Back in February, long before President Biden stepped back and Vice-President Kamala Harris became the Democratic nominee for President, two red-state Governors spoke out against vouchers. Both are Democrats who understand the importance of public schools for their communities. They are Governor Roy Cooper of North Carolina, whose gerrymandered legislature has a Republican supermajority, and Governor Andy Beshear of Kentucky, whose legislature is controlled by Republicans. When Beshear ran, he picked a teacher as Lieutenant Governor.
The two Governers wrote this article in USA Today:
In North Carolina and Kentucky, public schools are the center of our communities. We’re proud public school graduates ourselves – and we know the critical role our schools play in teaching our students, strengthening our workforces and growing our economies.
We’ve seen record-high graduation rates of almost 90% in our public schools. North Carolina and Kentucky rank in the top 10 for National Board-certified teachers, one of the highest recognition teachers can earn.
In Kentucky, we’ve seen significant improvement in elementary school reading, even with setbacks from the pandemic like many states experienced. In North Carolina last year, public school students completed a record 325,000 workforce credentials in areas like information technology and construction. The bottom line? Our public schools are critical to our success and an overwhelming number of parents are choosing them for their children.
That’s why we’re so alarmed that legislators want to loot our public schools to fund their private school voucher scheme. These vouchers, instituted in the 1950s and 1960s by Southern governors to thwart mandatory school desegregation, are rising again thanks to a coordinated plan by lobbyists, private schools and right-wing legislators.
Voucher programs chip away at the public education our kids deserve
This is their strategy: Start the programs modestly, offering vouchers only to low-income families or children with disabilities. But then expand the giveaway by taking money from public schools and allowing the wealthiest among us who already have children in private schools to pick up a government check.
In North Carolina, the Republican legislature passed a voucher program with no income limit, no accountability and no requirement that children can’t already go to a private school. This radical plan will cost the state $4 billion over the next 10 years, money that could be going to fully fund our public schools. In Kentucky, legislators are trying to amend our constitution to enshrine their efforts to take taxpayer money from public schools and use it for private schools.
Both of our constitutions guarantee our children a right to public education. But both legislatures are trying to chip away at that right, leaving North Carolina and Kentucky ranked near the bottom in per-pupil spending and teacher pay.
Public schools are crucial to our local economies. In North Carolina, public schools are a top-five employer in all 100 counties. In many rural counties, there are no private schools for kids to go to – meaning that those taxpayer dollars are torn out of the county and put right into the pockets of wealthier people in more populated areas.

In fact, in Kentucky, 60% of counties don’t even have a certified private school. This has caused rural Republicans in red states like Texas and Georgia to vote against voucher schemes that would starve their rural schools.

Private schools get taxpayer dollars with no real accountability
As governors, we’ve proposed fully funding our public schools, teacher pay raises to treat our educators like the professionals they are and expanded early childhood education. We know that strong public schools mean strong communities. Families in Kentucky and North Carolina know that too. In North Carolina, nearly 8 in 10 children go to public schools.
Our public schools serve all children. They provide transportation and meals and educate students with disabilities. And they’re accountable to taxpayers with public assessments showing how students and schools are doing and where they need to improve.
But private schools that get this taxpayer money have little to no accountability. They aren’t even required to hire licensed teachers, provide meals, transportation or services for disabled students. They don’t even have to tell the taxpayers what they teach or how their students perform. North Carolina’s voucher system has been described as “the least regulated private school voucher program in the country.”
Studies of student performance under school voucher programs not only showed that they don’t help them, but that they could actually have harmful effects. Results from a 2016 study of Louisiana’s voucher program found “strong and consistent evidence that students using an LSP scholarship performed significantly worse in math after using their scholarship to attend private schools.” In Indiana, results also showed “significant losses” in math. A third study of a voucher program in Ohio reported that “students who use vouchers to attend private schools have fared worse academically compared to their closely matched peers attending public schools.”
We aren’t against private schools. But we are against taxpayer money going to private schools at the expense of public schools.
The future of our nation goes to class in public schools, and all Americans must be on guard for lobbyists and extremist politicians bringing similar plans to their states. Our segregationist predecessors were on the wrong side of history, and we don’t need to go back.
We are going to keep standing up for our public school students to ensure that they have the funding they need, and that teachers are paid like the professionals they are. It’s what’s best for our children, our economy and our future.
Roy Cooper is the governor of North Carolina. Andy Beshear is the governor of Kentucky.

In other news, Biden is taking on HUGE issues before he leaves office: Supreme Court reform, scaling back presidential immunity, and federal protection of women’s right to choose.
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Bob,
Not what you would expect from a man who is allegedly senile!
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All schemes that deliberately move funds out of public schools in order to benefit private contractors undermine public schools. It is a feature and primary goal of such schemes. Every time a private group receives public funds, it diminishes the capacity of public schools to do their best work. The private sector wins when the public sector loses. With charter schools there is some semblance of structure to the plunder, but with vouchers there are few, if any guardrails, particularly when universal vouchers are adopted. Privatization is largely motivated by political and ideological bias, not evidence. Without billionaires buying political will, there would be little real interest in dismantling the schools most Americans need and value. It is no accident that there is such momentum to dismantle public schools and other public services comes at a time of extreme income inequality.
Democrats that support privatization are generally beholden to wealthy donors and are willing to stump for such anti-democratic policy, collect their thirty pieces of silver, and look the other way. The fact that some Democrats support such anti-democratic policies points to a need to revise our campaign finance laws.
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Nailed it, RT!!! This is the root problem.
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All across “rural” America, newcomers to areas outside American micropolitan areas that are seen as farming communities are voting for people who are trying to rob rural youth of funding because they do not want to give up their hard-earned big money. They often move to low tax counties and vote locally to deny funds for local building programs for schools, parks, and other youth-driven initiatives. They hang big trump banners in front of their expansive lawns and big new houses, ignoring the frail forms that drive by their big houses in cars that will barely get to the trash convenience center. Their home was built by illegal immigrants, most likely, the same one their idol bashes as criminals. School voucher programs and their support for them are just the tip of the iceberg that is their ignorance. Beshear and Cooper govern these voters as well as urban centers that are rapidly expanding in our border states.
In Tennessee, these voters were used to dilute urban voting strength to deny Jim Cooper, a conservative Democrat, his seat in congress last election cycle, allowing the Republicans to gain a seat in Washington. The economic expansion is happening in North Carolina and Kentucky as well, which have a more robust Democratic Party.
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And these Republicans have been running Southern states into the ground for decades now. Stacy Abram’s figured it out and rolled up her sleeves to move Georgia toward purple. She didn’t become governor but left a legacy. Democrats could do the same in NC and possibly TN if the national party was willing to do the work!
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This is why Bershear needs to remain Governor of Kentucky and Cooper would be an excellent Veep since he is term limited. He would also make an excellent Secretary of Education. The public schools can be a real winner for Democrats.
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I wish Kamala and Dems would get on the K-12 education issue
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I think Kamala is showing meaningful signs in that direction.
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I wish so too but first they’d have to axe the Duncan wannabe-Cardona. . . and that ain’t happening.
If wishes were kisses I’d be madly loved. . . (which ain’t happening either) and if wishes were fishes I’d be a happy fisherman. (Well I’m always happy fishing as we all know that a bad day of fishing is better than any day at work.)
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Duane, I’m with you on Cardona.
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Duane: if wishes were pickled squash, you would still have the best recipe
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Thanks for the kind word on the pickles. Those did come out nicely, eh!
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Tim Walz was a public school teacher/coach & is pro- public ed. I wish the Democrats & Harris would select Gov Walz as VEEP.
https://www.msnbc.com/morning-joe/watch/gov-watz-people-like-jd-vance-know-nothing-about-small-town-america-215470661588
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48 of Kentucky’s 120 counties have at least one private school., meaning 72 do not. Counties are the basis of school districts in that state. That’s why rural Kentuckians will reject the legislature’s proposed constitutional amendment.
Just as in Florida, the people of Kentucky are far more liberal on referenda and constitutional amendments than they are in electing legislators.
The same held in Texas. Rural Texans of all political persuasions rejected the governor’s push on vouchers, and he conducted a vendetta against them with funding from billionaire idealogues.
Rural people do not want vouchers. They want adequate funding for their local schools.
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Agreed, Stephen.
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So proud of these southern govrs bucking the trend. Both these states are 40% rural! These guys get it. And both are popular Dem govrs in red states, so obviously know how to reach across the aisle. Roy Cooper is term-limited as of the end of this year, so he would be an excellent VP choice- especially as NC is one of the battleground states. Beshear is term-limited in a sense: after current term (which started this year), he would have to wait out one term before running again. But he’s got another 3 yrs to serve– & KY is hardly a ‘swing’ state.
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