Alabama voters don’t always agree — but on public education, the message is clear: parents want more options, and they support public charter schools as part of a strong public education system.
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A new statewide poll of registered voters shows that support for public charter schools outpaces opposition by more than 30 points across Alabama.
That support spans race, geography and political affiliation, including strong backing from Black voters, Independents, Republicans, parents and voters in Alabama’s largest media markets. Even among Democrats, support exceeds opposition — underscoring that charter schools are not a partisan issue, but a parent-driven one.
Public charter schools are tuition-free public schools. They are held to the same academic standards as traditional public schools but are given flexibility to innovate, focus on community needs and respond to families. Voters understand this distinction — and the data reflects it.
Parental choice
Perhaps the strongest point of agreement is parental choice. Two-thirds of Alabama voters believe parents should have the right to choose where their child attends school, even if families cannot afford private education. That agreement holds across Republicans, Democrats and Independents alike — a rare point of bipartisan consensus in today’s political climate.
Voters also agree on a simple matter of fairness: if charter schools are public schools — and they are — then education funding should follow students to the public school they attend. Nearly two-thirds of voters support this idea statewide, with particularly strong agreement among parents, women under 55 and voters in Birmingham and Mobile, where the most charter schools exist.
Yet access to charter schools remains limited. Although Alabama has more than 700,000 public school students, only about 9,000 currently have access to a public charter school. And approximately 2,000 are on waitlists to get in to a public charter school. At the same time, a majority of parents say they would consider sending their child to a charter school if one were available in their community.
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EDITOR’S NOTE — This story was written by Tyler Barnett and originally published by Alabama Daily News.




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