A tale of two bills
No matter their zip code, their religion, or their race, what most Illinois families want is a well-resourced public school right where they live and play, a school where every child is welcome and has the freedom to learn and grow. As an advocacy organization, we support bills that get us closer to that vision, and oppose bills that push that vision even further out of reach.
Read moreAre vouchers on your primary ballot?
Read on for news on primary ballot questions about the federal voucher program, dozens of advocacy groups calling on Gov. Pritzker to refuse vouchers for Illinois, and the latest on federal funding with public schools under siege due to federal immigration agents...
Read moreVote NO on Vouchers
A stealth referendum question about vouchers may be on your ballot on March 17th! Here's what to know:
Illinois law enables voters or lawmakers to add up to three non-binding questions (per political subdivision, e.g. county) on election ballots to be voted for or against. These are also known as advisory referenda or ballot measures.
On March 17th, about 10% of Illinois voters will have a non-binding question on their primary ballot about whether Illinois should opt into the federal voucher program. You can check on this list to see if your county (or, in a few cases, your township) will have the ballot question.
Concerningly, the question is misleadingly worded (see details below). It implies that the program will not redirect public dollars to fund private schools and does not include the word voucher.
We urge all voters to vote NO on the question about the federal voucher program.
Share this fact sheet on the referenda.
Based on this news story, it looks like these stealth voucher ballot questions were coordinated by the Illinois Policy Institute, an ultra-conservative, anti-public school think tank funded by rightwing billionaires, including Charles Koch and Dick Uihlein. You can read more about IPI here.
The results of these ballot questions have no legal impact; the decision about whether Illinois joins the federal voucher program is up to Governor Pritzker and the General Assembly.
However, IPI and other voucher supporters are likely to use any favorable results as an indicator of public support for vouchers.

Historically, vouchers have lost on the ballot every time voters have been asked to weigh in since 1970, including the 2024 general election, where voters in Kentucky and Nebraska soundly rejected them by about 2:1. Voucher proponents know that vouchers aren’t popular with voters, which explains the deceptive wording on this latest question, describing the program as a federal program that distributes private dollars:
| Should Illinois opt into a federal program that would provide public K-12, private school, and homeschool students with privately donated funds for academic needs, such as tutoring and test preparation, educational therapies for students with disabilities, tuition, books, exam fees or for other specified academic needs?” |
Voters reading their ballot carefully may ask: why would you need a federal program to distribute private money? The answer is that the federal voucher program spends public dollars. It will divert billions of tax dollars from the US Treasury to fund mostly private education around the country. There is no limit on the size of the program in the statute, but estimates are upwards of $25 billion a year.
Because each of these advisory questions were approved by different jurisdictions, the wording may vary! Here's the wording on the Grundy County ballot for example:

More about the federal voucher program
The federal voucher program, set to begin in January 2027, is structured as a tax credit scholarship program, like Illinois’ now-defunct voucher program, known as “Invest in Kids.” Tax credit scholarship vouchers let taxpayers divert some portion of the taxes they owe to third-party “scholarship granting organizations” (SGOs).
These SGOs then distribute the money as vouchers to pay for private school tuition and fees, mostly at religious schools.
Regulations to implement the program are not yet finalized, but all indications thus far are that the SGO industry will be dominated by large multi-state organizations (e.g. a Florida SGO with ~$1B in revenue last year), with assistance from Betsy DeVos’ American Federation for Children, which has already seeded a $10 million fund for AFC to promote SGOs that align with it, in addition to creating its own SGO.
The money given to SGOs would otherwise be collected as tax payments, and courts have ruled that legally these are public funds.
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“There is nothing ‘private’ or ‘charitable’ about the funding of the AGOs [scholarship granting organizations], and this funding mechanism is not a ‘donation’ in any meaningful sense of that word that connotes a voluntary contribution of personal or business income. These taxpayers are not donating their own money to AGOs; they are taking the money they owe to the state in income taxes, and re-directing it to the AGOs, as authorized by this legislation.” |
Voucher programs were created to fund private schools with tax dollars , and the federal one is likely to be no different—despite the fact that in theory some dollars could go to SGOs that distribute money for individual public school families’ expenses. The overall drain on public school budgets if even a small percentage of students leave for private schools will be in the hundreds of millions of dollars, far outweighing any revenue from SGOs to public school students.
Opting into the federal voucher program will undoubtedly and irreversibly erode Illinois' public school funding—which is why we urge all voters to vote NO on this ballot question to send a clear message: Illinois says NO to vouchers.
More resources
- “What to know about the new federal school voucher program” - IL-FPS's FAQ
- "The Federal Tax Credit Voucher Program: A Landscape of Risks for Public Schools and Students" - National Coalition for Public Education
- "The Federal Tax Credit Program is Not Offering Free Money for States" - National Coalition for Public Education
- "Vouchers hurt equity": Illinois had a voucher program in the form of a tax credit scholarship from 2018-2024. This 1-pager summarizes IL-FPS' research on how the program funded discrimination, not equity. More background on Illinois' voucher program here.
What's new in 2026 for vouchers and funding
It's a new year on the calendar, but the fights to defend and improve our public schools continue. Read on for the latest news on the looming threat of the new federal voucher program and a potentially positive development for state school funding in Illinois...and action steps to take on both these issues.
Read moreIL-FPS comment on new federal voucher program
The US Treasury Department and the IRS are now writing the regulations to implement the new federal voucher program and issued a request for comments from the public in November. Below you can read the comment that Illinois Families for Public Schools submitted.
Read moreMore concerns emerge about fed voucher program; plus, an illegal EO on AI
Strong public schools that welcome and nurture every child benefit all of us. But, as you know, since January, the Trump administration has been engaged in a massive campaign to destroy our public school system, in line with a larger agenda of undermining the public good and the foundations of a democratic society, including the establishment of a brand new federal voucher program.
Read moreNo federal vouchers for Illinois
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About 10% of IL voters will have a non-binding referendum question on their March 17th ballot about the federal voucher program. IL-FPS urges voters to VOTE NO ON VOUCHERS. |
Strong public schools that welcome and nurture every child and young person benefit all of us. But, the Trump administration is engaged in an effort to undermine and ultimately dismantle our public school system—in line with their larger agenda of undermining the public good and the foundations of a democratic society.
The attacks on public schools include attempts to shut down the US Department of Education and withholding and cutting federal education funding. One tool: expanding school voucher programs across the country.
Congress approved Trump’s plan to create a new, unprecedented national voucher program in July 2025. You can read our Q&A about it here: “What to know about the new federal school voucher program”

As it stands, every state has the option of saying NO to this program. Governors can refuse to have their state participate in conjunction with any laws passed by their legislature regulating that participation. In January more than 45 organizations wrote to Gov. Pritzker urging him to opt out of the program. You can read that letter here.
Take Action
- Write to Governor Pritzker and your state senator and state representative urging them to say NO to the federal voucher program for Illinois. Use our letter-writing tool to send those emails.
- Call Governor Pritzker's Springfield or Chicago offices. Here's a quick script you can use or adapt:
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"I'm a constituent and a supporter of public schools, and I'm asking Governor Pritzker to make a public commitment that Illinois will NOT participate in the federal voucher program. Vouchers divert public dollars to private schools. We've seen vouchers before in Illinois, and they fund discrimination and hurt education equity. Illinois should fully fund its public schools, and not sign up for some financial gimmickry from the Trump administration that's just a facade to cover up using vouchers to dismantle public schools." |
- Call your state senator and state rep to pass legislation to keep federal vouchers out of Illinois. There are two bills currently in the Illinois Senate with Democratic sponsors, one would opt Illinois into the program, the other would prohibit Illinois from participating. More on those bills here. Here is a fact sheet to share with your legislators: No federal vouchers for Illinois!
Action Alert: Stop vouchers from returning to Illinois!
Strong public schools that welcome and nurture every child and young person benefit all of us. And—because of that—public schools are one of the foundational institutions in our country that Trump and his anti-democratic lackeys are trying to destroy.
One method of destruction that Congress voted last month to roll out is a nationwide school voucher program.
Read more