PolitiFact: Abrams’ claim on Evans, vouchers leaves information out

Democratic candidates for governor Stacey Abrams (left) and Stacey Evans (right) with moderator Cathy Cox appear in their first forum since announcing their candidacies on Monday, Oct. 2, 2017, at The Carter Center in Atlanta. Curtis Compton/ccompton@ajc.com

Credit: Curtis Compton

Credit: Curtis Compton

Democratic candidates for governor Stacey Abrams (left) and Stacey Evans (right) with moderator Cathy Cox appear in their first forum since announcing their candidacies on Monday, Oct. 2, 2017, at The Carter Center in Atlanta. Curtis Compton/ccompton@ajc.com

Georgia Democratic gubernatorial front-runners Stacey Abrams and Stacey Evans have both taken a firm stance against privatized public education and especially school vouchers.

But at a recent forum featuring the two candidates, Abrams accused Evans of voting for vouchers when she was a state representative.

“You voted for vouchers. You didn’t vote for it the last two times, but you voted for it in the beginning,” Abrams said on Oct. 2.

Abrams later said she was referring to Evans' involvement with a bill about the Georgia Student Scholarship Organization.

The program began in 2008, three years before Evans was in Georgia’s General Assembly. Back then, the Student Scholarship Organization bill established a program that allows people and businesses to receive tax credits if they make donations to local private schools. The money is used to fund scholarships to qualified, low-income students to attend the private institutions.

Abrams claims that Evans had voted in favor of school vouchers a few years later, when the Legislature made revisions to the program.

Evans did vote for an early version of the 2011 bill, but not for the final version. According to her campaign, she only voted for the measure because it had provisions that improved the program's transparency. When the final bill hit the House floor with its final revisions, the transparency clauses were removed, so Evans voted against the bill.

Evans has also maintained that she has never voted for vouchers because the Student Scholarship Organization is not a voucher program. On June 26, 2017, the Georgia Supreme Court ruled that stated that the scholarship program is not a voucher program, because it is financed by private individuals, not public revenue, a fact Abrams had acknowledged during the debate.

Despite the Supreme Court ruling, the Student Scholarship Organization’s status as a voucher program is still subject to debate. Before the forum, the Evans campaign had already been defending her stance against vouchers, and on Oct. 12 the Abrams campaign shared its opinion on Facebook that the funds in the program are “vouchers by another name.”

Our ruling

Some aspects of Abrams’ statement are wrong. Evans wasn’t in the Legislature in 2008 when the Student Scholarship Organization program was approved. In 2011, Evans voted for revisions to the program, although she voted against the final bill after those revisions were dropped. There’s been a legal dispute over whether the tax credits that fund the Student Scholarship Organization make the program different from school vouchers. In June 2017 Georgia’s Supreme Court ruled that the “voucher” label did not apply.

Abrams' claim had some accurate points, but it left out important details. We rate it Half True.


Says Stacey Evans “voted for (school) vouchers … in the beginning.”

— Stacey Abrams on Monday, Oct. 2, 2017 in a public forum