New Survey Finds Black and Latino Voters Want Politics
Out of the Classroom and Students’ Needs Put First
A new national poll, released in July 2025, from Freedom to Choose Schools (FCS) finds Black and Latino voters dissatisfied with the current direction of public education in America. The poll finds that voters want politics out of the classroom and for the focus to be on prioritizing high-quality school options and leadership that reflects the communities they serve.
“Families are seeking solutions that focus on learning, safety, and accountability. They are tired of the culture wars in the classroom,” said Jay Artis-Wright, Executive Director of Freedom to Choose Schools. “They want high-quality school options, culturally responsive curriculum, and academic programs that prepare their kids for the future, not political interference from either party.”
“There’s a powerful signal in this data,” added Cornell Belcher, President of brilliant corners Research, which conducted the survey. “Black and Latino voters are not buying what either party is selling on education. They’re frustrated by the politics and hungry for solutions that focus on student outcomes, not ideological battles. If you want to earn their trust, start by listening to what actually matters to them, and that’s better teaching, stronger schools, and more opportunity.”
Key Findings
The top concern for voters is political interference in schools.
68%
A full 68% said political interference in schools is a bigger threat to quality education than funding gaps or teacher shortages.
Black voters in particular are alarmed by efforts to erase Black history.
81%
81% of Black voters rated it a major obstacle to quality education, alongside bans on DEI initiatives.
Most Black and Latino parents feel the system is failing.
25%
Just 25% rated the quality of U.S. public schools as “excellent” or “good,” and more than 70% said their state is not spending enough on education.