Betsy DeVos looks likely to be confirmed as President Donald Trump’s education secretary on Tuesday, notwithstanding Senate Democrats’ dramatic 24-hour talkathon against the controversial cabinet pick. Vice President Mike Pence is expected to break a tie vote, rescuing a nominee now opposed by every Democratic senator as well as Republicans Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski.

But the silver lining for Democrats is that DeVos—a billionaire GOP donor with a track record of hostility to public education—emerges from this confirmation fight badly damaged politically. Her hearing exposed a basic lack of knowledge about education policy, and there’s been widespread public opposition. It may well hobble her ability to enact her agenda, and public education advocates—including the heads of the nation’s two largest teachers unions—are pledging a constant campaign against her conservative policies if she’s confirmed.

“No one’s taking their foot off the gas,” Lily Eskelsen García, president of the National Education Association, said in an interview at a Monday rally against DeVos on Capitol Hill.

American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten, who also spoke at the event, told The New Republic that sustained DeVos opposition would come to resemble conservative backlash to the Affordable Care Act in President Barack Obama’s first term. “I think what you’re going to see is a lot of grassroots action, just like with the Tea Party, over and over and over again,” she said. “The Tea Party started because they were convinced—even though it was untrue—that Obamacare was taking something away from them—their Medicare, their Medicaid, their Social Security. Here what’s happening is Betsy DeVos is really taking away something from them.”

Neither union leader was ready to talk tactics. (“Until you see what she specifically rolls out, you’re not going to know what the fight back is,” Weingarten said.) But Eskelsen García said DeVos is “coalescing the most diverse group of advocates that we’ve ever seen,” from social justice groups to business leaders. “They’re all interested in the contact list that we have,” she said, “and we’re interested in the contact lists that they have. We’re all going to be of one mind about watchdogging—bulldogging—the Department of Education under her leadership.” Plus, she said, her union now has a database of people passionate about this issue; a million people used their online portal to email senators urging them to oppose DeVos.