HB2532 raises the ceiling on Tennessee’s education freedom scholarships from 25,000 to 40,000 for the 2026–2027 school year and directs the governor to opt the state into a newly created federal education tax credit program (named in the bill as “The One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act”). In practice this means more students become eligible to receive publicly-subsidized scholarships to attend private schools or other nonpublic education providers, and the executive is instructed to accept and comply with whatever federal conditions are attached to participation now and going forward.
From a conservative constitutional and fiscal perspective this is a mixed-but-leaning-negative measure. Expanding the number of scholarships increases the size and reach of a government-subsidized education program (a durable fiscal commitment or revenue diversion), and the command that the governor “comply with any and all requirements” to maintain federal participation hands the executive broad authority to bind the state to federal strings without clear legislative guardrails. While expanded access to private schooling can advance parental choice in theory, the mechanism here increases state involvement in private education and invites federal entanglement and long-term program growth without a sunset or strict legislative oversight.
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