Texas has a Lt. Governor named Adan Patrick who hates public schools. Before he was elected to the legislature, he was a radio talk show host, a small-time rightwing shock jock. Patrick’s favorite cause is vouchers and defunding public schools. He needs to be reminded that “school choice” originated as the battle cry of white segregationists after the Brown decision of 1954. But maybe he knows that.
In this legislative session, vouchers will once again be debated. The Texas Senate, dominated by the hard right, will support them. The House will wage a spirited battle over them. In the past, vouchers died in the House because of a coalition of urban Democrats and rural Republicans who treasure their public schools. Under the leadership of the House Speaker Joe Strauss, vouchers have not been approved. But the potential for passage is always there.
One of the most effective opponents of vouchers is the group Pastors for Texas Children, led by Rev. Charles Foster Johnson. It has 2,000 members across the state of Texas and is helping to organize similar groups of pro-public school clergy in other states.
Here is his most recent statement in response to Governor Greg Abbott’s endorsement of vouchers.
This is what he wrote:
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said today that school choice voucher programs constitute “a civil rights issue” and said he would sign a school choice bill if one comes to him.
With all due respect to Gov. Abbott, voucher-type schemes are the antithesis of civil rights.
“School choice” voucher programs re-segregate our schools according to race.
“School choice” vouchers are not for poor children, as they are purported to be, because they don’t begin to cover the cost of a private school education.
“School choice” vouchers underwrite the private education of families affluent enough to send their children to private schools.
“School choice” vouchers violate religious liberty by establishing and advancing religious schools with public tax dollars.
“School choice” vouchers are unconstitutional because they do not “make suitable provision for the support and maintenance of an efficient system of public free schools” as the Texas Constitution mandates the Texas Legislature to do.
“School choice” vouchers deplete the funding of the public schools that do not screen or discriminate, but accept and love all children regardless of race and class.
“School choice” vouchers destabilize and overburden the traditional neighborhood public school.
“School choice” vouchers expand and extend government into the sacred and private spheres of our home and church schools.
“School choice” voucher programs do not improve the education of children who receive them.
“School choice” vouchers are not a real “choice” at all, except for those who would privatize the public trust of education for all children, making commodities of our kids and markets of our classrooms.
The American civil rights tradition was forged by values of human dignity and equality taught and modeled for our children every day in traditional public schools. Hijacking the term “civil rights” to advance the narrow private interest of “school choice” vouchers is morally wrong, and we call upon Gov. Abbott and other Texas state leaders to cease doing so now.

Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Education and commented:
Amen.
Lt. Dan is a bully trying to get his way and control everything. He makes me want to run for Governor so I can do everything the opposite of how he is doing them.
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Sad as this is, perhaps this more public exposure of the truly ANTI-public school stances coming out openly into the forefront will spark an interest in leaders who will now run for office on the platform of protecting and promoting public schools; in the current climate political, it feels likely that candidates running for office while saying loudly positive, rather than negative, things about our public school system, might quickly be elected.
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Oh, please do! Based on your views regarding education, you’d have my vote!
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Thank you
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I wonder what vouchers will do for the football programs in Texas?
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Vouchers would seriously dim those Friday night lights.
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Great recruiting tool, probably.
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We are traveling through Texas. Noticed a sudden spate of “news” stories on local stations noting the wonders of charters. The DeVos Propaganda Machine is up and running.
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It is reprehensible that various school choice schemes try to weasel out of the true intention through the rhetoric of civil rights. The true goal of vouchers is to defund public schools and bust unions. Evidence has shown that vouchers do not provide a better education. Vouchers do not serve poor students well, and they are a waste of public resources that would be better spent on quality public schools. If we want to prepare students’ for tomorrow’s demands, all communities need to invest in strong public schools that aspire to do the best for all students. We should not allow right wing Christians to destroy our public education systems. https://ourfuture.org/20160526/vouchers-subsidizing-education-failure
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This is one of the best rejoinders to the voucher campaign that I have seen, and better yet because it comes from Pastors for Texas Children. It is also heartening that they may try for a national network.
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Pastors for Texas Children have been wonderfully outspoken in their support of public education. They are worth their weight in gold. Thank you for bringing them to a wider audience.
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I’m not an emotional person, but this list actually brought a tear to my eye. As a former teacher in Texas, my case against school choice always sounded like a ploy from the teachers’ unions. This is the best clearest list of reasons as to why we should not support voucher programs. Well done, Diane Ravitch, for bringing Rev. Charles Foster Johnson’s statement to us all.
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