A majority of Louisiana
voters support school choice.
Watchdog.org: Poll: African - American
voters support school choice more than pols http://bit.ly/2cJGmXW
«Democratic
voters support school choice, the programs overwhelmingly benefit families represented by Democrats.
Reality: The most recent national poll conducted by Democratic polling firm Beck Research for the American Federation for Children found 70 percent of
voters support school choice, and 65 percent support opportunity scholarships otherwise known as school vouchers.
There was also considerable geographic support for school choice across the three regions of the state, with 68 percent of East Tennessee
voters supporting school choice, along with 64 percent of Middle Tennessee voters and 63 percent of West Tennessee voters.
Not exact matches
Only 29 percent of
voters supported Bloomberg's
choice to make the former Hearst Magazine president the top
school official in the city, according to the poll, which has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.7 percent.
Most Council members had two unstated reasons for
supporting Greenfield in using tax money to fund religious
schools: they either have constituents who would like their
choice to send their children to these
schools to be further subsidized or they want to buy themselves good will with the increasingly powerful and cohesive blocs of Orthodox, fundamentalist, and Catholic
voters should they decide to seek higher office.
Sure, there are plenty of Republicans who loudly
support empowering parents with
school choice, but they are still boosted by a party which expresses vocal disdain for the kinds of government
supports on which many of these urban
voters depend to keep their families intact.
Yet
support for private -
school choice among likely
voters remains very strong.
Support for
school choice in all its forms and for NCLB appears to be somewhat weaker among
voters in
school board elections than among the population as a whole.
The Tennessee Federation for Children, the state's voice for educational
choice, celebrates Tennessee's primary election results as
voters turned out in
support of
school choice candidates.
Likely
voters have made their opinions clear in polling — 68 percent
support school choice, and those percentages are even higher among African - American (72 percent), Hispanic (75 percent), and Millennial (75 percent)
voters.
As the Foundation for Excellence in Education's National Summit on Education Reform kicks off in Nashville today, a new poll of 625 Tennessee
voters conducted by Mason - Dixon Polling & Strategy shows that 65 percent of Tennesseans
support the issue of
school choice.
... 51 percent of Wisconsin
voters support a major expansion of the state's private
school choice program.
In Mississippi,
school choice is
supported by 81 percent of white
voters and 73 percent of African Americans; a unity we very rarely see in a state where
voters are often divided.
But one supposedly controversial issue that has broad
support among both white and African American
voters is
school choice.
The poll also found strong
support for locating charter
schools statewide,
support for making educational scholarship accounts available to all students, and that
voters are more likely to
support a candidate for the legislature if they
support school choice.
You can have a majority
support on
school choice in polls but lose in elections because union members have a far bigger stake than the average
voter.
A 2015 BAEO survey of Black
voters in the state indicated strong across the board
support for
choice programs — 78 %
supported parental
choice, 66 % approved of charter
schools and 63 % favored vouchers / scholarships.
The movement appears to have public
support: 70 percent of likely
voters said they'd
support parent - trigger laws in a March national poll by StudentsFirst, a pro-school
choice advocacy group run by Michelle Rhee, the controversial former chancellor of the Washington, D.C., public
schools.
Voters support the idea of
school choice by a 78 - 17 margin, including 83 percent of Republicans and 73 percent of Democrats.
National surveys and statewide reports indicate that the majority of likely
voters support the use of taxpayer money to fund
school choice programs.
The American Federation for Children celebrates Oklahoma's primary election results as
voters turned out in
support for
school choice candidates.
On issue on the mind of many
voters are the candidates»
support of
school choice options and continuing the groundbreaking education reforms enacted during the last decade.
«Wisconsin
voters continue their consistent
support for
school choice statewide,» said Justin Moralez, Wisconsin state director for the American Federation for Children.
Their poll results found that 54 % of all likely
voters and 42 % of self - identified Democrats
support school choice.
Los Angeles
Voters Strongly
Support Public
School Choice for Families; Cite Education as Most Important Issue the City Faces
In 2012, Republican Primary
voters voiced overwhelming
support of
school choice.
According to a recent statewide survey, 54 % of likely
voters in Wisconsin
support school choice.
«
Voters turned out to the polls in
support of
school choice and candidates who
support educational options for children in all parts of the country.
If
voters get angry enough with federal education politics, national Democrats may start learning from their state - level colleagues who are starting to
support effective policies like
school choice.
Scott saw his
support from African - American
voters more than double, and Chavous cites Crist's opposition to
school choice as a key reason why.
-LSB-...] Black and Hispanic
voters (76 percent) are more likely than whites (68 percent) to
support school choice, echoing findings from other recent surveys.
A 2015 BAEO survey of Black
voters in the state indicated strong across the board
support for
choice programs — 78 percent
supported parental
choice, 66 percent approved of charter
schools and 63 percent favored vouchers / scholarships.