President Obama’s call for a nationwide universal pre-K program in his State of the Union address this week is “a great idea,” but the government must find a way to pay for the program that would not add to the deficit or force taxpayers to foot the bill, Sen. Johnny Isakson, Republican of Georgia, said in an interview Saturday on Up w/ Chris Hayes.
“The thought that ran through my mind when the president was speaking is, ‘this is a great idea,’ but it is a 6% increase in the number of teachers you have to hire, the number of classrooms you have to build, the amount of money you have to spend,” Isakson said. “We’ve got to find the money to do it.”
Isakson is one of the first Republican lawmakers to react publicly to President Obama’s proposal, one of the biggest and perhaps most surprising elements of his State of the Union address on Tuesday. Iskason is from Georgia, which in 1995 became the first state to offer universal preschool to all of its four-year-olds.
So far, Republican lawmakers have mostly expressed skepticism about the president’s plan. House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said on Wednesday that getting the federal government involved in early childhood education would be a “good way to screw it up.” And Rep. John Kline, Republican of Minnesota and chair of the House Education Committee, released a statement saying, “before we spend more taxpayer dollars on new programs, we must first review what is and is not working in existing initiatives, such as Head Start.”
Isakson seemed somewhat more open to the proposal as long as it could be funded without adding to the deficit or costing taxpayers. He recalled the origins of Georgia’s universal pre-K program in 1994, which was funded by a statewide lottery that required both a state constitutional amendment and ratification by Georgia voters. “We created a dedicated source of funds,” Isakson said,








