(The Wall Street Journal)—Kentucky voters will decide the fate of educational opportunity in their state this November when they vote on Amendment 2, a ballot measure intended to pave the way for school-choice initiatives that would open doors for families. Opponents of Amendment 2 seem to be resorting to illegal tactics to stop it.
Kentucky law broadly prohibits the use of tax dollars “to advocate, in partial terms, for or against any public question that appears on the ballot.” Officials critical of school choice are doing so anyway.
The full op-ed by Corey DeAngelis and Dean McGee is available here at the Wall Street Journal.