Republicans are keeping their school choice promise

Megan Martin, The Washington Examiner, May 25, 2025

Republicans in Washington are on the verge of keeping a historic promise to America’s families. In the “one big, beautiful bill”  that the House of Representatives just passed, Republicans included an unprecedented school choice program based on a successful initiative in my home state of Pennsylvania. This transformative measure would help children nationwide get the best education for them.

Republicans have made school choice a mainstay of their platform for years, and last year, President Donald Trump said at a rally in Pennsylvania that he would support “universal school choice.” While that’s a lofty goal, the Educational Choice for Children Act is a bold step in that direction. The proposal, which Republicans included in the bill they just introduced, would create a tax-credit scholarship that any American student could use to attend a better school.

This tax-credit scholarship is simple to administer and has sweeping potential effects. Essentially, citizens could redirect their taxes from filling the swamp to funding organizations that provide scholarships for K-12 education. Since these donations would be tax-free, philanthropists would have a strong incentive to donate up to $5,000 each to these organizations. The groups, in turn, could give scholarships to millions of families across America, especially those without the means or stuck in failing public schools. My father always told me his education was his ticket out of poverty, and that goes for children nationwide.

Pennsylvania is proof that tax-credit scholarships work.

My state has two such programs: the Educational Improvement Tax Credit and the Opportunity Scholarship Tax Credit, which students in 66 out of 67 counties rely on for their education. Most recipients come from families earning less than the statewide median income, and counties with the lowest-performing public schools have the most scholarships. Put simply, low- and middle-class students depend on these programs to escape failing schools. Case studies routinely show that scholarship recipients do better in school and are more likely to attend and graduate from college.

Read the full article by The Washington Examiner here