Utah School Voucher Program Ruled Unconstitutional in Teachers Union Lawsuit
The Utah Education Association sued the state last year, arguing the Utah Fits All Scholarship Program violated the constitution by diverting tax money to private schools that aren't free, open to all students and supervised by the state board of education.
The $100 million voucher program was created in 2023 by the Utah Legislature. It provided up to $8,000 in state income tax funds to eligible students through scholarship accounts to pay for private schools.
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District Court Judge Laura Scott said in her ruling that the program not only allows schools to deny students admission because of religion, politics and location, but it provides benefits to private and homeschooled children that might not be available to those in public school, like funds for computers, test prep courses and tutoring.
'Because the program is a legislatively created, publicly funded education program aimed at elementary and secondary education, it must satisfy the constitutional requirements applicable to the 'public education system' set forth in the Utah Constitution,' she said. 'And because there is no genuine dispute that the program fails to meet these 'open to all children' and 'free' requirements, it is unconstitutional.'
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The ruling comes amid a nationwide push for school choice expansion. On Thursday, the Texas House gave initial approval to a bill that would create a $1 billion private school voucher program. School voucher bills have also advanced this year in Wyoming and Tennessee.
Utah officials previously argued that the program's share of tax revenue was less than 1% of the amount allocated for the state's public schools, according to court documents. Robyn Bagley, executive director of Utah Education Fits All — one of the main organizations that advocated for the program — said in a statement Friday that Scott's decision was a 'temporary setback' and there will be an appeal.
'We knew such a judgment at this level was a possibility, and we remain extremely confident the program will ultimately be ruled constitutional by the Utah Supreme Court,' Bagley said. 'Many families are eagerly awaiting the thousands of new scholarships that have just been funded by the Utah Legislature.'
The program paid for the vouchers of 10,000 students — 80% of them homeschooled, according to the Utah News Dispatch. After a waitlist reached 17,000 names, the legislature reduced scholarship amounts for homeschooled students earlier this year.
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The Utah Education Association, which represents 18,000 members, said in a statement Friday that lawmakers had overstepped their authority and the union held them accountable.
'This decision protects the integrity of public education, ensuring critical funding remains in schools that serve 90% of Utah's children and prioritize equitable, inclusive opportunities for every student to succeed,' the union said.
The union has also been advocating against a bill, passed in February, that bans collective bargaining, which some opponents say was created to retaliate against the school voucher lawsuit. Utah union organizations recently submitted more than 300,000 signatures for a referendum to overturn the bill.
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Miami Herald
11 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Calif., Illinois may fight new Texas congressional maps with their own
As the Texas Legislature plans to redraw congressional maps in an effort to increase Republican members in the U.S. House, the governors of California and Illinois may devise their own new borders. Traditionally, the boundaries are changed every 10 years with the latest U.S. Census data but Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has called a special legislative session after pressure from the White House to preserve the GOP majority in the U.S. House. President Donald Trump believes an additional five seats could be created by changing the borders. Of the state's 38 districts, 25 are held by Republicans. Democrats hold seats in big cities of Austin, Dallas, El Paso, Fort Worth, Houston, Laredo, McAllen, San Antonio. Ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, Republicans hold a 219-212 advantage in the House with four vacancies -- three Democrats who died and one Republican who resigned this week. More than a dozen Texas House members flew to Illinois and California -- two blue states -- on Friday for a meeting with California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Illinois Gov. JB Pritzkeper, during which they revealed their intentions. 'Donald Trump called up Governor Abbott for one simple reason: to rig the 2026 elections. California's moral high ground means nothing if we're powerless because of it,' Newsom said after meeting with Democrats from the Texas House. 'This moment requires us to be prepared to fight fire with fire. Whether that's a special election, a ballot initiative, a bill, a fight in court. If they proceed in Texas, we will be ready.' 'This is not a bluff. This is real, and trust me, it's more real after listening to these leaders today, how existential this is,' Newsom said. As the most populous state in the nation, California has 43 Democratic members of the house and nine Republican members, while Illinois is represented by 14 Democrats and three Republicans. 'Everything is on the table,' Pritzer said. The Illinois governor said he doesn't want to redraw the maps but 'if they're going to take this drastic action, then we might also take drastic action to respond.' 'We want the country to understand [that] what's going on in Texas is a national battle,' State Rep. Richard Pena Raymond, a Democrat from Laredo, said. Raymond told Pritzner that redistricting is 'clearly aimed at affecting the entire country.' Responsibility for determining Congressional district maps differs from state to state. In California, an independent commission approved by voters in 2010 works on the maps. Illinois maps, on the other hand, are put together by the state lawmakers have been drawn strongly to favor the Democrat Party in the state. Newsom said he is considering having a referendum to change the rules before the 2026 election, unless the Legislature comes up with another solution, which would take two-thirds of legislators voting in favor of. 'We have to fight fire with fire,' Newsom said. Two other Democratic governors are considering new maps -- Phil Murphy in New Jersey and Kathy Hochul in New York. 'There's other states that are violating the rules,' Hochul said during a news conference on Thursday. 'I'm going to look at it closely with Hakeem Jeffries,' a New York member of the House, as well has House minority leader. In New York, Democrats have a 19-7 advantage as a result of their districting maps. 'It's deplorable,' Murphy said during an interview at the summer meeting of the bipartisan National Governors Association in Colorado Springs. 'If they're going to play these games, we're going to have to be just as aggressive. We can't bring a knife to a gunfight.' Democrats hold nine of the 12 seats in New Jersey. In Florida, the state Supreme Court on July 17 upheld its newest congressional map. He said he believes the state had been 'malappropriated' and redistricting 'would be appropriate' in a few years. Florida's congressional delegation is controlled by Republicans, 20-8. In Ohio, legislators are required to redraw maps before 2026. The GOP has 10 of the 15 seats. Colorado Gov. Jared Polis is against redistricting more frequently. The state's maps are overseen by an independent commission and it's eight U.S. House seats are evenly split 4-4. Texas last redrew its borders in mid-cycle in 2003 after the GOP gained control of both chambers for the first time since Reconstruction. In Texas, Abbott noted a July 7 letter from the Justice Department that said majority Black and Hispanic districts in Dallas need to be redrawn based on a decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit last year. The DOJ said those districts are 'unconstitutional racial gerrymanders,' but Abbott argued the opposite in 2021. In federal court in El Paso, he argued race had not been taken into account there. 'We are no longer compelled to have coalition districts,' Abbott said in an interview with KDFW in Dallas. U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro, a San Antonio Democrat, appeared at a state House hearing. 'That's what's at stake here, whether you all are going to work for the people of Texas, as we used to do, to try to do, or whether you take your commandments from Donald Trump and the White House,' Castro said. 'I hope that you all will choose to do the business of the people of Texas, as this body has a history of being independent from the federal government.' Copyright 2025 UPI News Corporation. All Rights Reserved.


Washington Post
3 days ago
- Washington Post
Texas plan to redraw maps could protect GOP House majority
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Democrats could boycott the session to prevent the legislature from having enough members present to conduct business, but they haven't said whether they'll take that step. They fled the state during past fights to delay action on legislation, but their efforts to block it failed. A walkout is risky. Democrats who leave could be fined and Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) has threatened to arrest them. Democrats also could face criticism if they miss votes on addressing the state's deadly floods. State Rep. Gene Wu, who leads the Democratic caucus of the Texas House, said at a news conference Monday that Democrats were keeping their options open. In the meantime, all they can do is call attention to the unusual nature of the effort, which is normally tied to the once-a-decade census and is geared toward increasing GOP power with more gerrymandering. 'This isn't redistricting,' state Sen. Borris Miles (D) said on the Senate floor this week. 'It's rigged-districting.' GOP state Sen. Phil King, the chair of his chamber's redistricting committee, downplayed the gains Republicans could make and portrayed the GOP plans as ordinary even though they are not. He said on the floor of the state Senate that he didn't want to look at any new maps until getting input at public hearings. Democrats and other opponents of the GOP plans said they would pack the hearings but didn't see how voters could speak up in a meaningful way if they didn't know how legislators planned to carve up the state. Voters spoke out against the effort, but it may not change Republican lawmakers' minds, said Emily French, the policy director for Common Cause Texas, a group that opposes drawing maps for political advantage. 'Texas is already gerrymandered to hell,' she said. 'I'm not sure how much closer to hell they can get.' States are required to draw new congressional lines once a decade after each census to ensure the districts have equal populations. Those who draw the lines often analyze election data to draw districts that favor their party, giving them the ability to shape who controls Congress. Setting new lines in the middle of the decade, between censuses, is unusual, and Trump and Abbott's pressure on Texas Republicans is a sign of worries at the national level that they could lose control of the House next year. If Democrats gained the majority, they could thwart much of Trump's agenda and launch investigations of the administration. Republicans now hold a 219-212 majority with four vacancies. After the 2020 Census, Texas Republicans drew lines to protect incumbents instead of maximizing their chances of gaining more seats. In establishing new lines this year, they could give themselves opportunities in several districts. Under the current maps, Republicans hold 25 of Texas's 38 congressional districts. 'We're on the heels of Trump winning the state by 14 [percentage points], and so Republicans have more confidence to be aggressive,' said Dave Wasserman, a Cook Political Report editor who analyzes redistricting plans. Democrats warn that Republicans could lose some of the seats they hold now by moving voters to new districts, particularly if 2026 stirs up a wave of voter opposition to Trump. But the risk for Texas Republicans appears low. Republicans could draw a map for the state that gives them 30 House seats that Trump won by 15 or more percentage points last year, Wasserman said. That's a margin that would protect Republicans even in tough years. 'It's a question of how much legal risk do Republicans want to take,' he said. 'How much do they want to disrupt their own incumbents? But it is very doable in terms of raw mapping to eliminate five Democratic seats.' Litigation over the existing maps is ongoing, and a new set of maps would be sure to draw additional lawsuits. Trump's Justice Department in a letter this month alleged Texas lawmakers violated the Constitution by considering race when they drew four of the current districts. The letter threatened new litigation, putting pressure on the state to draw new maps. Democrats called the letter from Harmeet K. Dhillon, the head of Justice's civil rights division, a ruse because Texas officials have testified under oath that they did not take race into account when they developed their maps. The rules for redistricting differ by state. Ohio has a system meant to foster bipartisanship, and the state is required to draw new maps before the midterms because no Democrats supported the maps the state adopted after the 2020 Census. But Republicans will again control the map-drawing process, so they have a chance to give themselves more seats. Republicans now hold 10 of the state's 15 House seats and could gain two more, Wasserman estimated. Republicans in Missouri and other GOP-led states are also considering drawing new maps. Trump this month was bullish on the chance to draw new districts around the country. 'Texas will be the biggest one,' he said. 'And that'll be five.' The redistricting fights come as Democrats find themselves out of power in Washington and flailing about as they try to reconnect with the working-class voters they once relied on. The years ahead are filled with challenges for Democrats. They will struggle to capture the Senate next year because of a lack of pickup opportunities, and they are divided over how to retool their policy agenda and rhetoric ahead of the 2028 presidential election. The 2030 Census will reallocate the number of House seats each state gets. Republican-led states like Texas and Florida are expected to gain more because their populations are growing faster than many Democrat-run states. Democrats in other states could try to retaliate before the midterms by drawing maps favoring their party, but they face long odds because of legal and political barriers. California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D), a potential 2028 presidential candidate, has raised the possibility of redrawing lines in his state, but voters there adopted a ballot measure in 2008 that establishes an independent, nonpartisan process for adopting maps.


New York Times
3 days ago
- New York Times
At Redistricting Hearing, Texas Democrats Attack Silent Republicans
Scores of people from across Texas packed into the State Capitol in Austin on Thursday to testify against a Republican plan, pushed by President Trump, to redraw congressional districts and protect the party's slender majority in the U.S. House. The public hearing, before a 21-member select committee of the Texas House on redistricting, was the first since Gov. Greg Abbott directed state lawmakers to redraw congressional lines during a 30-day special session of the Legislature. No maps with new district lines have been publicly proposed yet by Republican leaders in the Legislature, and none were expected before the initial public hearings. Two more such hearings are set for Houston on Saturday and the Dallas area next Tuesday. So those testifying on Thursday were left to comment on the idea of a rare mid-decade redistricting, and Mr. Trump's stated wish that Texas Republicans should produce maps that create five additional Republican seats ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. The state has 38 congressional seats, 25 of which are currently held by Republicans. 'I am dismayed that the legislative session is not focused, first and foremost, on flood relief,' said Robin Peeples, a software designer from Temple, Texas. She added that redistricting 'should not be shoved through so quickly at a time when we're dealing with a disaster in the state.' State Representative Jon Rosenthal, the top Democrat on the committee, responded, 'I think you are the most important person we need to listen to.' Want all of The Times? Subscribe.