Outside of the court, a throng of school choice supporters gathered to support St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual School in Oklahoma, which is aiming to provide a publicly-funded Catholic education for families across the state who want more educational options.
“We are in a national crisis when it comes to our literacy rates, our math rates, and we need more free market competition in the school choice movement across the board, so we shouldn’t be excluding high-quality options simply because of their religious affiliation,” America First Policy Institute Education Chair Erika Donalds told The Lion in an interview outside of the Supreme Court. “I think the people have spoken, and we want more options.”