politicsconservative
Texas Lawmakers Push for School Choice: A New Era for Education?
Texas, AustinFriday, February 21, 2025
Burrows believes that school choice can coexist with well-funded public schools. He thinks that families deserve options, and schools need resources. He also promised cuts to property and business taxes, more support for small businesses, and stronger career technical and trade training for students who don't plan to go to college.
Opponents of school choice argue that these programs divert money from public schools, which are accessible to more students and cannot turn away children based on anything other than geography. They believe that Republicans should focus on fixing the underfunded public school system instead of diverting students and draining funding.
The Texas Policy Summit also featured other political heavyweights, including Governor Greg Abbott and U. S. Senator Ted Cruz. Burrows' speech left no doubt about his stance on school choice, following several days of his making brief statements of support on social media and in interviews.
The push for school choice in Texas is not new. For decades, the Texas House has resisted passing a school choice program. Governor Abbott spent millions on campaign donations to oust Republican opponents of school choice during last year’s primaries, replacing 11 GOP “no” votes in the Texas House with supporters.
Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who has been a strong advocate for school choice, expressed confidence that the Legislature will come together on a plan to send to Governor Abbott. He said he had not finished reading the House school choice bill, “but it looks good so far. ”
Whether the House can pass school choice before the session ends in June is a key issue. Burrows' opponent, Rep. David Cook, had criticized him for not coming out forcefully on the issue before House members chose a speaker on the legislative session’s opening day.
Actions
flag content