A Glimmer of Hope in Illinois
Voters support school choice, and the union’s endorsements lose.
By: The Wall Street Journal Editorial Board
March 18, 2026
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Education news out of Illinois tends to be grim. But a glimmer of hope comes from Tuesday’s primary election results, as voters showed their support for school choice, and the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) had a bad night.
Voters in more than 30 counties or townships—out of 102 counties in the state—weighed in on a nonbinding ballot question asking if the state should opt into the new federal tax-credit scholarship program. Some 64% of voters said yes, and the referendum passed in all jurisdictions that have final results, says the Illinois Policy Institute (IPI).
That’s a signal to Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker to join the 28 other states that have opted into the program, which provides federal tax credits up to $1,700 for donations to scholarship organizations in states that choose to join. State lawmakers last month introduced a bill to ban the state from opting in, but Democratic state Sen. Adriane Johnson has introduced a bill to opt in. Democratic comptroller Susana Mendoza called the decision to do so an “easy one.”
Why let Illinois money go to students in other states? The answer is that too many state Democrats bend to the teachers union. The CTU gave $72,500 to the campaign of Democrat state Sen. Graciela Guzman about the time she introduced the ban on opting into the tax-credit program, says IPI.
But Tuesday’s results also showed how the union is out of step with the public. The CTU endorsed 13 candidates with primary opponents and donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to the campaigns. Five of those state candidates, plus a U.S. House contender and a Cook County commissioner, lost.
That comes as a recent poll found that 53.6% of Chicago voters have an unfavorable opinion of the CTU, and no wonder. Only 43% of Chicago elementary and middle school students can read at grade level, and 27% were proficient in math on state tests in 2025. That’s after the state lowered proficiency standards.
Last week the union passed a resolution lobbying to make May 1 a “No Work, No School, and No Shopping” day. The resolution calls, among other things, to “tax the rich to support our schools.” The CTU would rather play politics than teach.
Parents shouldn’t have to put up with this, but Illinois lawmakers refused to extend the state’s tax-credit scholarship program when it expired in 2023. Opting into the federal tax credit is a way to remedy that mistake, at no state cost. Will Gov. Pritzker listen to voters?