Legislative
Education: Post Election and Pre-Inauguration
ILLUSTRATION © NATINKA
After the election,
the country entered
a period of uncertainty.
Trump won the electoral
vote but Clinton won the
popular vote. An effort was
made to have recounts in several
pivotal states, which was unsuccessful.
Then several groups tried to convince
state electors to change their vote on Dec. 19,
given the split between Electoral College state results
and the popular vote. It too proved unsuccessful.
This has been followed by a period of transition speculation
during transition. There has been concern over Trump’s
cabinet selections and the implications for how his administration
would govern, and overturn legislation and regulations that were a
center piece of Obama’s eight years in office.
While much has been written about “outsiders” being selected
for the cabinet and White House staff, along with Trump’s campaign
slogan “drain the swamp,” the fact is the swamp has not been
drained nor has the group selected been made up of “outsiders.” To
the contrary, most selected have had experience at the federal or
state government, military or inside the Beltway. The nominee-to-be
Secretary of State’s company led the lobbying effort to defeat
sanctions against Russia, and others have been involved in trying to
influence monetary policy while working in the private sector. No
one is a neophyte nor naïve on how government works, but may
have limited experience or exposure in government.
THE TRANSITION
Recent polling data indicates that 50 percent of Americans approve
of how the transition is moving. Several experts have found
it to be quite different than transitions in the past.
At Education, the transition has been fairly quiet. Little mention
has been made of who is being considered for key appointments.
Mum is the word. One reason is the concern to have secretarydesignate
Betsy DeVos confirmed without any problems. There
has been some opposition. One can expect some tough questions
over her education positions, and an outstanding fine. Once
these hurdles are overcome then more names should surface.
Yes, there has been a flurry of people mentioned to be considered
for some of the key positions. The latest include New Mexico
Education Secretary Hanna Skandera for either education deputy
secretary or undersecretary, and former Louisiana State Superintendent
Paul Pastorek and Kent Talbert, former general counsel
of the Department under President George W. Bush, for general
counsel. Others who may be in the mix include Jeanne Allen,
Andy Smarick, Gerard Robinson, Will Evers, Jim Manning, Chris
Cerf, Peter Oppenheim and Brad Thomas.
Unfortunately, it is “wait and see.” More names should be surfacing
as we get closer to Jan. 20, Inauguration Day. Some confirmation
hearings may begin as early as the second week of January.
DAUNTING DEADLINES FACING CONGRESS IN 2017
Republicans and president-elect Donald Trump will face a
slew of tough legislative deadlines in 2017. It will be an abrupt
change from 2016, when lawmakers faced few make-or-break
dates except to avoid a government shutdown. Also, Democrats
will have to address these dates. Some of the deadlines are:
- Mar. 16: date the debt ceiling expires and without an extension
the Treasury can no longer borrow money (see Treasuries)
- Apr. 15: date by law that Congress must pass a budget resolution
for the next fiscal year. The conventional wisdom is the
Republicans may try to pass the budget resolution and an extension
through the fiscal year for FY2016 that will include some
tax reform and a termination of the Affordable Care Act. But the
latter policy change has a mountain of problems.
- Apr. 28: FY 2016 Continuing Budget Resolution expires and a new
one must be passed or the government will be required to shutdown.
- Apr. 30: Trump’s 100th full day in office — we shall see how
much he can accomplish of what he promised during the campaign
in this period given his party has control of both the House
and the Senate.
- Sept. 30: end of FY 2016
- Sept. 30: authorization for the Federal Aviation Administration expires
- Sept. 30: authorization for CHIP (children’s health program) expires.
- Oct. 1: fiscal year 2017 begins and requires a budget and appropriation
so the government can stay open.
- Dec. 31: Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (Section 702) expires
and without reauthorization the nation’s security apparatus
will be handcuffed.
UPCOMING EDUCATION POLICY AGENDA
Other than the dates listed above, there are several actions that
are “front and center” for the Trump Administration and a Republican
majority Congress. The list includes:
- Tax reform
- Infrastructure legislation
- Repeal of the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare)
- Repeal of numerous regulations promulgated during the Obama
Administration — many of these are education regulations
Several legislative and policy issues will be addressed early by
new secretary and/or the first session of 115th Congress including:
- Immigration (includes Dreamers visas, and basic policy)
- Reauthorization of the Perkins Career and Technical Education Act
- Reauthorization of the Higher Education Act
- Student financial assistance policies and practices — including
Pell Grants and federally backed student loans. (See preview of
Federal postsecondary education policy written by AASCU: www.aascu.org.
- Selected ESSA regulations (accountability, supplement not supplant,
teacher prep, gainful employment)
- Regulations on for-profit postsecondary institutions including
gainful employment
- Civil rights rules, guidance and findings including regulations
governing use of bathrooms by transgender students
You can anticipate additional efforts focused on the use of federal
dollars to private schools, vouchers/school choice, teacher
evaluations, assessment, etc.
We will learn more over time as to the shape of the U.S. Department
of Education and the key players. It will take a while for the
new group to get up and running. At least a bit longer than Congress
since there is carry over of Republican leadership in both the Senate
and House. Lamar Alexander will take an aggressive role to change
some of the regulatory policy set by Obama as will Virginia Foxx, the
new chair of the House Committee on Education and Workforce.
About the Author
Fritz Edelstein is a principal in Public Private Action. His work focuses on strategic government and constituent relations, business development strategy, advocacy research and policy analysis, strategic planning and resource development, and advocacy, outreach and public engagement. This work includes producing Fritzwire, the education Internet newsletter providing timely information on education and related issues. To subscribe, write [email protected].