Randi Weingarten says quiet part out loud: Fears Ed Dept closure will boost school choice funds

Randi Weingarten decried vouchers as a "tax credit" for wealthy families, and fears Trump's plan to terminate the Education Department will mean more funding to boost school choice.


Randi Weingarten says quiet part out loud: Fears Ed Dept closure will boost school choice funds
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Weingarten's comments came during a podcast interview with Molly Jong-Fast, who spoke with her about the implications of Trump's spending reforms, particularly his plan to terminate the Department of Education. Weingarten stated that cutting the department's roughly $100 billion in funding will primarily benefit tax cuts for the wealthy or - "equally pernicious" - be redirected to states as "block grants."

"And frankly, what we are seeing in all the programs now - in terms of vouchers - they don't work for kids," Weingarten continued. "They basically go right now - it becomes a tax credit for people who already are sending their kids to private schools. So it's income redistribution."

Alongside his anticipated executive action to dismantle the department Trump issued an executive order on Jan. 29 to expand "educational freedom" for families through various school choice programs, including vouchers.

"We're fighting to protect our kids and protect that funding and not let Donald Trump or Elon Musk glom it off for tax cuts for billionaires or for block grants for vouchers," Weingarten responded after Jong-Fast asked what she and her union, the American Federation of Teachers, was doing to combat Trump. Weingarten added that regardless of whether you are a Republican or Democrat, ensuring American families have the economic and educational opportunities to achieve the American Dream, should be a priority.

"We all have to do a lot more to help make sure that families in America have what they need for a quality of life, for entry into the middle class," Weingarten said.

Rachel Langan, a senior education policy analyst at the Commonwealth Foundation, a public policy think-tank based in Pennsylvania, said "simply spending more money" is not an answer to the deficiencies within the U.S. education system. 

"Parents need more educational options, as evidenced by the continued waiting lists for charter schools and for the state's tax credit scholarship programs, which serve large numbers of low-income families zoned to attend low-achieving public schools."

"The time is now for school choice in every state," the American Federation for Children, a nonprofit that advocates for school choice, added following Trump's order. "For a generation, our nation's education system has been held hostage by bureaucrats and schooling unions who care only about preserving their own power, not the needs of American students."

Since Trump's executive order boosting school choice funding, a handful of states have introduced legislation to make these programs more widely available. In total, 14 states have passed universal school choice bills. 

Fox News Digital reached out to the American Federation of Teachers and Weingarten for comment, but did not hear back prior to publication. 

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