Texas Voters Punish Lawmakers Who Oppose School Choice
Of the 21 Texas House Republicans who joined Democrats to kill school choice during the special sessions, only seven survived their primaries.

Texas lawmakers had an opportunity to take bold action on school choice in 2023. Instead, they sided with teachers unions and chose to preserve an educational monopoly that abandons millions of families in a one-size-fits-all system.
Voters paid attention to the do-nothing approach. The result was a shellacking for the 21 House Republicans who joined Democrats to kill school choice during four special sessions ending on December 5, 2023. Of this group, only seven Republicans survived their 2024 primary election season.
The other 14 GOP incumbents either lost in the first round on March 5, lost in a runoff on May 28, or retired and did not face reelection. In contrast, 54 of 63 Republicans who supported school choice cruised through their primaries—an 86 percent victory.
Cassandra Posey, a former public school teacher who now fights for school choice, followed the races closely and said school choice was a central issue. This was by design. Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, who called the special sessions, made clear to lawmakers that if a school choice bill was not passed and sent to his desk, he would bring the issue to primary voters.
"We will have everything teed up in a way where we will be giving voters in the primary a choice," Abbott said in September during a virtual town hall.
Voters have now made their choice clear: They want educational savings accounts (ESAs), a tool that empowers students and their families. When opting for an ESA, participating families receive a designated amount of funds from the state to offset K-12 costs. Educational options previously out of reach—such as private school tuition, tutoring services, homeschool materials, and services for special needs—all become more affordable and accessible.
Finding room in the state budget is not the issue. The money for educating Texas children is there. The real fight is about power.
Teachers unions like using ZIP codes to assign schools. They oppose ESAs because these accounts give parents myriad options to tailor their children's learning experiences.
That is why the unions celebrated when lawmakers rejected ESAs, which are sometimes called "vouchers" by those who oppose them even though ESAs give far more control to parents and students. The status quo means fewer families can escape union influence and the underperforming school system they control.
"We stopped vouchers in their tracks," the Texas chapter of the American Federation of Teachers wrote in a news release at the end of the 2023 special sessions.
Texas voters can now boast right back that they stopped 14 anti-choice lawmakers in their tracks. The changing of the guard dramatically alters the composition of the Texas House and will give ESA supporters new momentum when they try again in the 2025 legislative session.
"Our goal is to level the playing field," says Posey, who now homeschools her three daughters in Waller, Texas, outside Houston.
Posey says every child learns differently, and local schools do not always meet a student's needs. "ESAs put families in control," she says. "Parents can shop around when a child needs something different."
This is how things already work in 13 states that operate ESAs. Another 33 states have school choice programs that let education funds follow students to the schools or services that fit their needs.
Texas will have many models to consider in 2025. The Texas State Teachers Association, the state's largest teachers union, opposes all of them. Union president Ovidia Molina calls every ESA proposal an attack against public schools because families might take their money and go elsewhere.
Specifically, Molina worries that funds might go to support private schools or possibly homeschools. What she misunderstands—or chooses to ignore—is that parents, not the government, make decisions with ESAs.
Our public interest law firm, the Institute for Justice, has successfully defended ESAs in court, including in North Carolina, Tennessee, and West Virginia. Most recently on June 4, we joined a legal battle to defend ESAs in Utah on behalf of parents. The teachers union sued to stop the popular program after 27,000 students applied for the state's first 10,000 savings accounts.
These programs are not only constitutional, they're also popular. Posey has nothing against public schools—she just wants families to have choice.
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I enjoyed taking my small part in the ouster.
Did not see where the article addressed this, but I'm guessing no Democratic lawmakers faced such any consequences for their [pro union] votes; other than that they will sail into reelection.
They will face an electorate who has shown they like school choice, and that could tip some voters against the Dems.
The way to get the left on board with school choice is to let them believe it means nurses doing abortions.
"Choice?"
No true fascist state allows the masses to choose.
That's what the Politburo does for them.
Choice is white supremacy.
Way to go Texas. Nay you be an example for the country.
Which union is worse the AFT or SEIU?
Government employee unions are evil parasites by definition.
"All Government employees should realize that the process of collective bargaining, as usually understood, cannot be transplanted into the public service. It has its distinct and insurmountable limitations when applied to public personnel management. The very nature and purposes of Government make it impossible for administrative officials to represent fully or to bind the employer in mutual discussions with Government employee organizations. The employer is the whole people, who speak by means of laws enacted by their representatives in Congress. Accordingly, administrative officials and employees alike are governed and guided, and in many instances restricted, by laws which establish policies, procedures, or rules in personnel matters.
Particularly, I want to emphasize my conviction that militant tactics have no place in the functions of any organization of Government employees. Upon employees in the Federal service rests the obligation to serve the whole people, whose interests and welfare require orderliness and continuity in the conduct of Government activities. This obligation is paramount. Since their own services have to do with the functioning of the Government, a strike of public employees manifests nothing less than an intent on their part to prevent or obstruct the operations of Government until their demands are satisfied. Such action, looking toward the paralysis of Government by those who have sworn to support it, is unthinkable and intolerable."—FDR
And yet this guy remains a hero to leftists.
See? Letting people vote is a danger to (D)emocracy.
Election outcomes are too important to be left in the hands of voters.
We need to rethink capitalism and democracy!
"Every election is a sort of advance auction sale of stolen goods." H.L. Mencken
Election outcomes are too important to be left in the hands of voters.
Exactly. That is why 147 Republicans voted not to certify the election results on Jan. 6, 2021.
Results that in many cases had NOT been left in the hands of voters.
Says who? The politicians that lost power? Isn't that convenient.
Do your own homework.
The point whooshed right over your head. The "homework" needed to be done by those claiming that election fraud so tainted the election that the certified results should be tossed out. That homework then needed to be evaluated in as objective a manner and forum as possible. Instead, the fraud claims were made on social media, by partisan commentators, and most vocally by the very candidate that lost the election. The partisans in Congress then wanted to simply vote based on their own belief that the results should not be accepted. In no way is that a reasonable fashion to challenge election results.
You are uninformed.
I am supposed to continue to guess what you mean, I take it?
Of the 21 Texas House Republicans who joined Democrats to kill school choice during the special sessions, only seven survived their primaries.
Will be interesting to see how it turns out in November when it is more than Republicans voting for them. Of course, the question will first hinge on which of those districts are at all competitive between (R) and (D). In any district with a majority of voters aligned with one party, the real election is the primary.
Government employees unions need to become extinct. Teachers Unions, Postal Workers unions, COP Unions and in general all other government employee unions, need to be shut down and outlawed.
When you work for the people or at least supposed to be, you have a contract between you and the people who pay the taxes to give you a paycheck, nice medical insurance and a great retirement package, thank you. Oh and all the other benefits such as paid holidays like Juneteenth which seem to be increasing.
With education standards cratering and students increasingly falling behind other nations such as China and even Europe, one has to take umbrage at those who insist on taking your children away from you to indoctrinate them into the alphabet people and brainwash them into nice little Marxists.
School choice and home schooling is the answer to the leftist indoctrination centers called public education or in another sense miseducation.