politics
5 min read
Pa. Senate Advances Voucher Plan, Reigniting School Choice Debate
National Desk
May 3, 2026
The Pennsylvania Senate Education Committee voted to advance Senate Bill 10, the Pennsylvania Award for Student Success Scholarship Program, with support crossing party lines when Democratic Sen. Anthony H. Williams joined Republicans in backing the measure.[2] The legislation would establish a voucher system allowing eligible students—those residing in Pennsylvania, without a high school diploma, and living in school attendance boundaries deemed low-achieving—to access state-funded scholarships for private school attendance.[2]
The bill represents the latest iteration of a school choice push that has gained momentum among Republican lawmakers. Sen. Doug Mastriano (R-33) separately introduced the broader Educational Freedom for Families Act, which would expand vouchers, establish Education Savings Accounts, increase charter and cyber school options, and provide loan forgiveness for teachers who demonstrate measurable student outcome improvements.[1] This proposal frames educational choice as a matter of parental rights, with Mastriano arguing that "Pennsylvania families have been denied the right to choose the best education for their children."[1]
Opponents of the voucher expansion paint a starkly different picture. The Pennsylvania State Education Association, joined by 28 other education organizations, characterized the legislation as "a full attack on public education," warning that the programs would siphon $144 million from school districts most in need of state resources.[6] Public education advocates argue that diverting taxpayer dollars to private institutions undermines funding for the public schools serving the majority of Pennsylvania's 1.6 million K-12 students.
The political landscape suggests the voucher debate will intensify. National polling shows 67% of Americans support Education Savings Accounts and school vouchers, with over 75% of school parents backing such policies.[3] At the federal level, three Pennsylvania Republicans—Reps. Mike Kelly, Guy Reschenthaler, and Dan Meuser—co-sponsor the Educational Choice for Children Act, which would establish K-12 scholarships that could stack atop Pennsylvania's existing programs.[3] The legislative path forward remains uncertain, however, as voucher proposals have repeatedly stalled in recent years despite Republican support.


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