The Texas legislature refused to pass voucher legislation!
Governor Greg Abbott said that getting a voucher law was his #1 priority in this session of the legislature. Republicans have a supermajority in the legislature but rural Republicans and urban Democrats blocked the bill. He pressured every Republican to back his bill.
Once again, vouchers failed to pass!
In rural Texas, public schools are often the only school in town and the biggest employer. Public schools are the heart of the community. Parents, aunts, uncles, and cousins went to the public school. The teachers are well known and respected. Rural Republicans said no to vouchers.
The Pastors for Texas Children have worked diligently to stop vouchers in Texas. PTC issued this press release today:

No Vouchers In Texas!
The Texas House of Representatives has once again stopped a private school voucher program in Texas.
Rep. Ken King’s public education funding bill, HB 100, was saddled in the waning days of the session by Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick with a one-hundred page Senate substitute calling for universal ESA vouchers. When the House refused to concur with the substitute, the bill was sent to conference committee where it died.
Although Gov. Greg Abbott made private school vouchers his #1 priority this legislative session, the House was crystal clear in their opposition to it. Three times throughout the session, they repudiated a voucher proposal.
First, the Herrero Amendment prohibiting tax money for private school vouchers passed the Texas House of Representatives during the budget debate on an 86-52 vote. Second, the House refused to grant the Public Education Committee permission to hold an impromptu meeting to push out Senate Bill 8 calling for a universal voucher. The final straw was when the committee failed to garner the votes to pass out SB 8. The plan died in committee.
That’s when the Senate, in a last-ditch effort, attached a comprehensive voucher program to HB 100 which would have provided much-needed funds for local public schools and well-deserved teacher pay increases.
Rep. King did not mince words: “Teacher pay raises held hostage to support an ESA plan. Teachers are punished over a political fight.”
This session’s rejection of vouchers is particularly powerful because Gov. Greg Abbott made the passage of a voucher policy an “emergency item” this legislative session, conducted a statewide campaign in anti-voucher House districts, and personally lobbied House members on the chamber floor to pass it.
“Vouchers are fundamentally unjust and inequitable,” said the Rev. Charles Foster Johnson, Founder and Executive Director of Pastors for Texans Children. “It is wrong for public tax dollars to be diverted to subsidize the private education of affluent children. To pay for religious education is an especially egregious violation of both the public trust and of God’s moral law of religious freedom.”
“Gov. Abbott has tied up the entire legislature this session, at the cost of millions of tax dollars, for his own petty personal political agenda. Sadly, his stated intention is to continue calling special legislative sessions until he bullies the House into submission.”
“There is only one way to deal with a bully: a firm, patient, courageous confrontation. Precisely what our morally oak-strong caucus of pro-public education rural Republican and urban Democratic House members can provide.”
The Texas State Constitution, in Article 7, Section 1, calls for the suitable provision for “public free schools.” There is no constitutional provision for public funding diverted to private schools.
Pastors for Texas Children is grateful that the Texas House of Representatives once again stood firm, as they have throughout the 30 year voucher debate in Texas, for the true conservative value of universal education for all Texas schoolchildren, provided and protected by the public.
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Pastors for Texas Children mobilizes the faith community for public education ministry and advocacy. http://www.pastorsfortexaschildren.com
PO Box 471155 – Fort Worth, Texas 76147
http://www.pastorsfortexaschildren.com

Well done, people.
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Thank you, Diane! MANY faithful advocates have worked overtime for 140 days to block this awful policy. As you know, it isn’t over yet, as Gov. Abbott is threatening special sessions. But, the line has been clearly drawn.
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Texas legislators understand that vouchers are a give away to the wealthy and a financial disaster for public schools and voted accordingly. Good job, Texas! Vouchers do not improve educational outcomes, and the people of Texas would pay dearly for this mistake.
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And in other news:
“To hell with science, clean water, clean air, and all future generations. There is more profit to be squeezed from the dying Earth by the fat cats alive right now who pay for our vacations. And besides, can’t you see that we are in the middle of rethinking this democracy business? So much to do, so little in kickbacks.”
–The United States Extreme Supreme Court
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Witness Fox pimping Georgia’s newest, loudest politician who advocates destroying public schools with vouchers and so-called school choice, Mesha Mainor, Democrat, District 56, Atlanta. Hear what she says about visiting Florida.
https://www.foxbusiness.com/video/6328085729112
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Where did the Reich wing dig up this moron?
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A couple of days ago, the WSJ posted an opinion that Dale Chu, senior fellow at Fordham, referenced in his twitter feed. It’s about Illinois and the right wing push for state tax credit scholarships. The Archdiocese of Chicago really wants them. The Church’s advocacy is identified in the reporting of NBC 5 Chicago (May 4).
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“The Archdiocese of Chicago really wants them.”
Gotta pay for those sexual abuse lawsuits somehow. It’s their god’s way of providing.
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And, by, not allowing these, school vouchers to keep funding the schools, there will only be more and more, who are, illiterate, and, uneducated, which makes them, that much, easier to, control, if the state of Texas is, aiming at, breeding the, next generations of, Republican followers, then, consider this, a “job well done!” by the, governor!
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Taurus, public schools are funded through separate appropriations that allot a per pupil fee to them. Vouchers take some of that per pupil money from regular public schools and give it to private and religious schools. So, they are TERRIBLE for public schools.
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“To pay for religious education is an especially egregious violation of both the public trust and of God’s moral law of religious freedom.””
Most would call separation of church and state an essential element of political freedom. It assures the right to conscience regarding religion. You can’t honor the first Amendment without assuring freedom of religion. The above statement is interesting in that it suggests freedom of religion conforms to a religious idea. I find that interesting.
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“. . . of God’s moral law of. . . ”
What I find interesting, and sad, is that people justify human behaviors by referencing a non-existent supposedly all-knowing, all-powerful being. How insane is that? Step into the realm of madness.
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The Privatization wars are increasing ahead of the 2024 election and the “Branding” of DeSantis as “Americas Governor.”
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