Let’s bring universal school choice to the finish line

By Sen. Jim Banks and Sen. Eric Schmitt, The Washington Examiner, May 12, 2025

Universal school choice was one of the many campaign promises that helped propel
President Donald Trump and Vice President J.D. Vance to victory last year. The status
quo in the American public education system, in which children’s schools are defined
solely by their zip code, is broken.

With unified control of Washington for the first time in nearly a decade, Republicans are
preparing to deliver on their promise to American families by incorporating the
Educational Choice for Children Act, which we co-sponsored in the Senate, into
Trump’s reconciliation bill. Passing the ECCA will help make school choice a reality for
many more children across the country.

The ECCA is modeled on laws in the states we represent, Indiana and Missouri, as well
as several others that have empowered scores of parents to access the best education
for their children.

The legislation would triple the number of students who currently benefit from private
school choice programs across the country. The law would provide up to $10 billion in
tax credits to induce greater charitable donations to not-for-profit scholarship-granting
organizations. These organizations would then use these private donations to award
scholarships for tuition and other education services. As parental demand increases, so
would the initial number of allowable tax credits to generate additional donations.

More importantly, the ECCA would not direct education policy from Washington, nor
would it involve the Department of Education. Instead, it would use private dollars to put
parents in control of their children’s education. The GOP’s commitment in last year’s
campaign is underscored by that belief that “families should be empowered to choose
the best education for their children.” The ECCA would make that a reality, delivering
“universal school choice in every state in America.”

Read the full op-ed by Sen. Jim Banks and Sen. Eric Schmitt via the Washington Examiner here.