Voters reject vouchers in Colorado, Kentucky, and Nebraska

Date Posted: 11/07/2024 | Author: Kate Johanns
As the dust settles from the 2024 election and post-mortems are written, one trend that deserves examination is the multiple instances in which voters across the country rejected voucher programs when they were put directly before them on the ballot—indicating that support for a candidate does not mean voters are in lockstep with all the candidate’s positions.
For example, in Kentucky, President-Elect Donald Trump, a private school voucher supporter, received 64.6% of the vote, yet 65% of voters also rejected amending the state’s constitution to allow the Kentucky General Assembly to provide state funding to students outside of public schools.
In Nebraska, 58% of voters voted to repeal a voucher program passed by the Nebraska Legislature just this April. Just over 60% of Nebraska voters supported Trump.
In Colorado, where the majority of voters supported Vice President Kamala Harris, voters also rejected a constitutional amendment that would have declared that “each K-12 child has the right to school choice” and “that school choice includes neighborhood, charter, private, and home schools, open enrollment options, and future innovations in education.”
Here in Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott appeared at a private school Wednesday in Tyler to rally for passage of vouchers during the upcoming legislative session. In his remarks, Abbott stated that “more than enough members of the Texas House of Representatives [were] elected last night to make sure that school choice is going to pass.” Abbott may, with some justification, be banking on legislators’ willingness to follow his lead, regardless of what their constituents back home think about the issue. However, as ATPE Executive Director Shannon Holmes told the Houston Chronicle, the relationship between candidate support and voucher support is not as clear-cut as voucher proponents often make it out to be, as evidenced by the Kentucky and Nebraska election results. “There’s nothing about the Texas election results that indicates public education was top of mind for most Texas voters as a whole in their decision making process,” Holmes said. “We also look at other states and see results that indicate a vote for a particular candidate doesn’t necessarily indicate alignment with all the candidate’s policies.”
CONVERSATION
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU

07/18/2025
Teach the Vote’s Week in Review: July 18, 2025
Check out ATPE’s comprehensive wrap-up of education-related bills passed during the 89th Legislature.

07/18/2025
TRS Board announces TRS-Care updates at its July meeting
The TRS Board of Trustees met July 17-18, 2025, in Austin – the first full meeting at its new headquarters.

07/17/2025
That’s a wrap: Additional notable education-related bills passed by the 89th Legislature
In this epilogue to our regular session wrap-up, we take a look at other new legislation of significant interest to Texas public educators.