Biden’s Education Secretary pick is a ‘clever play’ to balance various interests

President-elect Joe Biden nominated Miguel Cardona, a former public school teacher and current Connecticut Education Commissioner, to be the next U.S. Department of Education Secretary on Tuesday.

Rick Hess, an education policy expert at the right-leaning American Enterprise Institute, called the move a “clever” one since it wouldn’t cause a stir with Democrats or Republicans.

I don’t think he’s very well known on the national stage, which can be good or bad, … But it’s a relatively clever play,” Hess told Yahoo Finance. “Given the box that Biden was in, where the unions want to have sign-off, but he doesn’t want to look like a captive of the union or alienate interests. Cardona seems like a neat solution.”

Cardona, who is Puerto Rican, has a long history in education that began as an elementary school teacher and later as a principal for 10 years. Connecticut’s governor appointed him as the state’s education commissioner in August 2019.

Miguel Cardona. (Photo: University of Connecticut/ Shawn Kornegay/ Ryan Glista)
Miguel Cardona. (Photo: University of Connecticut/ Shawn Kornegay/ Ryan Glista)

“Having walked the walk as an educator, administrator, and public school parent, Dr. Cardona has a proven track record as an innovative leader who will fight for all students, and for a better, fairer, more successful education system,” the Biden-Harris team said in a statement, adding that he will “make getting students of all ages and in every community back in the classroom safely a national priority.”

Cardona will take over the reins from current ED Secretary Betsy DeVos, who has held the position for Trump’s entire presidency and implemented policies that were repeatedly assailed by Democrats.

And while DeVos pushed to reopen schools amid the coronavirus pandemic, “the national strategy was missing,” Mark Ojakian, president of the Connecticut State Colleges and Universities system since 2015, told Yahoo Finance. “In Connecticut, we did an excellent job of opening up our institutions and had very few cases relative to the rest of the country. And so I think the other parts of the country could benefit from a more strategic roadmap of how to get there, leaving the specifics to each state.”

National Education Association (NEA) President Becky Pringle said that Cardona’s past experience as a former public school teacher would help the reopening process, as “he understands what's at stake for students and promises to respect the voice of educators.”

U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos attends a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic response event about reopening schools hosted by U.S. President Donald Trump at the White House in Washington, U.S., August 12, 2020. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos attends a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic response event about reopening schools hosted by U.S. President Donald Trump at the White House in Washington, U.S., August 12, 2020. (Photo: REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque)

Balancing act

As Hess noted, Biden’s choice for ED was a tricky one: Biden’s team had to make a choice that would not only appease the unions, but also someone who would be palatable to the right.

In Cardona, the compromise was clear. Not only is he “a veteran educator, he comes from a deep blue state, the union has given him a thumbs up, but there’s also nothing that marks him really as one side or the other of the democratic reform,” Hess explained. So “it’s a lot like when a president nominates a Supreme Court justice with no paper trail … if you want to avoid a fight, you nominate somebody who doesn’t have a long track record.”