• Investing
  • Tech News
  • Stock
  • World News
Grand Expo Event
Editor's PickInvesting

Religious Charter Schools? Let States Decide

by June 2, 2025
June 2, 2025

Jeffrey Miron

catholic school students

A critical issue for the school choice movement is how charter and voucher programs treat religious schools. Supreme Court decisions from 2002 and 2022 hold that the Constitution’s Establishment Clause does not bar religious schools from receiving government funded vouchers, as these fund students but not religious institutions directly.

In a recent 4–4 ruling, however, the US Supreme Court upheld the Oklahoma Supreme Court’s prohibition of religious charter schools. Are the two cases—vouchers versus charters—different?

Cato’s Neal McCluskey argues that this case is why vouchers are superior to charters. He posits that allowing religious charter schools entangles the government with religion, as chartering boards must decide which religious schools to approve.

This is a reasonable view; charters plausibly involve government more than vouchers.

Yet a voucher system still requires the government to determine which schools are eligible to receive vouchers: do language-immersion, STEM-only, athletics-focused, and vocational schools all qualify? Is there a state-imposed curriculum? How much time is allowed for religious studies?

The logical conclusion is that only one approach removes government completely, and that is zero funding or provision of education in any way.

Despite its libertarian purity, this approach will run into massive opposition, and not just from the left; even hardcore libertarians might be open to some government attempt to ensure all children get a basic education.

The most practical solution is to uphold federalism and leave education policy completely to the states.

Schools are lightning rods for cultural issues beyond religion, such as transgender athletes, free speech, dress codes, and curriculum. This contentiousness points to differences in schooling preferences across the country. So when the federal government dictates education policy, it imposes particular views widely, generating backlash and polarization. Instead, states should determine their policies based on their residents’ preferences.

Rather than imposing federal decisions, therefore, preferences can be reflected by diverse state policies. Individuals can “vote with their feet,” leaving a state if they cannot tolerate its education policies or prefer another state’s policy. Further, this competition creates natural experiments, testing which education policies work best.

Thus, libertarian education policy should emphasize state autonomy. This promotes liberty by preventing the federal government from imposing monolithic, polarizing policies across all citizens.

This article appeared on Substack on June 2, 2025. Tommy Seneker, a student at Harvard College, co-wrote this post.

previous post
What’s Next for Dollar Tree, CrowdStrike, and Broadcom? Watch These Setups
next post
Hedge Market Volatility with These Dividend Aristocrats & Sector Leaders

You may also like

The FDA’s Biosimilar Burden—and How Congress Can Lift...

June 23, 2025

Election Policy Roundup

June 23, 2025

AI Stocks Ignite Again—Where Smart Money is Heading...

June 23, 2025

This Week’s Earnings Watch: Turnarounds and Momentum Plays

June 23, 2025

Congress Should Let the New Markets Tax Credit...

June 23, 2025

Can Mail Ballots Be Lawfully Counted If Received...

June 23, 2025

A Common Thread: Price Controls, Japanese Internment, and...

June 23, 2025

The Best Five Sectors, #24

June 23, 2025

Lagging Mid-cap ETF Hits Moment of Truth

June 23, 2025

US Strikes Iran: What Comes Next For Stocks?

June 22, 2025

    Fill Out & Get More Relevant News


    Stay ahead of the market and unlock exclusive trading insights & timely news. We value your privacy - your information is secure, and you can unsubscribe anytime. Gain an edge with hand-picked trading opportunities, stay informed with market-moving updates, and learn from expert tips & strategies.

    Recent Posts

    • The FDA’s Biosimilar Burden—and How Congress Can Lift It

      June 23, 2025
    • Election Policy Roundup

      June 23, 2025
    • AI Stocks Ignite Again—Where Smart Money is Heading Next

      June 23, 2025
    • This Week’s Earnings Watch: Turnarounds and Momentum Plays

      June 23, 2025
    • Congress Should Let the New Markets Tax Credit Expire

      June 23, 2025
    • Can Mail Ballots Be Lawfully Counted If Received After Election Day? Where the Law Stands

      June 23, 2025
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Copyright © 2025 grandexpoevent.com | All Rights Reserved

    Grand Expo Event
    • Investing
    • Tech News
    • Stock
    • World News