
Parents, not progressives, know their kids best. They should control education.
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Parents, not progressives, know their kids best. They should control education. | Opinion
The U.S. Supreme Court on June 27 delivered another victory for parental rights in education. A Maryland school board refused to give parents the ability to opt their children out of being exposed to books related to gender and sexuality. The Supreme Court agreed, ruling 6-3, that the school board’s actions were an unconstitutional affront to the First Amendment. With Texas now offering a universal private school choice program, thousands of families will be able to choose from schools they previously wouldn’t have been able to afford. The ruling is a significant victory for parents and should offer families greater say over what goes on in traditional public schools, Jacques says. He says the government should never stand between parents and their children’s right to determine what’s best for their children and their education. The decision comes as a growing number of states pass laws offering a form of universal school choice to families – Texas is the biggest state to do so to date.
Democrats and teachers unions (sorry, I repeat myself) may think they own your kids and know best what they should learn.
They’re wrong. It’s parents.
Luckily, parents are winning. And the U.S. Supreme Court on June 27 delivered another victory for parental rights in education.
That comes as a growing number of states pass laws offering a form of universal private school choice to families – Texas took that step in May, making it the biggest state to do so to date.
The Supreme Court considered a case out of Maryland that pitted a school board against parents. The Montgomery County district refused to give parents the ability to opt their children out of being exposed to books related to gender and sexuality.
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The parents, who are a mix of Jews, Muslims and Christians, want oversight of what their kids – some as young as preschool – are taught at school, especially when it comes to LGBTQ+ topics.
The books in question were acquired by the district several years ago as part of a new “inclusivity” effort. Rather than help kids learn about basic civility, they introduce young children to concepts like gender transitions, preferred pronouns and pride parades.
The concerned parents weren’t trying to get the books banned. They just didn’t want their children exposed to them.
The Supreme Court agreed, ruling 6-3, that the school board’s actions were an unconstitutional affront to the First Amendment.
“The Board’s introduction of the ‘LGBTQ+-inclusive’ storybooks, along with its decision to withhold opt outs, places an unconstitutional burden on the parents’ rights to the free exercise of their religion,” wrote Justice Samuel Alito for the conservative majority.
Supreme Court stands for religious liberty – and parental rights
The main question before the court was whether public schools burden parents’ religious exercise when they “compel elementary school children to participate in instruction on gender and sexuality against their parents’ religious convictions and without notice or opportunity to opt out.”
The majority answered with a resounding “yes.”
The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty represented the parents in the case, and the organization’s lawyers told me ahead of the decision that the First Amendment was at the heart of the lawsuit. Refusing to give parents an opt out is a clear violation of their religious freedom.
As Alito said in the opinion, “The right of parents ‘to direct the religious upbringing of their’ children would be an empty promise if it did not follow those children into the public school classroom.”
Parents are winning outside of court, too
While the court’s ruling is a significant victory for parents and should offer families greater say over what goes on in traditional public schools, parents are on a winning streak outside of court, too.
With Texas now offering a universal private school choice program, thousands of families will be able to choose from schools they previously wouldn’t have been able to afford.
“The Texas win is the biggest day one school choice victory in U.S. history,” Corey DeAngelis, a senior fellow at the American Culture Project and a leading voice on school choice, told me. “The political winds are shifting in favor of parents.”
There are now 17 states that offer robust private school options to all – or nearly all – families. Florida and Tennessee are among them. According to EdChoice, 45% of students nationwide are now eligible to participate in a private school choice program.
That’s a number that would have seemed impossible a few years ago.
President Donald Trump has also made a strong stand for school choice, and Republicans in Congress are working on a generous federal school choice tax credit program. It’s included in the “big, beautiful bill” that has passed the House and is under review in the Senate. As designed, the program could introduce broader school choice to blue states that have resisted it.
The latest Supreme Court victory and the expansion of true school choice will benefit millions of American families. And the government should never stand between parents and their right to determine what’s best for their children.
Ingrid Jacques is a columnist at USA TODAY. Contact her at ijacques@usatoday.com or on X, formerly Twitter: @Ingrid_Jacques