Gov. Andy Beshear (D-KY) launched a new universal pre-K program on Thursday over the objections of Kentucky’s Republican supermajority legislature, escalating a long-running battle over early childhood education in the state.
The move comes as Beshear enters the final stretch of his last term as governor and continues to fuel speculation about a possible future presidential run.
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Universal pre-K has been a major point of contention between Beshear and GOP lawmakers, who have repeatedly opposed broad statewide expansion efforts while backing narrower childcare and early education pilot programs instead.
“Kentucky’s economic success starts with the education and care of our children, which is why I am so proud today that we’re expanding access for 700 kids and their families across our commonwealth,” Beshear said. “In just one day, we created more childcare capacity than the legislature did this entire session – and this is progress we intend to build on, because we know our families and businesses need it.”
Beshear criticized Republican lawmakers for refusing to fund a broader universal pre-K initiative during the legislative session, framing the issue as both an economic and educational necessity.
“Unfortunately, the Republican supermajority refused to fund Pre-K for All this session, turning a no-brainer into a partisan issue,” Beshear said. “We will not accept that outcome, because Kentucky’s kids deserve better.”
Because the program was created through executive action rather than legislation, it will be financed using economic development funds redirected from underperforming workforce programs, a funding mechanism that immediately drew criticism from top Republicans in the state.
Republican state Senate President Robert Stivers questioned whether the administration was improperly reallocating taxpayer dollars and called for more transparency about the funding structure.
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“These are not political questions,” Stivers said. “They are fundamental questions of governance and budgeting. When taxpayer dollars are repurposed, Kentuckians are owed a clear accounting of where those dollars are coming from, what tradeoffs may follow and how those decisions are being made. That level of transparency is essential to maintaining public trust.”
The program announcement comes as Beshear continues to float a 2028 presidential run. In an interview with MS NOW, the Kentucky governor said he was “comfortable” being factored in as a possible 2028 presidential candidate, adding that he has not made any final decisions.
