The Florida Education Association has filed a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the state’s highly-acclaimed school-choice and charter school programs, which provide a quality education for more than 1 million kids.
Legal scholars counter the lawsuit by noting: “The Florida Constitution guarantees a ‘uniform’ system of free public schools, but does not prohibit the Legislature from expanding educational options beyond the traditional public-school model.”
The unions want to abolish the program even though the kids are getting better results than in the public schools. Florida’s public charter sector maintains an aggregate grade of “A,” outperforming traditional public-school counterparts in 55 of 77 metrics.
We guess that the unions define a “uniform education system” as one that is uniformly bad.

