Nomination and confirmation In December 2020, Cardona emerged as a candidate for
United States secretary of education in
Joe Biden's cabinet. Biden began to lean toward Cardona over two other "high-profile" teachers' union leaders,
Lily Eskelsen García and
Randi Weingarten. By choosing Cardona over the two, Biden "appeared to have sidestepped any sibling rivalry between the
NEA and
AFT." Cardona was brought to the attention of Biden by
Linda Darling-Hammond, the leader of the transition's education secretary search efforts, a role she also filled for
Barack Obama in 2008. Darling-Hammond and Cardona had worked together on numerous projects. Cardona appeared before the
Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions on February 3, 2021. On February 25, his nomination was advanced by the Senate on a
cloture vote of 66–32. Cardona was confirmed on March 1, 2021, by a 64–33 vote. Cardona took his oath of office on March 1, 2021, and was ceremonially sworn in by Vice President
Kamala Harris on March 2, 2021.
Tenure '' in December 2023. Throughout his tenure as Secretary of Education, Cardona has been responsible for implementing several forms of forgiveness for
student loans. The administration's most sweeping attempt to do so, which would have forgiven about $430 billion in student loan principles, was struck down by the
Supreme Court on June 30, 2023, in
Biden v. Nebraska. Since the
Biden v. Nebraska decision, Cardona has announced a series of smaller and more targeted student loan forgiveness programs, and the Department of Education has reemphasized the
Public Service Loan Forgiveness program to reduce the student debt of people working full-time in
public service. In December 2023, Cardona announced that the administration had forgiven about $132 billion of student debt in its first three years. In December 2023, simplified
Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) forms were released after a two-month delay. By late March 2024, there was a backlog of 6 million applications. On April 26, the Education Department announced that the top official in charge of federal financial student aid would step down. Colleges across the country were obliged to delay their decision deadlines as students were still waiting for financial aid offers. On April 30, Cardona was questioned at a congressional hearing about the troubled introduction of the new form. On May 7, Cardona apologized at another congressional hearing. == Personal life ==