Court allows Louisiana law requiring Ten Commandments in schools to take effect

Court allows Louisiana law requiring Ten Commandments in schools to take effect

By Nate Raymond

Reuters

Feb 20 (Reuters) - A federal appeals court on Friday cleared the way for a Louisiana law requiring the display of the Ten Commandments in all classrooms of the state's public schools and universities ‌to take effect.

The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans on a 11-7 vote overturned a judge's ‌ruling declaring the state's law was unconstitutional, saying the law needed to be assessed based on how local school boards ultimately would implement it.

The ruling marked ​a setback for parents who had sued over the Republican-led state's enactment of the law, which they argued trampled on their religious rights under the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment. Their lawyers had no immediate comment.

Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry, a Republican, in 2024 signed into law the measure known as H.B. 71, which required the display of posters or framed versions of the Ten Commandments in K-12 ‌schools and state-funded colleges.

In the Christian and ⁠Jewish faiths, God revealed the Ten Commandments to the Hebrew prophet Moses.

The law made Louisiana the first state to require displays of the Ten Commandments since the U.S. Supreme Court struck down a ⁠similar Kentucky law in 1980. Arkansas and Texas passed their own laws in 2025 requiring similar displays, prompting litigation and rulings blocking those laws.

A trial court judge blocked the law in November 2024, and a three-judge 5th Circuit panel upheld that ruling in October. But the ​full ​appeals court subsequently voted to hear the case, leading to Friday's decision.

In ​an unsigned opinion, the 5th Circuit's majority said ‌because the law gave school boards discretion on how to implement the law, it could not be deemed unconstitutional in all applications and that context would matter.

"We do not know, for example, how prominently the displays will appear, what other materials might accompany them, or how—if at all—teachers will reference them during instruction," the majority said. "More fundamentally, we do not even know the full content of the displays themselves."

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The court's majority, all appointees of Republican presidents, called their ruling narrow, saying nothing prevented future challenges ‌to the law based on how it is applied once it had ​been implemented.

U.S. Circuit Judge James Dennis, in a dissenting opinion joined by ​five fellow appointees of Democratic presidents, called the majority's ​ruling a "calculated stratagem" to evade Supreme Court precedents.

"By placing that text on permanent display in public school ‌classrooms, not in a way that is curricular or ​pedagogical, the State elevates words ​meant for devotion into objects of reverence, exposing children to government‑endorsed religion in a setting of compulsory attendance," Dennis wrote.

The case is Roake et al v Brumley et al, 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, No. 24-30706.

For the plaintiffs: ​Jonathan Youngwood of Simpson Thacher & Bartlett

For the ‌state: J. Benjamin Aguinaga of the Louisiana Department of Justice

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Louisiana requires display of Ten Commandments in ​all classrooms

(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi)

 

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