In Ohio, as in every other state, most children go to public schools. You would think that their elected officials would work hard to ensure that their district’s public schools are well-funded. In red states like Ohio, you would be wrong. Safe in their gerrymandered districts, Republicans are shoveling money to charters and vouchers, not public schools. Their generosity to nonpublic schools ignores the long list of scandals associated with charters, as well as their poor performance. Nor are Republicans concerned by the lack of accountability of voucher schools, not to mention their discriminatory practices.
Jan Resseger wonders whether Republicans care about the education of the state’s children. Answer: No. They have higher priorities, religious and political.
She writes:
On Tuesday, the Ohio Capital Journal’s Susan Tebben reported: “Ohio House Democrats have laid out a plethora of bills targeting the education system in the state, impacting everything from teacher pay to oversight of private school vouchers and the overall funding of the public school system…’Our principles are pretty clear on that front,’ said House Minority Whip Dani Isaacsohn, D-Cincinnati. ‘There is no better investment we can make in the future of our state than investing in the education of our students, and that every kid, no matter which corner of the state they grow up in, deserves a world class education.’
There is a problem, however, blocking most pro-public school legislation. Only 32 of 99 Ohio House members are Democrats, and in the Ohio Senate, only 7 Democrats serve in a body of 33 members. Due to gerrymandering, the Ohio Supreme Court rejected the district maps that are being used today, but the Court did not enforce its ruling. This means that, except in the state budget where compromises sometimes are demanded, most of the Democratic priorities languish. In the recent budget, the legislature enacted a second stage of the three-budget, phase-in of a new public school funding formula, but it was accompanied by a universal private school tuition voucher expansion.
Here, according to Tebben, is what has happened to a bill to prioritize and protect the new public school funding formula:
“At the top of the (Democrats’) list is House Bill 10, which seeks to hold legislators to the six year phase-in plan that was assigned to the Fair School Funding Plan, legislation that funds public schools based less on property values and more on the needs of individual school districts. HB 10 is a bipartisan bill which simply ‘expresses the intent of the General Assembly to continue phasing in the school financing system,’ which was inserted in the 2021 budget bill, ‘until that system is fully implemented and funded,’ according to the language of the bill. The bill was introduced in February 2023 and quickly referred to the House Finance Committee, but has not seen activity since.”
Ohio’s gerrymandered Republican supermajority won’t commit to the eventual full funding of the state’s public school system because, they say, revenue projections are unsure in the context of growing privatization and years of cutting taxes in budget after budget.
Ohio’s gerrymandered Republican legislators instead operate ideologically and far to the right. After Governor Mike DeWine vetoed a bill to deny medical care for transgender youths last winter, legislators immediately overrode the veto. Far-right bills from the American Legislative Exchange Council and other bill mills, and bills endorsed by the extremist but powerful Columbus lobby, the Center for Christian Virtue, now housed in the building it purchased across the street from the Statehouse, dominate legislative deliberation and get lots of press.
Please open the rest of this important post.

“I love the uneducated.” –Adjudged felon and rapist and 2024 Republican candidate for president, Jabba the Trump.
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Oops. The exact quotation is, “I love the poorly educated.”
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To answer the question . . . maybe something as complicated as teachers tend to vote for Democrats. It is interesting that instead of trying to woo more people “under their tent,” they prefer to villainize and disempower people who don’t vote their way. It says much about their proclivities and they ain’t “pro life.” They are “pro power” and they do not care how they acquire it.
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They are “pro power” and they do not care how they acquire it.
Exactly. Nailed it.
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If people showed by their actions, and not just words , that they supported Public Schools, would they not put their money where their mouth is? If they felt funding fell short there is nothing stopping a donation to the cause. If they felt the tax and transfer process, missed the mark, there is nothing stopping them from transferring their money to their mark. If they believed the future of the state rested on funding , do their actions prove it? Hand wringing doesn’t work on the elected masters…
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Reportedly, voucher-funded religious schools are attracting more ultra conservative Orthodox to Ohio, further bolstering GOP voting rolls.
Publicly-funded religious schools are a disaster for the publicly-funded everything-else
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Republicans have been attacking public education steadily, at least since the Reagan administration which supported the thesis that America was “A Nation at Risk” because of our public schools.
That antipathy went back to at least the New Deal era of the ’30’s and ’40’s in which public schools were “liberalized” to include not just “the basics” of the 3 R’s, but broader social studies, more kinds of literature, student involvement through things like student councils, etc.
The antipathy increased when schools unionized in the ’60’s and ’70’s, when those unions–AFT, NEA, AFSCME, etc.–getting into politics and endorsing candidates, including Jimmy Carter, who as President, created the Department of Education.
Ohio Republicans were and are just a part of this. When Democratic Governor, Richard Celeste, signed a bill legalizing public unions including the right to strike, Republicans began to organize and fight back–to make the schools less liberal and more under the control of business and the church. Etc.
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In summation, why, gerrymandering causing a lack of accountability to voters, do Ohio Republicans, gerrymandering causing a lack of accountability to voters, hate, gerrymandering causing a lack of accountability to voters, public schools, gerrymandering causing a lack of accountability to voters?
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Apparently, at the Washington Post, Editor in Chief Sally Buzbee has been pushed out in favor of someone more to Rupert Murdoch’s liking. They did get one important story right today, though:
Billions in taxpayer dollars now go to religious schools via vouchers
https://wapo.st/4bOGSxS
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The Post’s website had 101 million unique visitors a month in 2020, and had dropped to 50 million at the end of 2023. The Post lost a reported $77 million last year. Maybe she was pushed out because she was terrible at her job.
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I’m not sure one can pin a sharp drop in readership on the editor-in-chief. It may have been due to job cuts that hurt the paper.
Whatever it is, it’s frightening to me to see graduates of the Rupert Murdoch field of journalism taking charge of the Washington Post.
The owner is Jeff Bezos, who has a personal fortune of more that $200 billion. He can afford to lose $50 million in a year. He should be investing more, not cutting costs.
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