Republican leaders are jumping into the Louisiana school choice debate.
The Louisiana Scholarship Program, created in New Orleans in 2008 and expanded to the entire state in 2012, would provide vouchers to low-income families to help them transfer their children out of failing public schools and into private ones.
But the program came under fire in August when the Justice Department filed a lawsuit to permanently block the state from awarding vouchers to students in public schools that are under federal desegregation orders, arguing that vouchers would disrupt “much of the progress made toward desegregation.” The Justice Department argues that its goal is not to completely shut down the voucher program, but rather to ensure that the voucher program will not impede with the state’s desegregation orders.
Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal defended the voucher program in a recent op-ed for the Washington Post where he accused President Obama of setting “the fight for civil rights back decades” by standing in the way of school choice.
Now he’s getting national support for his cause: on Wednesday, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and South Carolina Senator Tim Scott spoke in protest of the Justice Department’s suit at the National Press Club, echoing Jindal’s criticism of the efforts to block the program.









