education
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Kentucky Joins Federal School Choice Program After Veto Override
National Desk
May 3, 2026
On March 17, 2026, Kentucky lawmakers completed a veto override that fundamentally shifts the state's approach to school choice. The House voted 77-14 to override Beshear's veto, followed by the Senate's 31-5 vote the same day. The partisan split was stark: no Democrats supported the override, and no Republicans opposed it. House Bill 1, filed by State Representative Kim Moser (R-Taylor Mill), requires the secretary of state to annually opt Kentucky into the federal school choice tax credit scholarship program established by the Trump administration's One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which took effect July 4, 2025.
The program operates through a dollar-for-dollar federal tax credit structure that allows individuals to receive federal tax credits for donations up to $1,700 to authorized scholarship-granting organizations. Those organizations then disburse scholarships directly to eligible students for private school tuition, homeschooling expenses, and other qualifying educational costs. Supporters emphasized that no public dollars are directed to particular schools. "Instead, contributions go to scholarship-granting organizations, which then provide scholarships directly to eligible students, including those served by public schools," said Senator David Givens (R), who backed the legislation. Nonprofits supporting public schools could also raise funds to cover services not available through existing state or local resources.
Governor Beshear vetoed the bill on March 13, citing concerns about the program's impact on Kentucky's education system, but the Republican-controlled legislature swiftly moved to override his objection. Kentucky became the second state nationally to enact legislation requiring participation in the federal program and the first state legislature to do so without gubernatorial approval. Indiana Gov. Mike Braun had already opted his state in administratively in January.
Implementation of the program will require Kentucky to identify and approve scholarship-granting organizations operating within the state and establish administrative procedures for participation. States must submit a list of eligible scholarship-granting organizations to the U.S. Treasury by January 1 each year to participate. Local nonprofits and education advocates have begun preparing outreach campaigns to inform Kentucky families, educators, and organizations about scholarship opportunities and how the framework operates. Over 25 states had already opted in before Kentucky's March action, with many more expected to participate in coming months.
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