Jim Swanson and John Graham, both CEOs in Arizona, wrote a stern warning against the legislature’s proposed voucher expansion, which would make almost all students in the state eligible for public funding to spend in a private or religious school. One of the authors is on the Arizona State Board for Charter Schools. Arizona is a state that likes low taxes; it does not fund its public schools adequately or equitably. Under the leadership of Governor Doug Ducey (who promised the Koch brothers a few years ago that he would drive taxes down as low as he could), the state is offering choice instead of adequate funding to its schools. Arizona has consistently underfunded its public schools and pretends to “reform” them by offering charters and vouchers.
They wrote:
The current, aggressive push to expand Empowerment Scholarship Accounts (ESAs) does nothing to address the systemic education challenges we face in Arizona.
It is a dangerous attack on our public education systems and our state’s economic future. As a business community, our priority is to ensure that all students have access to a top-quality school that meets students’ needs and interests.
Arizona leaders should focus on effectively funding public education and supporting innovative programs that improve academic outcomes.
The time is now. Public education is the single most powerful economic development tool we have as a state.
ESAs were originally designed to serve a small population of students – they were never meant to replace public education or to serve all students.
A full expansion of ESAs is nothing more than a boutique scheme to address a non-existent need for private school subsidies.
While being marketed as a solution for low-income students and students of color – the students whom data tells us need the most wide-scale, institutional support – SB1452 is the most offensive of the private school voucher bills proposed this session. The bill would make roughly 700,000 Arizona students eligible for ESAs – a 280% increase in a single move. This is nothing more than a bold attempt to privatize education.
There’s a lot wrong with this bill, but the worst is the fact that rather than focus on supporting low-income students of color, many of whom are already eligible, SB1452 will make many more middle- and high-income white students eligible for taxpayer-subsidized vouchers, exploiting the impoverished communities in favor of further subsidizing the tiny fraction (as few as approximately 5%) of Arizona families choosing to home-school, private and parochial schools.
Greater Phoenix Leadership, Southern Arizona Leadership Council and Northern Arizona Leadership Alliance, representing more than 200 CEOs across Arizona, have made it clear that they are against the expansion of vouchers in Arizona and have voiced support for our public education systems, from early childhood to higher education. Business leaders and voters are like-minded – we have consistently come together for public education with a focus on equity and access. Instead of proposing unsustainable ways to make 70% of students eligible for private school vouchers, we need to make the public schools better, stronger and more successful.
What our state needs is crystal clear – an equitable, fully funded, high-quality public education system that serves all students across Arizona, no matter the zip code or income level. We have fallen too far behind and the only way we catch up – the only way we move the needle and bring Arizona to a competitive, robust and morally conscionable state – is to focus on the public education funding formula. Programs like private school vouchers have a long history of excluding and segregating our communities rather than including and supporting them. ESAs don’t get us where we need to be.
We need to put our heads together – across the business, education and political realms – and finally execute big changes to the funding formula and other mechanisms that have proven inefficient and worse, inequitable. Now is the time to focus on what moves all our students forward – working together to properly fund the schools serving 95% of Arizona students.
Question: Will the legislature listen to Arizona business leaders or to Charles Koch and Betsy DeVos?

It’s the same in Ohio under ed reform-dominated governance. The public schools go begging while ed reform lobbyists get every one of their voucher demands met.
No one does any work for public school students. They’re all too busy pursuing their ideological privatization objective.
Public school students come LAST in ed reform. They return no value for +/- 90% of the students in the country. We’re paying thousands of them in state government and they haven’t done anything for public schools in a decade.
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Anyone in Arizona doing anything for the public school students in the state?
Or are their schools too unfashionable to merit attention from these disruptive “geniuses”
Remember when the people you paid in government supported your schools and actually performed some measurable work on their behalf?
When this ideological crusade is over maybe a few of these state employees could turn their attention to the 90% of students in the state who DON’T attend the preferred private schools? Why are we paying these people? They do nothing for our schools.
Let’s hire some non-geniuses. See if they can get some actual work done.
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The goal of vouchers was described by Charlie Kirk of Turning Point USA, “Secular culture and higher taxes are both rooted in collectivism” which is at odds with “Christian values which espouse personal accountability, freedom and, God’s truth over that of the state’s.” (Newsweek, May 2020, “I’m an evangelical fighting for the Catholic school system”)
Conservative religious use the Christian faith to insure the historic demographic ruling class continues its entitlement.
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Charlie Kirk is one nasty piece of right wing filth. He’d like to push us so far right that we would resemble Franco’s Spain. The fringe right wing jerks have gone mainstream.
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Kirk’s wife, Erika Frantzve, was in the first cohort (2019) of the Falkirk Fellows.
The son of Brent Bozell was arrested on charges related to the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol. His father and the Koch-funded Paul Weyrich, co-founder of ALEC, the religious right, the National Council on Policy and the Heritage Foundation were the subjects of a paper posted at Surface, Syracuse University, 5-1-2007. The paper’s author credits them with creating a religious conservatism. (“Architects and Foot Soldiers: The Catholic Influence within the New Christian Right”.
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“they were never meant to replace public education or to serve all students.”
Oh, baloney. Of course they’re meant to replace public education. They expand them every year with the express goal of “reinventing education”.
The goal is to replace public education with a low value voucher and a list of private contractors who will accept the voucher. Anyone who doesn’t realize this by now is paid not to realize it.
“Liberal” ed reformers are the biggest suckers on the face of the planet. They realize they’re going to end up with a much worse system than we have now, right? They can add and subtract?
The plan it to replace a comprehensive public education with cheap junk these social engineers threw together on an experimental basis. There’s no thought or planning involved in this- it’s wholly ideological and relies completely on Right wing economic theory.
It’ll work out about as well as Texas essential services. Garbage.
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I think it’s so great how the brilliant thinkers of the ed reform “movement” are conducting this massive national experiment in public school privatization with no planning or analysis at all.
They have no earthly idea how this will impact public education as a whole, and they don’t care. Every public school student in the country is now the subject of their Right wing economics experiment. Gosh I hope it works out okay for lower income students! Keep your fingers crossed!
If it’s a disaster we already know that none of the architects will be held responsible and will probably get promoted. They seem to get lifetime sinecures in ed reform lobbying jobs, no matter their performance.
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Why do people keep voting in right wing extremists? The effort really has to be put into electing representatives who actually serve their communities. I’m thinking that those CEOs need to start not only funding candidates who support public education but actively working for them with boots on the ground.
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Why?
They are groomed to do so by conservative religious leaders, conservative religious organizations, conservative religious hosts on Fox?
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Fascinating insight. Thank you, I will definitely share this.
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Oops! Posted this comment under the wrong story. 😝
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