVos may have less power than the storm of opposition suggests. She of the fifteen Cabinet departments, and the vast majority of education spending comes from state and local governments.
As Paul Reville, a professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, told Business Insider, "The position of secretary of education is, more than anything, an opportunity to be a bully pulpit to express the views of the president.鈥
But many of the federal grant programs that get funnelled through the Department of Education, including Title I for low-income students and the Individuals with Disabilities with Education Act, now face Congressional budget cuts.
DeVos's opponents could refocus their efforts toward fighting to protect funding for these programs, but doing so will require focusing on Congress, which controls the purse strings, rather than the secretary. Even some congressional Republicans have expressed opposition to cutting these small but important programs.
As Representative Tom Cole (R) of Oklahoma聽, "Some of these basic programs like Title I and IDEA are important building blocks for a lot of school districts around the country."