OnTheIssuesLogo

Rush Holt on Education

Democratic Representative (NJ-12)


Voted YES on $84 million in grants for Black and Hispanic colleges.

This vote is on a substitute bill (which means an amendment which replaces the entire text of the original bill). Voting YES means support for the key differences from the original bill: lowering student loan interest rates; $59 million for a new Predominantly Black Serving Institution program; $25 million for a new graduate Hispanic Serving Institution program; provide for year- round Pell grants; and repeal the Single Lender rule. The substitute's proponents say:
  • The original bill has some critical shortcomings. First and foremost, this substitute will cut the new Pell Grant fixed interest rate in half from 6.8% to 3.4%, to reduce college costs to those students most in need.
  • It would also establish a new predominantly black-serving institutions programs to boost college participation rates for low-income black students, and a new graduate Hispanic-serving institution program.
  • As we saw from 1995 to 2000, the questions employers were asking was not your race, not your ethnicity, not your
    Reference: Reverse the Raid on Student Aid Act; Bill HR 609 Amendment 772 ; vote number 2006-080 on Mar 30, 2006

    Voted NO on allowing school prayer during the War on Terror.

    Children's Prayers Resolution: Expressing the sense of Congress that schools should allow children time to pray for, or silently reflect upon, the country during the war against terrorism.
    Reference: Bill sponsored by Isakson, R-GA; Bill H.Con.Res.239 ; vote number 2001-445 on Nov 15, 2001

    Voted YES on requiring states to test students.

    No Child Left Behind Act of 2001: Vote to pass a bill that would authorize $22.8 billion in education funding, a 29 percent increase from fiscal 2001. The bill would require states to test students to track progress.
    Reference: Bill sponsored by Boehner R-OH; Bill HR 1 ; vote number 2001-145 on May 23, 2001

    Reduce class size to 18 children in grades 1 to 3.

    Holt sponsored an amendment to the Elementary and Secondary Education Act:

      Amends the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to establish a grants program to:

    1. recruit, train, and hire 100,000 additional teachers over a seven-year period ;

    2. reduce class sizes nationally, in grades one through three, to an average of 18 students per classroom; and

    3. improve teaching in the early grades so that all students can learn to read independently and well by the end of the third grade.
    Source: House Resolution Sponsorship 01-HR1036 on Mar 14, 2001

    Teacher development grants to improve math & science classes.

    Holt wrote the National Improvement in Mathematics and Science Teaching Act:

    Title: To improve the quality and scope of science and mathematics education.

      Summary: Directs the Secretary of Education to:

    1. make grants to States for improvement and recruitment of quality teachers in science and mathematics education;

    2. make grants to States for professional development of mathematics and science teachers;

    3. establish 15 John Glenn Academies, for summer workshops and intensive, year-long fellowships for 3,000 individuals to prepare them to meet State certification requirements;

    4. establish and operate a National Clearinghouse of Best Practices to coordinate successful and proven professional development opportunities for teachers;

    5. make grants to improve science and mathematics education, and encourage more students to enter the fields of mathematics, science, and technology;

    6. make grants to promote both achievement equity and gender equity in mathematics and science education;

    7. establish a tax credit for businesses that employ science, mathematics, and technology teachers in summer fellowships related to their fields of teaching; and

    8. establish a fair market value tax deduction for charitable contributions of science, mathematics, or technology equipment to public elementary and secondary schools.
    Source: House Resolution Sponsorship 01-HR117 on Jan 3, 2001

    Opposes requiring schools to allow school prayer.

    Holt sponsored a bill weakening the requirements on voluntary prayer:

    H.R.340:

    To amend the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to improve the quality of public education and raise student achievement by increasing investment, strengthening accountability, raising standards for teachers, improving professional development and teacher compensation, rewarding successful schools, and providing better information to parents, and for other purposes.
    H.R.340: SEC. 10410. SCHOOL PRAYER.
    Any State or local educational agency that is adjudged by a Federal court of competent jurisdiction to have willfully violated a Federal court order mandating that such local educational agency remedy a violation of the constitutional right of any student with respect to prayer in public schools, shall be ineligible to receive Federal funds under this Act until such time as the local educational agency complies with such order.
    Opposing legislation H.R.1:
    No DOE funds shall be available to any educational agency which prevents participation in constitutionally protected prayer in public schools by individuals on a voluntary basis. [This is weakened in HR340 by requiring a federal court ruling on each school district before the removal of DOE funds.]
    Source: H.R.340 01-HR340 on Jan 31, 2001

    Rated 100% by the NEA, indicating pro-public education votes.

    Holt scores 100% by the NEA on public education issues

    The National Education Association has a long, proud history as the nation's leading organization committed to advancing the cause of public education. Founded in 1857 "to elevate the character and advance the interests of the profession of teaching and to promote the cause of popular education in the United States," the NEA has remained constant in its commitment to its original mission as evidenced by the current mission statement:

    To fulfill the promise of a democratic society, the National Education Association shall promote the cause of quality public education and advance the profession of education; expand the rights and further the interest of educational employees; and advocate human, civil, and economic rights for all.
    In pursuing its mission, the NEA has determined that it will focus the energy and resources of its 2.7 million members toward the "promotion of public confidence in public education." The ratings are based on the votes the organization considered most important; the numbers reflect the percentage of time the representative voted the organization's preferred position.
    Source: NEA website 03n-NEA on Dec 31, 2003

    Other candidates on Education: Rush Holt on other issues:
    NJ Gubernatorial:
    Jim McGreevey
    Jon Corzine
    Richard Codey
    NJ Senatorial:
    Bob Torricelli
    Frank Lautenberg
    Robert Menendez
    Thomas Kean Jr.

    2004 Presidential:
    Pres.George W. Bush
    Sen.John Kerry
    Ralph Nader

    2008 possibilities:

    Sen.Hillary Clinton
    Sen.John Edwards
    Sen.Russ Feingold
    Rudy Giuliani
    V.P.Al Gore
    Sen.Barack Obama
    Sen.John McCain


    2006 Senate retirements:
    Jon Corzine(D,NJ)
    Mark Dayton(DFL,MN)
    Bill Frist(R,TN)
    Jim Jeffords(I,VT)
    Paul Sarbanes(D,MD)
    2006 Senate Races:
    (AZ)Kyl v.Pederson
    (CA)Feinstein v.Mountjoy
    (CT)Lieberman v.Lamont v.Schlesinger
    (DE)Carper v.Ting
    (FL)Nelson v.Harris
    (HI)Akaka v.Thielen
    (IN)Lugar v.Osborn
    (MA)Kennedy v.Chase
    (MD)Cardin v.Steele v.Zeese
    (ME)Snowe v.Bright
    (MI)Stabenow v.Bouchard
    (MN)Kennedy v.Klobuchar
    (MO)Talent v.McCaskill
    (MS)Lott v.Fleming v.Bowlin
    (MT)Burns v.Tester
    (ND)Conrad v.Grotberg
    (NE)Nelson v.Ricketts
    (NJ)Menendez v.Kean
    (NM)Bingaman v.McCulloch
    (NV)Ensign v.Carter
    (NY)Clinton v.Spencer
    (OH)DeWine vBrown
    (PA)Santorum v.Casey
    (RI)Chafee vWhitehouse
    (TN)Ford v.Corker
    (TX)Hutchison v.Radnofsky
    (UT)Hatch v.Ashdown
    (VA)Allen v.Webb
    (VT)Sanders v.Tarrant
    (WA)Cantwell v.McGavick v.Guthrie
    (WI)Kohl v.Vogeler v.Redick
    (WV)Byrd v.Raese
    (WY)Thomas v.Groutage
    Abortion
    Budget/Economy
    Civil Rights
    Corporations
    Crime
    Drugs
    Education
    Energy/Oil
    Environment
    Families
    Foreign Policy
    Free Trade
    Govt. Reform
    Gun Control
    Health Care
    Homeland Security
    Immigration
    Jobs
    Principles
    Social Security
    Tax Reform
    Technology
    War/Peace
    Welfare

    Other Senators
    House of Representatives
    SenateMatch (matching quiz)
    HouseMatch
    Senate Votes (analysis)
    House Votes