Obama plans to nominate King as education secretary
By BY KEVIN FREKING, Associated Press
Feb 11, 2016 5:10 PM CST
FILE - In this Oct. 2, 2015 file photo, John King Jr., accompanied by President Barack Obama, speaks in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington. President Barack Obama will nominate King, now the acting Education Secretary, to serve as Education Secretary after receiving commitments from...   (Associated Press)

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama will nominate Dr. John B. King Jr. to serve as Education Department secretary after receiving commitments from lawmakers to give his nomination speedy consideration, the White House said Thursday.

King has served as acting secretary since Arne Duncan stepped down at the end of December. Facing strong Republican opposition to many of Obama's nominees in the Senate, the White House opted to skip the potential clash over education policies and said it didn't intend to nominate another candidate.

But Sen. Lamar Alexander, the Republican chairman of the panel with jurisdiction over education, said that King will receive a "prompt and fair hearing in our committee."

King's selection could move ahead as Congress wants to see a new education law covering elementary and secondary education implemented. The legislation passed with strong bipartisan support last year.

"For proper accountability ... it is important to have in charge of the department a member of the president's cabinet confirmed by the United States Senate," Alexander said.

King oversaw federal education programs for preschool through 12th grade before becoming acting secretary. Before joining the department King had worked as a teacher and principal. He also co-founded a charter school that became one of the highest performing urban middle schools in Massachusetts. He then served as New York State's education commissioner, overseeing elementary and secondary schools, as well as the state's public colleges and universities. He was the first Afro-Latino to hold that job.

"There is nobody better to continue leading our ongoing efforts to work toward preschool for all, prepare our kids so that they are ready for college and career and make college more affordable," Obama said.

In New York, King pushed an ambitious agenda for the state's public schools. But he also became a lightning rod for criticism over linking student test scores to teacher evaluations and a rushed implementation of the Common Core academic standards for grades K-12. The state's largest teachers union said upon his departure for Washington that it had "disagreed sharply and publicly with the commissioner on many issues."

Both of King's parents died before he was 12, and King credits public school teachers in New York City with giving him hope and purpose.

"John knows from his own incredible life experience how education can transform a child's future," Obama said.

Alexander has been pressing for the White House to nominate a secretary since Obama signed the new education law on Dec. 10. He said he didn't think it was appropriate to go a whole year without a secretary firmly in place and at the time pledged to have an "immediate hearing and markup and, barring some kind of scandal, work to have that person immediately confirmed."

___

Associated Press writer Jennifer C. Kerr contributed to this report.