14 Years Ago Today, The Giants and Jets Faced Off...and Put One Team...
Four Years Ago, Some Patriot Dropped an Epic Line on a Call With...
DK Metcalf Just Lost a Lot of Money for Punching a Detroit Lion's...
Merry Christmas, Over a Million More Files Potentially Related to the Epstein Case...
Supreme Court Ruled on Trump's Use of National Guard In This Blue State
Christmas Eve With J.R.R. Tolkien
2025 Media Malpractice Recognized With the Heckler Awards Pt. 2 — The Individual...
Bari Weiss Is Everything Today’s Journalists Hate
Another Left-Wing Judge Just Decided He's Got More Authority Than President Trump
Popular Neo-Nazi to Campaign Against Vivek Ramaswamy in Ohio Gubernatorial Race
Stephen Miller Blasts CBS for Sympathizing With Criminal Illegal Immigrants
Federal Judge Blocks California Policy Forcing Schools to Hide Gender Transitions From Par...
98 Minnesota Mayors Warn of Fiscal Fallout After State Spends $18 Billion Surplus
ICE Agents Fired at Incoming Van in Maryland
Federal Judge Rules That Michigan Cannot Disrupt International Line 5 Pipeline
Tipsheet

Obama Signs Education Bill That Actually Hands Power Back To The States

Chalk it up as another (rare) bipartisan success in Washington, D.C. President Obama signed the Every Student Succeeds Act into law Thursday morning, officially replacing its predecessor, the much more controversial No Child Left Behind Act.

Advertisement

The legislation maintains annual testing to identify groups of students who are failing, but empowers states to come up with their own standards and determine how to revamp schools that don’t make the grade. It comes after years of complaints from critics who argued No Child Left Behind spurred excessive testing in public schools and used unrealistic goals to label too many schools as failing.

While Pres. George W. Bush perhaps had good intentions with No Child Left Behind, it soon became a bloated, bureaucratic program. Every Student Succeeds, orchestrated by Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-TN) and Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA), offers states more accountability and less pressure to submit to federal mandates, particularly on how teachers should be evaluated.

Some GOP presidential candidates, however, believe the bill does not go far enough in stripping educational control from the government. While Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) voted yes, Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) voted no and Sens. Marco Rubio (R-FL), Ted Cruz (R-TX) didn’t vote.

Advertisement

Paul explained why he was opposed to the “flawed” legislation on his Senate website:

“I believe education is the great equalizer, but Washington’s intrusion in the classroom leaves most kids behind. This bill is not the solution, as it retains some of No Child Left Behind’s biggest flaws – a lack of adequate parental choice, a federal testing mandate, and continued support for Common Core.”

Yet, at a time when little gets done in Congress thanks to gridlock, a bipartisan bill that focuses on the children is a nice change.

The legislation was so unexpected, Obama heralded it an “early Christmas present.”

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos