Twitter erupts over conservative cartoonist's portrayal of Betsy DeVos
Of all President Trump's cabinet picks, it would seem that Betsy DeVos -- the White House's new education secretary -- faced some of the biggest hurdles in being confirmed for her position.
And as of late, the controversy surrounding one of the president's most contentious cabinet picks appears not to be letting up.
See Betsy DeVos through the years:
The education secretary has been receiving backlash the past few days for a political cartoon published by conservative artist Glenn McCoy on Monday.
Since its publication in an Illinois outlet, the Belleville News-Democrat, the photo has gone viral, igniting users on Twitter, including Chelsea Clinton, who say the photo reimagines man Rockwell's 1964 painting "The Problem We All Live With," which depicted a young Ruby Bridges in New Orleans' 1960 desegregation crisis.
The cartoon riffs on Norman Rockwell's "The Problem We All Live With," depicting Ruby Bridges in New Orleans' 1960 desegregation crisis. /2 pic.twitter.com/7paH2CVV4O
— Kevin M. Kruse (@KevinMKruse) February 14, 2017
Chelsea Clinton rebuked the editorial cartoon's comparison on Twitter Tuesday night.
What?! What?! https://t.co/oYcCLSZ0DK
— Chelsea Clinton (@ChelseaClinton) February 14, 2017
Here is Norman Rockwells The Problem We All Live With showing courageous 6 yr old Ruby Bridges integrating her school pic.twitter.com/YnmX5qphUX
— Chelsea Clinton (@ChelseaClinton) February 14, 2017
And others joined Clinton in outage by the comparison.
ah yes, the n-word and "conservative" - two equally hateful words. https://t.co/Va8V5b5n2I
— Kendall Uvena (@AsianOnOccasion) February 15, 2017
Equating DeVos, a well-connected billionaire who paid her way into the Cabinet, with the heroic Ruby Bridges is ignorant and offensive. https://t.co/5Q2tGWb4Ob
— Tim Gibson (@timgibson) February 15, 2017
Ok blatant racism aside, Betsy DeVos is a full grown woman. https://t.co/lHsuwK5S0U
— amalia (@amalianicholson) February 15, 2017
See more Twitter reactions to this story:
President Trump nominated DeVos to the post in November, calling her "a brilliant and passionate education advocate."
But DeVos' performance before a nomination committee in January caused her to make headlines for all of the wrong reasons.
SEE ALSO: Protesters block Education Secretary Betsy DeVos' entry into DC school
After two Republican senators said they could not back DeVos, the vote to nominate her was tied at 50-50.
Still, following a marathon of objections from Democrats that exceeded 24 hours, DeVos was confirmed education secretary early February after Vice-President Mike Pence casted the deciding vote to confirm the educational choice activist from Michigan.