Senate confirms Betsy DeVos with help from Vice President
Congress | Federal
Date Posted: 2/07/2017
The U.S. Senate voted today to confirm Betsy DeVos as U.S. Secretary of Education. Senators were literally split on her nomination, a 50-50 tie. The anticipated scenario meant Vice President Mike Pence was on hand to break the tie, and his favorable vote sealed her confirmation.
Two Republican senators announced last week that they would vote against DeVos, which meant just one more Republican senator needed to join Democrats in opposing her nomination in order to block her confirmation. Despite reports that Senate offices were flooded with messages from constituents and despite targeted communication efforts aimed at a few seemingly sympathetic Senate Republicans, no additional "no" vote was identified. Interestingly, today was the first time the Vice President has broken a tie vote for a cabinet nominee.
ATPE weighed in on DeVos's confirmation once it was final. In a statement to the press, I shared our intent to work collaboratively with DeVos and our hope that she "will focus her energy on supporting the only school system that supports all children — the public school system." We will continue to work in conjunction with our federal relations team to ensure the voice of Texas educators and ATPE members is heard in Washington.
CONVERSATION
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
05/01/2026
Teach the Vote’s Week in Review: May 1, 2026
Learn how the Department of Education’s proposed budget could impact Texas public education. Plus: ATPE’s Show Texas Teachers Love celebrates teachers throughout May.
05/01/2026
Secretary McMahon defends the Trump administration vision for dismantling the Department of Education
What does the FY 2027 Department of Education budget mean for Texas public schools?
05/01/2026
TRS Board of Trustees finalizes TRS-ActiveCare rates for 2026-27
TRS continues to outperform broader market trends, enabling reductions in some copays and coinsurance