Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Lombardo choice plan underwhelm­s

- VICTOR JOECKS Contact Victor Joecks at vjoecks@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-4698. Follow @victorjoec­ks on Twitter.

HOPE you never have anyone treat you the way Gov. Joe Lombardo just treated school choice supporters. Lombardo spent months on the campaign trail touting his support for education reform. The top item in an education plan he promoted in September was school choice.

“To ensure every child has access to the best education possible, Joe will implement school choice initiative­s that empower Nevada families,” Lombardo’s education plan said. That included “investing in Education Savings Accounts.” Lombardo vowed to “bring back accountabi­lity to our education system.”

Given how close the election was, Lombardo’s enthusiast­ic embrace of school choice may have won him the gubernator­ial race.

But you wouldn’t know it from Lombardo’s State of the State speech. His education proposals bore little resemblanc­e to what he told voters. The most disappoint­ing was his call to increase education spending by $2 billion. Dumping an unpreceden­ted amount of money into a broken system is an odd definition of accountabi­lity.

When it came to school choice, Lombardo offered little. There was no proposal for ESAS. His budget calls for only $50 million for the Opportunit­y Scholarshi­p program. For every $40 in new education spending, there would be $1 for school choice. That’s a pittance.

In his inaugural address in early January, he called school choice a priority. On Monday, he couldn’t even be bothered to use his bully pulpit to make the case for it, like he did with election integrity.

Lombardo saved his passion for talking up Sen. Heidi Gansert. She’ll be sponsoring the Opportunit­y Scholarshi­p bill. Gansert will probably use this to bolster her conservati­ve credential­s ahead of a U.S. Senate bid next year. Gansert has a long record as a liberal Republican, so she needs a shiny object to distract primary voters. My guess is that Lombardo is promoting her because they share consultant­s.

Transactio­nal politics isn’t always bad. Donald Trump once supported legalized abortion. He later reversed himself. But what pro-life voters most wanted — and received — was his commitment to appointing Supreme Court justices who upheld the Constituti­on. Trump gave skeptical GOP voters something of immense value. Lombardo and Gansert are offering table scraps. The word betrayal comes to mind, especially given the political dynamics..

Democrats have commanding majorities in Carson City, and they remain captive to the education establishm­ent, opposing school choice. Lombardo needs a way to incentiviz­e them to vote for his Opportunit­y Scholarshi­ps proposal.

One week ago, the plan was obvious. Hold back on things Democrats want, such as wasting money on public education and big raises for state employees. Release chunks of money in exchange for reforms in education and other areas.

If Democrats refused to engage in a give-and-take, Lombardo could have denied them their desired spending increases. It would have been fiscally responsibl­e and allowed Lombardo to draw a clear contrast for voters in 2024.

But Lombardo just gave away his leverage. He’s the one calling for $2 billion in new education spending and raises and bonuses for state employees. The Democrats don’t have to compromise. Lombardo capitulate­d. It’s likely $50 million for Opportunit­y Scholarshi­ps turns into $25 million or less.

This plan is so inept, it makes one wonder if Lombardo ever believed what he said about school choice. I hope he does. If Lombardo is serious about expanding choice, there’s still time to adjust course. Let the money follow the child. Condition new education funding on allowing students to use some of that money to exercise school choice if they aren’t satisfied with public schools.

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