Commonweal is a liberal Catholic magazine. It publishes thoughtful articles without deference to Church dogma. This article is an excellent example; Luke Mayville of Idaho explains why vouchers are bad for the common good, bad for society. This is a bold stance to take in a Catholic publication. The usual deep-pocketed voucher advocacy groups pumped money into Idaho to promote universal vouchers (vouchers for all without income limits). They were unsurpringly opposed by the Idaho Education Association and the Democratic Party, which saw the danger to public schools. Even State Senate Republicans opposed them because of concerns about cost and accountability.
Luke Mayville explains the secret of Idaho’s success in rejecting vouchers: grassroots organizing.
Mayville writes:
Ever since Milton Friedman’s 1955 essay “The Role of Government in Education,” economic libertarians have dreamed of privatizing America’s system of public schools. In place of a school system that is publicly funded, democratically governed, and accessible to all, policy entrepreneurs have sought to transform American education into a commodity—something to be bought and sold in a free market.
In the push to privatize education, the tip of the spear has always been school vouchers—policies that extract funds from public schools in order to subsidize private-school tuition. Milwaukee established the nation’s first voucher program in 1990. In the following twenty-five years, voucher experiments were rolled out in fits and starts, often meeting with stiff public resistance. Voucher advocates gained significant footholds in Ohio, Washington D.C., Indiana, and elsewhere, but lacked the power to fundamentally transform the nation’s public-school system.
The cause has gained unprecedented momentum during the past five years. In their book A Wolf at the School House Door (2020), Jennifer Berkshire and Jack Schneider sounded the alarm about “an increasingly potent network of conservative state and federal elected officials, advocacy groups, and think tanks…backed by deep-pocketed funders,” all of them committed to dismantling public education as an institution. The new assault on public education intensified in the pandemic era, as voucher advocates seized the opportunity of mass school closures to propose—and in many cases enact—sweeping privatization schemes. In states across the country, the voucher agenda went hand in hand with efforts to sow distrust in public education by claiming, usually without evidence, that schools had become centers for critical race theory, “gender ideology,” and other forms of “social-justice indoctrination.” Meanwhile, voucher proponents were energized by landmark decisions of the United States Supreme Court, most notably Espinoza v. Montana in 2020 and Carson v. Makin in 2022, both of which appeared to remove constitutional obstacles to the use of public dollars for private religious education.
The nationally coordinated push to privatize public education is one of the most corrosive developments in American life. While Catholics and members of other faith communities have rightly cherished private parochial education, they, too, have strong reasons to support America’s public schools even if their own children do not attend them. It is an essential feature of the mission of public education to affirm the dignity of every child and to prepare each child to be a full participant in civic and economic life. As Berkshire and Schneider put it, public education “is our collective effort to realize for all young people their full human potential, regardless of circumstance.”
Fortunately, the coordinated attack on public education has met strong resistance from educators, students, parents, and citizens in several states across the country. During the 2023 legislative session here in Idaho, legislators presented a long series of voucher bills. One proposal sought to enact universal “education savings accounts” (ESAs) that would be available to every Idaho family—including the affluent. Other bills proposed tax-credit schemes or more targeted approaches. Every single proposal failed. Remarkably, Idaho remains voucher-free even as the voucher movement has enacted sweeping legislation in Arizona, Florida, West Virginia, Iowa, Arkansas, and elsewhere.
Grassroots organizing has been indispensable in Idaho’s fight against vouchers. A strong coalition of educators, parents, and advocacy organizations—including Reclaim Idaho, an organization I cofounded—has proved to be an effective counterweight to the voucher movement’s deep-pocketed lobbying efforts.
A recent poll by the Idaho Statesman found that public opinion in Idaho is dead set against vouchers, with 63 percent opposed and just 23 percent in support. The mission of organizers has been to translate widespread public opposition into effective political action. To that end, we’ve organized in communities across this vast state and helped citizens become defenders of public schools and sharp critics of voucher schemes. We’ve helped local advocates understand and articulate the arguments against vouchers that resonate most with the public: that vouchers are fiscally reckless, costing far more than advertised; that voucher programs tend to diminish student achievement and discriminate against students with disabilities; and that voucher programs are especially harmful for rural communities where no private-school options exist.
In local efforts to resist vouchers, grassroots organizing can harness the power of personal stories. The voucher movement has attempted to tell their own personalized story by evoking images of poor, marginalized children who’ve been “trapped” in failing public schools. The promise of “school choice” is to give struggling parents the choice to move their children into private schools that better fit their needs. However, as more states adopt voucher programs, the vast majority of voucher funds are flowing not to students who’ve left public schools but to private-school students who were never in public schools to begin with. A total of 89 percent of voucher funds in New Hampshire, 80 percent in Arizona, and 75 percent in Wisconsin have gone to students already enrolled in private schools, and these students disproportionately belong to affluent families living in suburban and urban areas.
The “school choice” story is mostly a fiction, and grassroots organizing can refocus the conversation on personal stories that paint the full picture. When people get organized on the voucher issue, the question can suddenly shift from “Do families deserve more choice?” to “Why would we pull scarce funds from our public schools—especially in rural areas—in order to subsidize tuition for affluent suburban families?” During testimony before the Idaho Senate Education Committee on a bill to create universal ESAs, a public-school supporter named Sheri Hughes phoned in to testify remotely from Challis—a mountain town of 922 people located 190 miles from the state capital. “I know the power and strength of consolidated public money for education, especially in rural Idaho,” Hughes said. She told the committee that her grandfather had served on the Challis school board and helped build the town’s first high school, that her mother—also a school-board member—helped get the high school rebuilt after the 1983 Challis earthquake. “Based on Arizona’s ESA Voucher experience,” Hughes went on, “the money proposed to be removed off the top of Idaho’s education funding budget would take an estimated 17–20 percent of funding away from Challis schools—in an area with no private alternative choices, and where home-school students still access public-school resources for proctoring, band, sports, special ed, and other extracurricular activities.”
Please open the link and learn how Idaho parents and teachers and citizens organized to beat back the out-of-state money behind vouchers.

Vouchers are a wasteful tool to undermine and weaken the public schools most families support and need. It is good news that states like Idaho with large rural areas understand the potential damage they cause and are standing against them.
Unfortunately, in Pennsylvania the DNC refused to rebuke Josh Shapiro’s voucher support because they feel it would alienate voters from voting for Biden. However, vouchers are wrong for Pennsylvania as well. The Commonwealth is already on shaky economic footing from years of reckless charter funding drain. Also, northern and western Pennsylvania are largely rural, and schools there are already operating on shoestring budgets.https://www.inquirer.com/news/pennsylvania/shapiro-pa-democrats-2024-school-vouchers-party-20231216.html
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Strategists for public school defense should look to Ohio to understand what led to vouchers and how to counter the privatizers who had substantial aid from those who wanted growth in Catholic schools at the expense of taxpayers.
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A study of correlations by state would aid defenders of public education in developing a strategy. Case in point is Ohio. It has more rural areas than the Northeast. Catholics are likely GOP voters unlike the Northeast. A greater number of Catholics who live in Ohio are White than in Idaho. A significant number of Catholics live in Ohio. Almost all of the elected state officials in Ohio including the Supreme Court justices are Catholic. The Akron Beacon Journal article, “Whose choice? How school choice began in Ohio,” establishes the topic of religious sects as relevant.
Idaho’s Catholics are, as a percentage of state population, about half what is true in Ohio. Based on that, it is less likely that their political offices are held by Catholics in as great a representation. The diocese of Boise says more than half of the Catholics in Idaho are Latino. That segment nationally has tended to vote Democratic.
It’s an interesting observation to write that Commweal’s stance is bold.
Why is that? Are they supported by the Catholic Church (the USCCB)?
I surmise it would be liberal (not necessarily bold) if Commonweal wrote about the Trump administration’s Jones Day lawyers. There are indications that furtherance of conservative agendas possibly related to religion were observed.
Readers of the blog, like me, don’t believe Catholics to be a monolith. What I know is that the Catholic Church spends lavishly to undermine democracy and it lobbies heavily to get tax dollars into the hands of Catholic organizations. I know that a GOP Catholic majority on SCOTUS
exempted religious schools from civil rights employment law, decided taxpayers should fund religious schools and, that prayers could be led by public school employees on public playing fields. And, I know that the legal scholar credited as most influential in advancing religious charter schools is at Notre Dame (friend of Amy Comey Barrett). I know that a Catholic priest at Marquette University was instrumental in the early stages of the school choice campaign. I know that the Koch network’s politicization includes people and organizations connected to efforts affiliated with Catholic institutions.
Perhaps, a bit of “boldness” was called for a ways back?
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“There are indications that furtherance of conservative agendas possibly related to religion were observed.”
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Those aren’t conservative agendas, they are reactionary/regressive agendas.
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I so agree with you, Duane! These people are vandals. They are not in the business of conserving anything except their privileges and grift.
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You are correct, Duane.
Trump was quoted today-
Biden is anti-Catholic.
It’s Trump’s tactic to get tribalists to circle the wagons for the GOP.
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“rightly cherished,” would that be schools where gays aren’t welcome, men are exalted as better than women, schools that are 95+% White, schools that tell children too young to think for themselves that pregnancies shouldn’t be ended despite the fact that women die in pregnancies at 13 times the rate as abortions, schools that teach students that their church is the one and only true church ?
Scientologists, snake handler churches, the Dugger and Yates family churches, etc., what about their indoctrination, that “rightly cherished”, as well?
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I love how Utah managed to be left out of the article, even though Utah’s experience with vouchers will most like kept inform Idaho’s decisions on the subject.
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Glad to see this from Commonweal, although not surprised.
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Good Morning Diane, I was shocked when I saw the explanation of why Abbott has made the voucher a “Do or Die” program? Would it be possible to resend this to me as somehow I accidentally deleted it and I do want to share this unbelievable discovery with some of my friends. The “Mother’s win is absolutely FANTASTIC!!! Thank you.Connie Born
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Here you go:
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Thank you Diane. Have a good week…………………. Connie Born
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