Margaret Spellings (born Margaret Dudar on November 30, 1957) is the current Secretary of Education under the administration of U.S. President George W. Bush and was previously Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy to Bush. She was one of the principal authors of the 2001 No Child Left Behind Act.
The eldest of four daughters, she was born in Michigan and moved with her family to Houston when she was in third grade.
Spellings earned a bachelor's degree in political science from the University of Houston and worked in an education reform commission under Texas Governor William P. Clements and as associate executive director for the Texas Association of School Boards.
Before her appointment to George W. Bush's presidential administration, Spellings was the political director for Bush's first gubernatorial campaign in 1994, and later became a senior advisor to Bush during his term as Governor of Texas from 1995 to 2000.
She is married to Robert Spellings, who practices law in Austin and has lobbied for the adoption of school vouchers in Texas.
"I think it's regrettable, frankly, when the achievement gap between African-American and Anglo kids in Connecticut is quite large. And I think it's unfortunate for those families and those students that they are trying to find a loophole to get out of the law as opposed to attending to the needs of those kids," Spellings said.
"That’s the notion, the soft bigotry of low expectations, as the president calls it, that No Child Left Behind rejects."
1957 births | Living people | United States Secretaries of Education
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