Carol Burris, executive director of the Network for Public Education, writes in The Progressive about the hidden purpose of “school choice.” It’s not to educate children better; it’s not to save money. It’s to destroy your child’s right to a free public education.
She begins:
In 2017, PBS released School Inc., a rightwing billionaire-funded documentary created by the late Andrew Coulson, a conservative author and former director of the libertarian Cato Institute’s Center for Educational Freedom. School Inc. showcased Coulson’s theory that for-profit schooling, funded by parents without government involvement, is the best delivery model for education. In a review for the long-running Answer Sheet blog in The Washington Post, the education historian Diane Ravitch and I criticized Coulson’s romanticization of the era of American schooling before public education, during which children were homeschooled, church-schooled, or taught by private tutors—except for the poor, who, if they were lucky, were trained in charity schools.
The “school choice movement,” which Coulson’s documentary promoted, has always been a classic bait-and-switch swindle: Charter schools were the bait for vouchers, and vouchers the lure for public acceptance of market-based schooling. While narrow debates about accountability, taxpayer costs, and the public funding of religious schools raise important concerns, the gravest threat posed by the school choice movement is its ultimate objective: putting an end to public responsibility for education.
This goal is not a secret. The libertarian right has openly dreamed of ending public education for the past seventy years—the economist Milton Friedman advocated for school choice as early as 1955, and his acolytes have continued to do so ever since.
And they have made extraordinary progress. During the past few years, the traditional voucher model championed by the right has morphed into the Education Savings Account (ESA). In exchange for promising not to enroll their child in public schools, parents receive funds to “shop” for services, including private school tuition, tutoring, and luxury purchases, including trips to Disney World, televisions, and waterskiing lessons. Nearly all recent state ESA programs have either no or high-income caps, and few have sensible protections.
The libertarian right embraces this flagrant waste because it helps them achieve their ultimate objective of shifting all of the responsibility and costs to families. By approving universal ESA programs, they are creating a vested interest among middle and upper-income families in pay-as-you-go education. Frivolous spending is tolerated because it aligns with Friedman and Coulson’s objective of putting parents in charge of education without government responsibility or concern.
The America First Policy Institute, where Trump’s Secretary of Education nominee Linda McMahonserves as board chair, states in its recent policy agenda that “the authority for educating children rests with parents.” As public responsibility for schooling shifts to parents, educational subsidies will be gradually reduced until Friedman and Coulson’s dream of a fully for-profit marketplace that competes for students is achieved.
Please open the link to finish reading this important article.

The so-called school choice movement is part of a larger strategy to shift all common-good features of our social structure to for-profit on-your-own opportunities for the wealthy. It is coupled with deregulation and tax-relief for the wealthy. It applies to post-secondary education, healthcare, housing, the environment, and food quality and security, as well. And of course, the only folks whose rights are protected in this ideology are the wealthy. Unfortunately, it has been abetted by Democrats as well, since the twin shocks of the oil-crisis and Iran’s taking of American hostages in the 1970s and the failure to address the devastating effects of globalization on everyday people’s lives.
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Well said. Trump, I believe, will push for a tax write-off to help fund a federal universal voucher that will mostly benefit the wealthy, if no income limits are attached or if the income limits are very high. Making education a private commodity instead of a public responsibility further erode public school budgets and diminish educational opportunities for the poor, working class and so many students with special needs. It may cause the collapse of one of the greatest institutions that has contributed so much to this country by providing opportunities to all our young people by bringing them together for their mutual benefit and growth. Both parties should hang their heads in shame for selling out investment in the common good, but particularly the Democrats for failing to defend public education and failing to understand that public schools are an essential element of a functioning democracy. Shame on the corporate Democrats that take campaign donations and look the other way instead of serving the needs of constituents and our nation.
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Retired,
Income limits mean nothing. We have seen how states like AZ and Ohio and Florida start with income limits or other requirements for eligibility. But within a few years, the limits are gone. The goal is universal vouchers, which will destroy public schools and benefit most those already in private schools.
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Arthur: Yes . . . if there is a shadow playbook to the 2025 document, high on the list is “bait and switch” as long as they can get away with it. Grocery prices are just the most easily discernible for most of us, where a dozen eggs, which were almost $10.00 last weekend in my neck of the woods in California near LA, is just another red herring for the other damage Trump is up to. CBK
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For the last 40 years, conventional wisdom has been that the private sector gets things done better than the government. Fueled by money from those who stand to financially gain from this attitude, information supporting this thesis began circulating as the Reagan revolution took hold, and was amplified by various news outlets that increasingly became mouthpieces for the moneyed interests that saw a trillion-dollar business in the public schools. The privatization of hospitals and the takeover of care by financial interests has now begun to turn the tide, however, as was evidenced by the outpouring of glee at the murder of a CEO. People have begun to question the Reagan postulate, and become frustrated that nothing seems capable of changing its egregious failings.
So maybe the public will, thanks to the hard work of the advocates for public education, finally swing the pendulum toward reason. It is demonstrable that the privatization of the health care industry has produced far more negative results than the mythology of the Reagan postulate. Maybe people will begin to see that hiring your own personal government is not so beneficial, even for the individual who does the hiring.
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Well said, Roy.
Common sense should alert people that a nonprofit will cost less than a for -profit.
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And take the US back to 1900 when only 7% graduated from high school and 3% from college.
40% of the US population lied in brutal poverty.
Women couldn’t vote.
Children were the property of their parents and could be sold into a form of slavery to coal mines, factories and bordellos as young as seven, working 12 hour days, six and a half days a week for wages no one could survive on. If ingured on the job, those children had no health care or job protection.
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I understand that this is the libertarian goal [et al who jumped on bandwagon], but I’m skeptical. Shout the warning from rooftops: every increase in the trend harms the public and its schools. But how would it happen?
So far, school choice has done nothing but increase public cost of K12 education. Charter schools alone, shown by NPE research/ reports, wastes education dollars, and lowers the ability of traditional schools to provide robust ed for the 85%+ who attend them. Add a few % attending voucher schools, state ed budgets are increased by $400million in AZ, $ 4 billion in FL, & we’ll see more of that as a dozen more red states expand programs. A consensus of studies shows charter schools, despite extra costs of running a two-tier system, perform no better or worse than traditional publics. Several studies show voucher schools (which add to increased ed budgets) perform far worse.
We’re seeing what happens when we underfund higher ed and put 60%-70% of the funding on students’ backs—and simultaneously vilify higher ed. The numbers enrolling in college begins inching down. How do we imagine things would go in K12 if at some future point “As public responsibility for schooling shifts to parents, educational subsidies will be gradually reduced”? How do ad-hoc you-pay-for-it K12 options mesh with a society which already requires both parents working full time to afford rent/ mortgage? Leads to a Dickensian society with no compulsory education, child labor legalized, punitive reformatories run on a shoestring for kids running loose in the streets scamming for pocket change.
Perhaps this would be a happy ending for fringe libertarians, but I have no doubt it’s not what any normal Americans or even MAGAs have in mind. I just don’t buy it.
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Normal Americans don’t understand what the billionaire libertarians want: no Social Security, no Medicare, no public schools, tiny taxes.
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