Vouchers:
Another Name for Welfare
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
By
now, I’ve received a dozen or so press releases from editorialists
and institutions proclaiming the Supreme Court decision "Zelman,
Superintendent of Public Instruction of Ohio, et al. v. Simmons-Harris
et al." (argued Feb. 20, 2002-June 27, 2002) as the greatest
step toward liberty in our time. Oh sure.
From
reading these breathless tracts, you’d think that the very same
Supreme Court that has blessed and even dictated 50 years of catastrophic
political centralization in American public education has suddenly
been converted to libertarianism, and is fighting for the property
rights of parents, and their right to educate their children in
freedom.
Well,
no surprise, that would be a wrong conclusion. What the court approved
was an aspect of Ohio’s Pilot Project Scholarship Program that allows
kids receiving vouchers for elementary education to use them at
schools with a religious affiliation and/or ownership. The majority
of the Court said that because the parents, and not the government,
decide how and where the voucher is spent, this is not a violation
of the first amendment separation of church and state.
Well,
of course it is not a violation of the first amendment! In the original
Constitution, the Bill of Rights restricted only the activities
of the central government. It was supposed to prevent it from compromising
the federal nature of the American system, which left the states
free to govern themselves.
But
in the interim, in an Orwellian turn, the Supreme Court has flipped
this system on its head, controlling the states in the name of the
Bill of Rights (as if the 14th amendment miraculously
incorporated the first ten amendments), thus requiring the same
consolidation that the Bill of Rights sought to prevent.
In
the original constitutional structure, the Supreme Court had no
jurisdiction over Ohio’s educational programs. In general, the states
learned in the 19th century that it was a very bad idea
to subsidize religious schools because it only increased public
hatred for the religion being helped. But a state’s right to do
so was never in question. Today, however, the Supreme Court can
determine any aspect of state-level educational policy.
To
be sure, Zelman was not decided on federalist grounds. Indeed, there
is no mention of the enumerated powers and 10th amendment.
The Court cites the "valid secular purpose of providing educational
assistance to poor children in a demonstrably failing public school
system." And that little sentence begins to point us toward
the truth about the program, which isn’t about freedom but merely
an extension of welfare rights.
The
Cleveland program is means-tested, paid for by the rich as a benefit
to the poor. As the Court says, "Tuition aid is distributed to parents
according to financial need…. The only preference in the program
is for low-income families, who receive greater assistance and have
priority for admission."
In
other words, the people who do not pay the bulk of the taxes
most Ohio schools are funded largely via property taxes are
getting the bulk of the benefits, while those who do pay the taxes
are ineligible for the benefits. If the middle and upper-middle
class want to send their children to private schools, they must
shell out twice: once for public schools for everyone else and once
again for the schools they actually use. Meanwhile, the poor are
not only not paying into the public-school system, but now
receive a direct cash transfer from those who do pay into the system.
In other words, it’s welfare.
The
Ohio legislation, passed in 1995, has the government pay $2,250
in tuition for a "low-income student" (as defined by the
social welfare bureaucracy) who enrolls in a private school. The
participating school agrees to allow the state to control its tuition
and also agrees to surrender control over admission requirements:
crucially, the religious school may not discriminate on grounds
of religion, according to the Ohio statute, and that includes in
the hiring of teachers and principals.
Not
that the participating schools object. Catholic schools in this
country, and many mainline evangelical schools, long ago gave up
their doctrinal identities as the core of the mission. The schools
that have accepted the vouchers admit they have been transformed,
as these
interviews reveal. An example from the principal of St. Mary’s
elementary: "Before vouchers, we were a parish school. We catered
to the kids in our parish. Now, we are really a community school.
We serve a lot of kids from the area."
Indeed!
Sloshing around public money can bring that about. As Justice Souter
pointed out in his
dissent:
a
separate condition that "[t]he school … not … teach hatred
of any person or group on the basis of…religion,"…could
be understood (or subsequently broadened) to prohibit religions
from teaching traditionally legitimate articles of faith as
to the error, sinfulness, or ignorance of others, if
they want government money for their schools.… For perspective
on this foot-in-the-door of religious regulation, it is well
to remember that the money has barely begun to flow. Prior examples
of aid, whether grants through individuals or in-kind assistance,
were never significant enough to alter the basic fiscal structure
of religious schools; state aid was welcome, but not indispensable.…
But given the figures already involved here, there is no question
that religious schools in Ohio are on the way to becoming bigger
businesses with budgets enhanced to fit their new stream of
tax-raised income….When government aid goes up, so does reliance
on it; the only thing likely to go down is independence. If
Justice Douglas in Allen was concerned with state agencies,
influenced by powerful religious groups, choosing the textbooks
that parochial schools would use, 392 U.S., at 265 (dissenting
opinion), how much more is there reason to wonder when dependence
will become great enough to give the State of Ohio an effective
veto over basic decisions on the content of curriculums? A day
will come when religious schools will learn what political leverage
can do, just as Ohio’s politicians are now getting a lesson
in the leverage exercised by religion.
So
here is the essence of the program approved by the Supreme Court.
It takes taxes paid by the earning classes to give to poor parents
who enjoy an exclusive right to leave public schools they weren’t
paying for anyway to attend private schools which now accept controls
over admissions and tuition and curriculum (becoming public schools,
in effect).
The
only mystery is why libertarians are celebrating, when they should
be pointing to the wisdom in Souter’s dissent. This correct position
for a libertarian is clear: 1. Deregulate schooling and permit every
kind and variety, without compulsory attendance laws; 2. Reduce
or eliminate taxes that fund schools; 3. Remove your children from
the public schools, the sooner the better, but do it at your own
expense. Vouchers do none of the above.
July
2, 2002
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send
him mail], is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, and editor of LewRockwell.com.
Copyright
© 2002 LewRockwell.com
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