Steven Singer describes the budget mess in Pennsylvania. The legislature is under court order to change state funding for education to make it equitable. But the Republican-dominated State Senate inserted a voucher proposal, encouraged by the support of Democratic Governor Josh Shapiro. And the State House, with a tiny Democratic majority, opposes vouchers.
Singer writes:
How do you stop the other team from making a goal when you aren’t even sure your own team’s goalie will try to block the shot?
Pennsylvania House Democrats find themselves in that uncomfortable position as they refuse to pass a Republican supported 2023-24 budget on time.
The problem? School vouchers.
Democrats generally oppose them and Republicans love them. But in the commonwealth, new Gov. Josh Shapiro, ostensibly a Democrat, has let it be known that he likes vouchers under certain conditions.
So Republicans designed a bill exactly along those lines hoping that if they can get it through both legislative bodies, the Governor will give it his signature. (Under the previous Democratic administration, Gov. Tom Wolf blocked the worst the GOP could throw at him, stopping all kinds of horrible policies from getting through.)
A budget encrusted with voucher giveaways passed the Republican-controlled Senate on Thursday, but the House – where Democrats now hold a slim majority – refused to go along with it.
So Republicans are holding the entire budget hostage. As usual.
In a time when the state is flush with cash from inflation-juiced tax collections and federal pandemic subsidies, legislators still couldn’t pass a budget on time.
And it all comes down to our schizophrenic education policies.
Fact: the Commonwealth shortchanges public school students.
The state Supreme Court said so after an 8 year legal battle.
Now lawmakers in Harrisburg are rushing to fix the problem by tearing public schools apart and giving the pieces to private and parochial schools.
It’s called the Lifeline Scholarship Program – throw a lifeline of $100 million to failing edu-businesses and religious indoctrination centers on the excuse that that will somehow help kids from impoverished neighborhoods.
You could just increase funding at the poorest public schools – but that would make too much sense.
Better to give taxpayer money to private interests with little to no accountability or track record and just hope it works!
During the election, Shapiro admitted he liked the concept of these kinds of vouchers, but back then the only other choice was Doug Mastriano, a raving MAGA insurrectionist Republican. The Democrat could have said he had developed a taste for human flesh and he would have been the better alternative.
This means only the slim Democratic majority is left to uphold public schools over this wrongheaded policy nightmare.
House Democrats swear the bill is destined to fail.
House Majority Leader Matt Bradford, D-Montgomery, put it this way:
“There are not the votes for it. It’s not coming up, and if it comes up, it will be defeated.”
This seems to be the case. Yesterday, the House Rules Committee voted against sending the tuition voucher bill to the full House for a vote. So it is not scheduled for a vote at all.
However, now that the June 30th deadline has been blown, lawmakers probably will try to use this newest school voucher bid as a bargaining chip to get a spending plan – any spending plan – passed. This could drag on for months – it certainly has in the past.
The current voucher iteration is a taxpayer funded tuition subsidy for students attending private schools.
Under this bill, students in the lowest 15% of schools in the commonwealth (as determined by standardized test scores) would be eligible.
So what’s wrong with school vouchers?
Open the link to learn what’s wrong with vouchers and also to see links that you can use to establish that vouchers are a disastrous policy. Most will be used to subsidize kids from well-off families who never attended public schools.

Thanks so much for publishing this, Diane, but there are new developments from just last night!
Pennsylvania finally got a state budget passed after Gov. Josh Shapiro announced that he will line-item veto the $100 million allocated by Senate Republicans for the Pennsylvania Award For Student Success scholarship program (PASS).
“Knowing that the two chambers will not reach consensus at this time to enact PASS, and unwilling to hold up our entire budget process over this issue, I will line-item veto the full $100 million appropriation and it will not be part of this budget bill,” Shapiro said.
However, he has directed the state House led by Democrats and Senate led by Republicans to come together and approve a school voucher program or increase the tax scholarship defacto vouchers we already have.
It’s a victory for House Democrats who stood firm and got Shapiro to change. But the fight is far from over and Shapiro has not given up on school vouchers.
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