Should public funding follow students to private schools through vouchers?
Parent choice or public school drain?
In July 2025, President Trump signed the 'big, beautiful bill' into law, establishing the first federal school voucher program in U.S. history through tax credit scholarships for private school tuition. Simultaneously, Texas enacted what is described as the largest universal voucher program in U.S. history, allocating $1 billion over two years for more than 5 million students. These federal and state developments have intensified a national debate already playing out across 30 states where 114 bills were introduced in 2025 to expand, revise, or limit private school choice.
When a child leaves a struggling public school for a private one, should the tax dollars attached to that child follow them — or does redirecting public money to private institutions, many of them religious, quietly defund the schools that can't turn anyone away?
- Search results: 2025 federal 'big, beautiful bill' tax credit scholarship provisions and Joint Committee on Taxation analysis
- Search results: Texas universal voucher program 2025 legislative details
- Search results: FutureEd analysis of 114 state bills in 30 states in 2025
- Search results: Florida Policy Institute data on Florida voucher funding shares 2021-2025
- Search results: Step Up for Students data on Florida new voucher recipient prior enrollment
- Search results: Oklahoma voucher applicant public school enrollment data
- Search results: South Carolina Supreme Court ruling on education savings accounts
- Search results: NEA President Becky Pringle statement on vouchers
- Search results: New Mexico Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham announcement on federal program non-participation
- Search results: Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy projection of $51 billion cost
- Background knowledge: Zelman v. Simmons-Harris (2002), Milton Friedman (1955), Milwaukee voucher program (1990)