If Stacy Abrams is elected Governor of Georgia, the school lobby is in big trouble. Not only would she be the first African-American Governor of Georgia, she would eliminate the state’s new voucher program. She might have help from rural Republicans, who are not thrilled to have vouchers in their communities where the public schools are the center of community life.
By Caitlin Emma
With help from Mel Leonor and Kimberly Hefling
GEORGIA SCHOOL CHOICE BACKERS WORRY ABOUT GOVERNOR’S RACE: School choice hasn’t played prominently in the competitive Georgia governor’s race, but advocates are quietly growing concerned about the fate of the state’s tax credit scholarship program that provides nearly 14,000 students with private school scholarships. I have the story here.
— Georgia is one of 18 states with such a program, which awards individuals and corporations with a tax credit in exchange for a donation to an organization that awards the scholarships. Democrat Stacey Abrams has proposed eliminating it while her Republican opponent, Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp, has said he’ll preserve it.
— A poll earlier this month showed the two were virtually tied and an internal poll released by the Abrams campaign in the last week had her pulling ahead.
— Easier said than done? If Abrams wins, she’ll likely face a Republican-controlled state legislature that would block any effort to dismantle the program. But political analysts say that Abrams — a former state lawmaker who’s known as a skilled negotiator — could garner support from some Republicans who’ve raised concerns about school choice in the Peach State, making it a potential bargaining chip to push through her policy priorities. The Abrams campaign didn’t respond to follow-up questions about how she’d seek to eliminate the program.
— “There’s a general fear,” said Buzz Brockway, a former state legislator who’s now vice president of public policy for the Georgia Center for Opportunity, which advocates for school choice. “We’re hoping this is one of those things that’s said on the campaign trail and never materializes.”
— Republican support for Georgia’s school choice program isn’t universal. Rural Republicans in particular have questioned how it would benefit their constituents. “The fight always boils down to school officials feeling like it’s taking money out of their pocket,” Brockway said. He said he doesn’t believe that’s the case, but it’s “an argument that holds sway with a lot of Republicans, too.”
— The program just cleared a major hurdle last year after the state Supreme Court ruled that it doesn’t violate the state’s constitution. And state lawmakers, after a year of difficult negotiations, agreed in March to raise the cap on tax credits for donations from $58 million to $100 million in 2019. Kemp had originally proposed doubling the cap. Since the state legislature lifted the cap on tax credits to $100 million, his campaign said he’ll seek to preserve the cap.

Diane: check out the FRONTLINE trailer (30 seconds): https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/film/the-pension-gamble/
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The Pension Gamble How state governments and Wall Street led America’s public pensions into a $4-trillion hole. http://www.pbs.org
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Stacey Abrams. look at her remarkable bio and prior work as a politician. She is so much better than her opponent, and well beyond the issue of keeping public schools public.
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The people of Georgia should realize that education tax credits are a tax avoidance strategy of the wealthy. While the wealthy get to reduce their taxes, everyone else pays more or services will have to be cut. This tax scheme shifts the tax burden from the wealthy to working families. Plus, the quality of voucher schools is generally poor. If people want to get what they pay for, support Stacy Abrams and investment in well resourced public education.
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Yes, and other tax avoidance ploys are Health Savings Accounts and 401Ks that benefit the rich and do nothing for the working class. More clap trap from the right wingers and libertarians who are hell bent on undermining public schools, defined benefit pensions, Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and the ACA.
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There are a few public offices in each state that voters can vote for that are not affected by extreme gerrymandering. The governor and each state’s two senators to the US Senate are three of them.
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VERY best line of the year: “If Stacy Abrams is elected Governor of Georgia, the school lobby is in big trouble. “
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All Charter Schools did was promote JIM CROW Laws.
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We can only hope that votes (& voters!) in Georgia will be protected; just 3 days ago, an attempt to legislate a reversion to paper ballots only failed (this, as GA has been having “difficulty”–ahem–w/their voting machines). Also, in July, 2016, a New York Times report out of rural GA stated that “police officers were physically approaching black voters to challenge voting rights” (this from Verified Voter).
We all remember the Ossoff debacle there, as well.
Vote, residents of Georgia, vote. &, honest citizens, get certified to serve as election judges. Serve as poll watchers. &–after the election–volunteer to be a citizen auditor, if necessary. (Hopefully, not.)
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How can a governor eliminate a law? Under the Georgia state constitution, only the legislature can repeal a law. And Georgia does not have a “new” law. Georgia has had school choice (in limited form) since 2009. see
Click to access HB251%20-%20Public%20School%20Choice%20-Public%20School%20Choice%20FAQ.pdf
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If a state’s governor issues and executive order that guts a law passed by the legislature at any time in the state’s history and the current GOP dominated legislature and the GOP dominated state courts do nothing to stop the governor, that’s how a governor guts laws the GOP does not like.
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