AUSTIN, Texas — Democratic presidential candidate Julián Castro on Monday unveiled an education plan that joins other 2020 candidates in calling for tuition-free higher education, universal prekindergarten and raising teacher pay.
The rollout follows the former Obama Cabinet member’s immigration plan that was more detailed than many of his rivals in the sprawling Democratic field. This time, Castro is getting behind education reforms that other candidates have also embraced ahead of the first debates in June that he believes will offer his slow-building campaign a new chance to stand out.
Expanding prekindergarten was arguably Castro’s signature mark during his five years as mayor of San Antonio, where he convinced voters to fund early education programs through part of the city’s sales tax. It was not the universal prekindergarten that Castro is now proposing for children as young as three.
Castro has also come around to eliminating tuition at public colleges. He had previously stopped short of championing the idea during his campaign launch in January, instead proposing to make the first two years of college “affordable” and accessible.