Democrats For Education Reform applauds New York Governor Hochul’s decision to opt into Federal Scholarship Tax Credit

(Providence, R.I.) – Democrats for Education Reform (DFER) today applauded New York Governor Kathy Hochul’s announcement that she intends to opt New York into the Federal Scholarship Tax Credit (FSTC) program, making it the second, and largest Democratic-led state to act to date. New York is poised to become the 30th state to opt in—a landmark moment for the program and for Democratic leadership on education. Education Reform Now projects that New York could recapture more than$1.525 billion annually in new educational support if just 30% of its taxpayers redirect $1,700 that would otherwise go to the IRS to a local education organization.

Jorge Elorza, CEO of Democrats for Education Reform, released the following statement:

“Governor Hochul’s decision is a major win for New York students and families and we applaud the governor for her leadership. This would represent one of the largest education funding infusions to New York in years—and it comes at no cost to the state budget.” 

“These new resources will help kids—including low- and middle-income students in public schools—access tutoring, after-school programs, transportation, technology, summer learning, special-education services, and other supports that have historically been out of reach for far too many families. This means more resources flowing to public school students, not away from them.

“DFER has been urging Democratic governors to opt in since the program’s inception, and the momentum is now undeniable. Governor Hochul joins Governor Polis in the yes column. Meanwhile, three governors—in Hawaii, New Mexico, and Oregon—who initially said their states would not participate have publicly confirmed they are reconsidering their positions. As the largest Democratic-led state to act, New York sends an unmistakable signal to every blue-state governor still on the sidelines.”

“We urge non-profit organizations throughout New York to actively consider how they might participate in the program and utilize the funds to meet the needs of kids and families.”

Education Is a Fault Line In U.S. Politics. Democrats Are on the Wrong Side

There was a time when challenging broken institutions was the Democratic Party’s calling card. Democrats didn’t just tolerate disruption, they drove it, demanding that schools, health care and government agencies answer to the people they were supposed to serve, not the other way around. That instinct produced some of the party’s greatest achievements.

Once the populist force — suspicious of institutions and champions of those too often overlooked and left behind — the party is now widely perceived, and increasingly operating, as the party of elites and institutional insiders. Meanwhile, Republicans, long the party of the establishment and elite-oriented, have absorbed the populist energy that once defined the left.

Nowhere is that reversal more glaring or more costly than in America’s K-12 schools. Since the end of the Obama years, Democrats have defended the system despite evidence of mounting failure. Reading and math scores fell sharply. Achievement gaps widened. Chronic absenteeism surged. And the Democratic Party’s answer has been to default to a system-protection mindset, rather than question whether that system is working. The party has deferred to administrators, shielded unions and told frustrated families to trust a system that has repeatedly failed their children.

Read the full op-ed on the74million.org

America faces an education depression. Why are Democrats silent?

The party has focused on defending institutions instead of empowering families.

Not too long ago, Democrats were the party of change. Today, they have become small-c conservatives, more intent on defending the past than building the future.

Over the last decade, Republicans have transformed their party. They abandoned long-standing orthodoxies, embraced populism and aligned themselves with the country’s anti-institutional mood. The shift has been chaotic, destructive and often cruel. But they recognized the moment and changed.

Democrats, meanwhile, have remained tethered to institutions, frameworks and assumptions from a political era that is disappearing. If they don’t adapt, they risk becoming the minority party in a political order they had little role in shaping.

K-12 education might not be the first issue that comes to mind when diagnosing Democratic drift, but if you want to understand how Democrats went from the party of reform to defenders of the status quo, start with public schools.

Read the full op-ed by Jorge Elorza and Ben Austin in The Washington Post

Fox News: Former Democratic mayor goes against the grain in backing school choice, calls for party to embrace it

The debate over school choice is changing — and Democrats have a chance to help shape where it goes.

DFER CEO Jorge Elorza joined Fox News Digital to talk about what it looks like when Democrats engage seriously on education options, why more governors are coming around on the federal tax credit scholarship program, and how the party can build a vision for school choice that puts families first.

Elorza pointed to Colorado Governor Jared Polis opting into the federal tax credit scholarship program as proof that the politics are shifting, and argued that Democrats who engage seriously on this issue can lead — not just follow.

“I think this is a real opportunity for Democrats to show that we’re on the side of working-class Americans and not simply following the cues of powerful stakeholders.” — Jorge Elorza

[Read the full story on Fox News Digital]

Democrats, It’s Time to Embrace School Choice

By Jorge Elorza

This essay was published in the New York Times on February 17, 2026. Read the full piece here.

America is in a decade-long education depression. Barely a third of students are proficient in reading or math across most grades in recent testing, achievement gaps are widening fast, and too many college freshmen are arriving on campus unable to read a full book or do middle-school-level math. Chronic absenteeism has surged after the pandemic; students are disengaged. Educators are burning out, and teachers are increasingly hard to recruit and retain. Costs are rising. Trust in public schools is at a record low, and families with the means to leave increasingly do, leaving districts with half-empty buildings.

This is what an institutional breaking point looks like. In these periods of deep political and social change, or interregnums, reforms that were once considered unthinkable become not only possible but also necessary. This moment of crisis in K-12 education is an opportunity to reimagine it from the ground up. We need nothing less than a new educational operating system — one that channels public funding through students and families directly, rather than through centralized district bureaucracies.

For decades, reformers have tried to fix the education system from within, pushing for higher standards, better data, stronger accountability and more equitable funding. Some gains have been made, but efforts to improve the system have repeatedly ground to a halt, blocked by bureaucratic inertia and political gridlock.

At the heart of this resistance is a fundamental misalignment of incentives. Schools are largely funded according to their ZIP code, not their success or failure. They often don’t need to deliver strong outcomes to maintain enrollment or secure their budgets. 

Without structural incentives to improve, even well-meaning systems stagnate, as bureaucracies optimize for self-preservation rather than delivering results. To transform 

our education system, we need to change the architecture of the system itself, not just patch the policies and programs that sit on top of it.

We’ve seen in other sectors what’s possible when consumers, not top-down managers, are put in the driver’s seat. When Apple introduced the iPhone, it wasn’t the phone’s sleek design that changed everything. The true revolution came from its open operating system that invited third parties to create apps to meet nearly every imaginable need. The result was an explosion of bottom-up innovation: innumerable independent creators responding directly to users in ways Apple alone never could.

Education needs a similar shift. Instead of a top-down model that delivers a one-size-fits-all experience, we need an open, dynamic system where educators have the freedom to design new schools — and parents have the power to choose among them. When families have more agency, schools are compelled to adapt and improve to earn their trust, and a more responsive system follows.

This is the core of a new educational operating system: public funding flowing to numerous types of schools. In this model, government still plays a critical role. It sets guardrails to ensure access and standards, and provides the funding. Critically, it no longer controls how schooling is delivered. Instead, the money follows the children themselves to different learning environments, whether public or private, that families believe best meet their needs. This vision is not theoretical. Most of our international peers fund students and diverse types of school, not large public systems. States across the country have begun to follow suit.

Since the pandemic, education savings accounts and tax credit programs have expanded, allowing education dollars to follow children to the schools families choose. Families now have access to learning experiences that are hard to find under the traditional system: blended STEM and Montessori in Arizona microschools, a focus on Black culture in Atlanta and personalized tutoring in New Hampshire. Public schools, charter schools, private schools and hybrid models should all be on the table.

This is the same logic we apply to Pell Grants, housing vouchers, Affordable Care Act plans and many child care subsidies that allow individuals to choose between a variety of public and private providers. K-12 education should be no different.

Private schools — and school choice — are not a panacea. When oversight is lacking, quality suffers. But research by the scholar Ashley Rogers Berner shows that when countries fund many types of schools while holding them to common academic standards, students thrive both academically and civically. A growing body of evidence and research, across the United States and abroad, shows that a well-designed school choice program can produce academic and civic results that match or surpass those of traditional schools.

When traditional public schools have to demonstrate value alongside other options, they get better too. Rigorous studies from New York City and beyond show that the presence of charter schools and private scholarship programs provides healthy competitive pressure and sometimes even boosts achievement in nearby district schools.

Pursuing this vision does not mean abandoning public education; rather, we must reimagine it for a new era. Public education is a goal, not a fixed set of institutions. If the aim is an educated public, we should care less about who runs a school and more about whether it helps students thrive. Families should be able to choose any learning environment that meets their needs, so long as it is accessible and accountable.

Both conservatives and progressives would find much to like in this new system. Conservatives would find its promise of freedom from government control appealing, while progressives could focus on how it empowers families and communities. Both can unite around a system designed to meet the needs of every child.

The next generation is stepping into a world of constant, accelerating change. If we want children to thrive, we need an education system as dynamic and future-ready as the world ahead, one that is student-centered, innovation-driven and flexible enough to evolve with the times.

Former U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan Urges States to Opt Into the Federal Scholarship Tax Credit Program (FSTC)

In a new Washington Post op-ed co-authored with Jorge Elorza, Duncan calls the program a moral imperative and a chance for Democrats to lead again on education

Washington, DC — Former U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan has publicly endorsed state participation in the Federal Scholarship Tax Credit (FSTC) program—previously known as the Educational Choice for Children Act (ECCA)—arguing that the initiative represents both a practical and moral opportunity for Democrats to lead again on education reform.

In a Washington Post op-ed co-authored with Jorge Elorza, CEO of Education Reform Now, Duncan calls the federal program “a no-brainer” for states seeking to help students recover from a decade of learning declines.

The piece comes as the latest Nation’s Report Card reveals steep and persistent declines in reading, math, and science scores across grade levels, a crisis Duncan and Elorza describe as “an education depression.” They argue that the federal program, created under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, provides a way for states to expand tutoring, transportation, and other learning supports for both private and public schools, at no cost to taxpayers

“Arne’s voice carries weight because he’s never shied away from hard truths”, said Jorge Elorza, CEO of Education Reform Now. “Arne has always led with courage and conscience, and his support underscores that this isn’t about partisanship, it’s about doing what’s right for students and families. By stepping forward on this issue, he’s reminding Democrats that no matter where the ideas come from, we have both the power and the responsibility to shape policy according to our values.”

Under the program, individual taxpayers can receive a dollar-for-dollar federal tax credit for donations to qualified scholarship-granting organizations (SGOs). Those SGOs can then fund tutoring, special education, transportation, and other supports for students in both public and nonpublic schools. Education Reform Now estimates that even modest participation rates could generate billions in new education resources nationwide.

Duncan’s endorsement marks a significant moment for the future of bipartisan education reform. As one of the nation’s most prominent Democratic education leaders, his support signals growing recognition that innovation and equity must go hand in hand.

Read the full Washington Post op-ed here: WaPo_ America is in an ‘education depression.’ This solution is a no-brainer.pdf

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Shavar Jeffries in The Hill: Our Next President’s Education Agenda

On Wednesday, DFER President Shavar Jeffries detailed in The Hill President Obama’s “greatest unsung accomplishment” – his commitment to lasting, meaningful education reform and what it means going forward for the next President.

In it, Shavar outlines four principles if Hillary Clinton is to embrace and build upon President Obama’s education legacy. Otherwise, students will be relegated to a system that perpetuates inequality.

It is available here.

CNBC: Education reform ‘good politics, good policy,’ School choice advocate says

DFER’s National President Shavar Jeffries recently sat down with CNBC to discuss the intersection of politics and education in the 2016 race:

Education reform ‘good politics, good policy,’ School choice advocate says
Javier E. David, CNBC

Education reform, a traditionally contentious policy issues in America, is one that has gotten short shrift in the current race for the White House.

A 2016 campaign largely defined by economic anxiety, immigration and fears of terrorism has devoted little illumination to the state of public education, which by many indications could use the attention. Just this week, the National Assessment of Educational Progress issued a dismal report that showed most U.S. high school seniors aren’t prepared for college or a career.

This lamentable state of affairs is one that animates the schools choice movement, and charter school advocates such as Shavar Jeffries. The Newark native, Columbia-trained civil rights lawyer and a self-described progressive is one of a small and rare cadre of Democrats tilting against party orthodoxy by pushing to develop charter schools. These are free public schools that are run independently, set their own performance goals and methods, but do so without union-organized teachers and administrators.

In a recent interview with CNBC, Jeffries expressed frustration over the “muted” political conversation about deteriorating primary and secondary education quality. He argued increasing school choice was crucial to solving the seemingly intractable income gap problem, particularly among black and Latino students trapped in failing public schools.

“It’s not just a winning policy issue, it’s a winning political issue,” said Jeffries, who lost a campaign for mayor of Newark in 2014 and who now heads the charter advocacy organization called Democrats for Education Reform (DFER), an advocacy group that lobbies other Democrats for educational reform.

Continue Reading: http://www.cnbc.com/2016/04/30/education-reform-good-politics-good-policy.html

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