“We’re going to start by investing in Virginia classrooms,” he said. “Education is the key to opportunity, the means by which all children and their parents can realize their greatest dreams.”
He asked for $150 million to form 20 new charter schools, and proposed the creation of lab schools that would partner with Virginia’s universities.
And while Republican governors in other states have angered voters by slashing funding for education, Youngkin said he wanted to sign a budget with bipartisan buy-in that sets a “record investment in education including a significant boost in teacher pay.”
Democrats: No, thanks
The response among Democrats has been a combination of skepticism and outrage.
L. Louise Lucas, the president pro tempore of the State Senate, criticized Republicans for promoting “bad legislation” in a video celebrated by many on the left.
“We have a couple other bills here that we really don’t like,” she said, crumpling up a piece of paper. “And this is what we intend to do with them — put them in the trash can.”
Schuyler VanValkenburg, a teacher and state delegate, called Youngkin’s push for privatization and charter schools a “standard, conservative right-wing educational policy.”
And though he thought he could find common ground with Youngkin on issues like prioritizing in-person learning and raising academic standards, “the executive orders kind of undercut those claims to both of those things,” he said.