Thursday, November 20, 2025

Trump's Executive Order on American History Does Not Infringe Plaintiff's Free Exercise Rights

In Jeanpierre v. Trump, (D UT, November 18, 2025), a Utah federal district court dismissed a suit by the founder of a religious organization called the Black Flag challenging President Trump's Executive Order titled "Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History." The court said in part:

According to Mr. Jeanpierre, this executive order “effectively establishes a state-sponsored religious doctrine of American historical exceptionalism” and, as a result, is “a direct attack on the foundational tenets of [his] sincerely held religious beliefs.”  He alleges the order prevents Mr. Jeanpierre “from exercising his religious autonomy to perceive and interpret history according to his religious conscience.”...

Mr. Jeanpierre fails to assert facts showing the executive order substantially burdens his exercise of religion.  He alleges the order “imposes a sanitized historical narrative” that prohibits “depicting American history as ‘inherently racist, sexist, oppressive, or otherwise irredeemably flawed.’”  And he broadly alleges this prevents him “from exercising his religious autonomy to perceive and interpret history,” impedes his religious practice of identifying and confronting “historical realities” and “acknowledging and addressing systemic racism,” forces him to comply with an incorrect historical narrative, compels him “to violate his religious tenants regarding autonomy, truth-telling, and confrontation of systemic inequity,” and forces him “to choose between adherence to his religious principles and compliance with federal law.” 

But the executive order ...  does not demand any conduct from Mr. Jeanpierre or impose any consequence for his religious beliefs.  It orders federal agencies to remove race-centered ideology from the Smithsonian Institution and to restore public monuments, according to President Trump’s historical narrative that the country’s achievements, principles, and milestones are being undermined and cast in a negative light.  Mr. Jeanpierre does not assert he was made to alter his religious behavior in some way because of this order.  He does not even allege he visited the Smithsonian or any other monument affected by the order.  And, even if he has, the order demands nothing from him.

UK Supreme Court Faults Type of Religious Education Offered by Northern Ireland Primary School

The United Kingdom Supreme Court yesterday in In the matter of an application by JR87 and another for Judicial Review, (UK SC, Nov. 19, 2025), held that the Christian religious education and collective worship as practiced in a Northern Ireland primary school violates Article 2 of the First Protocol to the European Convention on Human Rights read in connection with Article 9 of the Convention.  Article 2 reads:

No person shall be denied the right to education. In the exercise of any functions which it assumes in relation to education and to teaching, the State shall respect the right of parents to ensure such education and teaching in conformity with their own religious and philosophical convictions.

According to the court:

20.  JR87’s parents are not Christians and do not profess any other religious beliefs. They are “broadly speaking” humanist in their outlook.  

21. ... They do not wish her to be raised as a Christian. They object to her being taught at the School to assume that Christianity is an absolute truth. Their concerns as to religious education and collective worship at the School are heightened given that she is being taught at an age prior to the development of her critical faculties. Rather, JR87’s parents wish to raise her to be caring, ethical, and respectful towards all people, whatever their religious beliefs or otherwise....

32... They were concerned that by the time JR87 had commenced P2 she had absorbed and adopted a religious (specifically Christian) worldview which was not consistent with their own views and beliefs. By way of illustration G [the girl's father] states that, in the absence of any religious exposure at home, his daughter now believes that God made the world, and she repeats and practices a prayer/grace that she was taught at school at snack-time. His concern is that his daughter is learning Christianity and not learning “about” Christianity in a school context that effectively assumes its absolute truth and which encourages her to do the same. 

The court held that the parents' right to withdraw their child from religious education and collective worship is not a sufficient remedy because it risks stigmatizing the child and the parents and exposing the parents' non-religious beliefs to the school and the wider school community.

The Court also issued a press summary of the decision.

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Texas Governor Declares CAIR Foreign Terrorist and Transnational Criminal Organization

Texas Governor Greg Abbott yesterday issued a Proclamation (full text) designating the Muslim Brotherhood and CAIR as Foreign Terrorist and Transnational Criminal Organizations under Texas law. The Proclamation, after three pages of introductory "Whereas" clauses, reads in part:

I, Greg Abbott ... do hereby:

(1) Designate both the Muslim Brotherhood and its successor organization CAIR as Foreign Terrorist Organizations under Texas Penal Code §71.01(e), and thereby subject those organizations, and any persons promoting or aiding their criminal activities, to the heightened penalties authorized by Chapter 125 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code; and

(2)  Designate both the Muslim Brotherhood and its successor organization CAIR as Transnational Criminal Organizations and proscribed entities under Texas Property Code §5.254(a)(2)(A), and thereby subject those organizations, and their affiliates and members, to Chapter 5 of the Texas Property Code, which prohibits them from purchasing or acquiring land in Texas.

In a press release announcing his action, Governor Abbott said in part:

The Muslim Brotherhood and CAIR have long made their goals clear: to forcibly impose Sharia law and establish Islam’s ‘mastership of the world... The actions taken by the Muslim Brotherhood and CAIR to support terrorism across the globe and subvert our laws through violence, intimidation, and harassment are unacceptable.... These radical extremists are not welcome in our state and are now prohibited from acquiring any real property interest in Texas.

CAIR responded to the Governor's action with a letter (full text) saying in part:

As you know, your proclamation has no basis in law or fact. You do not have the authority to unilaterally declare any Americans or American institutions terrorist groups, nor is there any basis to level this smear against our organization....

CAIR has spent 30 years vocally speaking up against all forms of bigotry, including anti-Black racism, Islamophobia, anti-Palestinian racism and antisemitism, as well as all forms of unjust violence, including hate crimes, ethnic cleansing, genocide and terrorism. ...

Sadly, your office has spent months stoking anti-Muslim hysteria to smear American Muslims critical of the Israeli government. By defaming another prominent American Muslim institution with debunked conspiracy theories and made-up quotes, you have once again shown that your top priority is advancing anti-Muslim bigotry, not serving the people of Texas. 

Unlike your office, which has unleashed violence against Texas students protesting the Gaza genocide to satisfy your AIPAC donors, our civil rights organization answers to the American people, relies on support from the American people, and stands up for American values.

We have successfully sued you three different times for shredding the First Amendment for the benefit of the Israeli government, and we are ready to do so again if you attempt to turn this publicity stunt into actual policy.

Axios reports on these developments.

Award of Attorney's Fees Not Barred by Church Autonomy Doctrine

In Coronado-Arrascue v. Roman Catholic Diocese of Colorado Springs, (CO App., Nov. 13, 2025), a Colorado state appellate court held that the dismissal on church autonomy grounds of a priest's defamation suit against his former diocese does not preclude the award of attorney's fees by the court to the Diocese. The court said in part:

[Plaintiff] contends that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to enter the award.  In support of this contention, he reasons that because the court determined that the church autonomy doctrine divested it of subject matter jurisdiction to consider the substance of his claims, it follows that the church autonomy doctrine also divested the court of subject matter jurisdiction to consider the Diocese’s request for an award of fees and costs.  Second, Coronado-Arrascue contends that resolving the Diocese’s request for fees and costs would require the court to become “excessively entangled” with religion in violation of the church autonomy doctrine.  We reject both contentions....

... [T]he unambiguous language of section 13-17-201 and section 13-16-113(2) provides that an award of fees and costs is mandatory regardless of whether a complaint was dismissed for failure to state a claim or for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.  ...

 So, regardless of the court’s decision on the merits of Coronado-Arrascue’s claims, its assessment of whether there was a basis to award the Diocese its fees and costs was a separate determination.

... [I]t wasn’t necessary, as Coronado-Arrascue claims, for the court to “probe internal ecclesiastical matters” to determine whether there was a basis to award fees and costs.  Rather, the court was only required to examine the face of his complaint to determine whether the substance of Coronado-Arrascue’s claims were pleaded in tort.

[Thanks to John Melcon for the lead.]

Court Enjoins School Districts from Complying with Texas Mandate to Post 10 Commandments in Classrooms

In Cribbs Ringer v. Comal Independent School District, (WD TX, Nov. 18, 2025), a Texas federal district court issued a preliminary injunction barring 14 Texas school districts from complying with SB 10, a recent Texas statute requiring the posting of the Ten Commandments in every public-school classroom. The court concluded that the case is factually indistinguishable from the U.S. Supreme Court's 1980 decision in Stone v. Graham. The court held that the Supreme Court's later decision in Kennedy v. Bremerton School District abandoned the Lemon test in Establishment Clause cases, the Supreme Court "gave no indication it was abrogating or overruling any of its public school cases." The court said in part:

Even if Kennedy undermined Stone to some extent, it would still control this case. Lower courts must apply controlling Supreme Court precedent even when it appears to rest on "reasons rejected in some other line of decisions."

Eleven other Texas school districts were previously enjoined from complying with SB 10. (See prior posting.) 

ACLU issued a press release announcing yesterday's decision.

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Texas AG Sues Challenging Exclusion of Sectarian Employment from Work-Study and Similar State Programs

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton last week filed suit in a Texas state trial court against the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board and its Board members claiming that conditions imposed in the state's work-study program, its WORKS internship program for college students, and its Adult Career Education grant program for non-profit institutions cooperating with educational institutions in job training violate the 1st Amendment's Free Exercise clause. The complaint (full text) in Paxton v. Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, (TX Dist. Ct., filed 11/12/2025), alleges in part:

To participate in the Work-Study Program, however, an eligible institution or other employer must provide employment to an eligible student “in nonpartisan and nonsectarian activities.”... These requirements effectively eliminate religious organizations with only sectarian employment opportunities from participating in the Work-Study Program and condition the receipt of State funds on nonsectarian use. The Work-Study Program also excludes students “enrolled in a seminary or other program leading to ordination or licensure to preach for a religious sect or to be a member of a religious order” from participating and receiving state funds.... This amounts to a wholesale exclusion of certain people—no matter how needy—from state benefits under the program based solely on the religious character of their course of study.,,,

And like the Work-Study Program—to be eligible to participate—employers in the WORKS Program must provide employment in nonsectarian activities to students in the program....

 A rule established by the Board ,,, prohibits organizations receiving ACE Grant Program funds from using the funds for “religious activities, such as sectarian worship, instruction, or proselytization.”...

... When a state program is otherwise generally available, use-based conditions like the Sectarian Exclusions and Use Restriction are impermissible under the First Amendment.... Moreover, such laws targeting religious practice are not facially neutral and are, therefore, subject to strict scrutiny under the First Amendment....

The AG's office issued a press release announcing the filing of the lawsuit. The Black Chronicle reports on the lawsuit.

9th Circuit Remands Discrimination Suit Against Third-Party Health Plan Administrator

In Pritchard v. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois, (9th Cir., Nov. 17, 2025), the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals remanded to the district court a suit contending that Blue Cross, when acting a third-party administrator for a health care plan of a religious organization, is liable under the anti-discrimination provisions of the Affordable Care Act for enforcing the employer's  religious-based exclusion of coverage for gender dysphoria. The court held that ERISA does not require plan administrators to administer terms of the plan that are illegal. It also held that Blue Cross cannot not invoke RFRA as a defense because neither its religious exercise, nor that of its employees, officers or shareholders are impacted by its paying for treatment for gender dysphoria. Also, it held that RFRA does not apply to suits in which the government is not a party. However, the court remanded the case so that the district court could reconsider whether the policy exclusions discriminate on the basis of sex in light of the Supreme Court's recent decision in United States v. Skrmetti.

Judge Rawlinson filed a concurring opinion saying in part:

... I part company with the majority’s analysis that goes beyond a discussion of the Supreme Court’s holding in Skrmetti and a remand for the district court to apply Skrmetti in the first instance.

Out Smart reports on the decision.

Monday, November 17, 2025

Cert. Denied in Football Pre-Game Public Prayer Controversy

Today the U.S. Supreme Court denied review in Cambridge Christian School, Inc. v. Florida High School Athletic Association, (Docket No. 24-1261, certiorari denied 11/17/2025). (Order List.). In the case, the U.S. 11th Circuit Court of Appeals rejected free speech and free exercise claims by a Christian school that was refused the use of a stadium's public address system for a pre-game prayer at the FHSAA state championship football game in which it was playing. The court held that pre-game PA announcements at state championship games are government speech and government control of its own speech does not violate rights of private individuals. (See prior posting.)

Old Order Amish Practices Do Not Justify Termination of Foster Care Placement

 In In re M.B., (WV Sup. Ct., Nov. 13, 2025), the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals rejected an attempt to remove a two-year old child from his Old Order Amish foster parents who had previously adopted the child's three sisters. The petitioner was a guardian ad litem for the child. The foster parents and the state Department of Human Services opposed the attempt to remove the child. The trial court had denied the motion to remove. According to the state Supreme Court, petitioner contended that the child should be removed from his foster parents' home where he had been since shortly after his birth because the foster parents could never permanently adopt the child. The court said in part:

The petitioner offers several bases for her contention that the foster placement here cannot lead to permanent placement. First, the petitioner contends that the foster parents, being members of an Old Order Amish community, would restrict M.B.’s formal education to grades one through eight and thus deprive him of his constitutional right to a thorough and efficient education. See W. Va. Const. art. XII, § 1.2  The petitioner also argues that remaining with Amish foster parents would not be in M.B.’s best interests because he would not have regular pediatric checkups, would not be vaccinated, would not be exposed to technology, and would not learn to drive. Finally, the petitioner suggests that M.B.’s adoption into the Amish community is problematic, at best, in that the community might not welcome a biracial child....

The respondent, the West Virginia Department of Human Services, and the foster parents, argue that to the contrary, it is in M.B.’s best interests to remain in what all parties acknowledge to be a loving home with the foster parents and his three siblings, who are part of the family unit....

We begin by recognizing that this issue is unique: whereas the relevant precedents guiding our consideration all involve the right of parents to the free exercise of their religion versus the interest of a state in establishing and enforcing educational standards, this case involves the right of a child to receive an education that meets this State’s educational standards....

Here, the constitutional argument in the petitioner’s brief consists of two sentences that could most charitably be deemed conclusory.... We easily conclude that these thirty-six words are insufficient to preserve the complex, many-layered argument that the petitioner attempts to raise: whether high school is a necessary component of a “thorough and efficient” education and, if so, whether a child’s right to that education outweighs the Amish parents’ right to the free exercise of their religious beliefs, which beliefs preclude formal schooling after eight years....

The court then turned to petitioner's claims based on West Virginia's Foster Child Bill of Rights. The court said in part:

The petitioner appears to view each and every provision of the FCBR as mandatory, i.e., one strike and you’re out. However, our precedents make clear that with the exception of subsections (a)(1), (2), and (3), the provisions of the FCBR constitute an interwoven set of factors to be considered and weighed in making a determination of whether a foster child’s placement is in his or her best interests.

Justice Bunn filed a concurring opinion, saying in part:

Armed with little more than a list of ways the Amish lifestyle diverges from the mainstream, the GAL presented the circuit court with no evidence that M.B. is or will be deprived of the nurturing and care to which he is entitled as a foster child.

Justice Trump filed a concurring opinion, saying in part:

I would have addressed the circuit court’s misapplication of Yoder to make absolutely clear that neither the lower courts nor the DHS should ever subordinate the best interests of a foster child to the interests of foster parents—based on the foster parents’ “free exercise rights” or any other factor—in an abuse and neglect proceeding.

Justice Ewing filed a concurring opinion, saying in part:

I write separately to emphasize that the outcome of this appeal turns on the specific circumstances presented; namely, M.B.’s very young age, the strength of the bond he has formed with the foster parents over the course of his young life, and the foster parents’ adoption of M.B.’s three biological siblings.

Senior Status Justice Hutchinson filed a concurring opinion, saying in part:

There was no showing by anyone establishing that it was in M.B.’s best interest to remove him from his foster home....

Recent Articles of Interest

From SSRN:

From SmartCILP:

Sunday, November 16, 2025

Certiorari Filed in Exclusion of Catholic Schools from Colorado's Preschool Program

A petition for certiorari (full text) was filed last week with the U.S. Supreme Court in St. Mary Catholic Parish in Littleton v. Roy, (Sup. Ct. filed 11/13/2025). In the case, the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals held that the nondiscrimination requirements of Colorado's Universal Preschool Program do not violate the free exercise or expressive association rights of Catholic schools that are excluded from the program because they insist on considering the sexual orientation and gender identity of a student and their parents in making decisions on who will be admitted. (See prior posting.) According to the petition for review:

The decision below exacerbates a 7-4 split [among Circuits] over the test for determining whether a law is generally applicable under the Free Exercise Clause.

Becket issued a press release announcing the filing of the petition for Supreme Court review.

Friday, November 14, 2025

New Executive Order on Foster Care System Includes Focus on Religious Concerns

President Trump yesterday issued an Executive Order titled "Fostering the Future for American Children" (full text). The Executive Order is designed to modernize the foster care system and support those transitioning out of the system. The Executive Order. reads in part: 

Sec. 1 ...Some jurisdictions and organizations maintain policies that discourage or prohibit qualified families from serving children in need as foster and adoptive parents because of their sincerely-held religious beliefs or adherence to basic biological truths....

 Sec. 4.  Maximizing Partnerships with Americans of Faith. The Secretary of Health and Human Services, in coordination with the Director of the White House Faith Office and the Director of the White House Office of Intergovernmental Affairs, shall:

     (a)  take appropriate action to address State and local policies and practices that inappropriately prohibit participation in federally-funded child-welfare programs by qualified individuals or organizations based upon their sincerely-held religious beliefs or moral convictions; and

     (b)  take appropriate action to increase partnerships between agencies and faith-based organizations and houses of worship to serve families whose children have been placed in foster care or are at risk of being placed in foster care.

Scripps News reports on the Executive Order.

Thursday, November 13, 2025

Catholic Bishops Issue Special Pastoral Message on Immigration

Yesterday, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, gathered at their Fall Plenary Assembly, issued a Special Pastoral Message on immigration. (Press release and full text). The Special Message-- the first since 2013-- was adopted by the Plenary Assembly by a vote of 216 in favor, 5 opposed, and 3 abstentions. The Special Pastoral Message reads in part:

... We are disturbed when we see among our people a climate of fear and anxiety around questions of profiling and immigration enforcement. We are saddened by the state of contemporary debate and the vilification of immigrants. We are concerned about the conditions in detention centers and the lack of access to pastoral care. We lament that some immigrants in the United States have arbitrarily lost their legal status. We are troubled by threats against the sanctity of houses of worship and the special nature of hospitals and schools. We are grieved when we meet parents who fear being detained when taking their children to school and when we try to console family members who have already been separated from their loved ones....

... We bishops advocate for a meaningful reform of our nation’s immigration laws and procedures. Human dignity and national security are not in conflict. Both are possible if people of good will work together....

... We oppose the indiscriminate mass deportation of people. We pray for an end to dehumanizing rhetoric and violence, whether directed at immigrants or at law enforcement. We pray that the Lord may guide the leaders of our nation, and we are grateful for past and present opportunities to dialogue with public and elected officials....

Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Andrea Lucas Named Chair of EEOC

Last week, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission announced that Andrea R. Lucas has been designated by President Trump as Chair of the Commission. She has been a member of the Commission since 2020. She was confirmed by the Senate in July 2025 to serve a second term on the Commission. She has been serving as Acting Chair of the EEOC since January of this year. (Background.) According to Lucas' biography on the EEOC website:

She prioritizes evenhanded enforcement of civil rights laws for all Americans, including by rooting out unlawful DEI-motivated race and sex discrimination; protecting American workers from anti-American national origin discrimination; defending the biological and binary reality of sex and related rights, including women’s rights to single-sex spaces; protecting workers from religious bias and harassment; and remedying other areas that have been historically under-enforced by the agency.

On Oct. 7, the U.S. Senate confirmed Brittany Panuccio as an EEOC member, restoring sufficient members for a quorum. The EEOC lost its quorum when President Trump removed two Biden-appointed Commissioners in January. (Background.)

The EEOC administers federal laws barring employment discrimination, including discrimination on the basis of religion.

Religious Based Proxy Advisors Challenge New Texas Regulatory Law

Texas S.B.2337 enacted by the Texas legislature earlier this year imposes new disclosure requirements on proxy advisory services that provide advice or research to institutional investors on how to vote on shareholder proposals if the service bases its advice in whole or part on non-financial factors such as environmental and social goals, corporate governance, or diversity, equity or inclusion. Suit was filed this week in a Texas federal district court challenging the law on free speech and vagueness grounds. Two of the plaintiffs have a specific religious focus. A third focuses on sustainability issues.  According to the complaint (full text) in Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility v. Paxton, (WD TX, filed 11/10/2025)

6. Plaintiff Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility (ICCR) is a coalition of investors who believe their faith or their values should—and as fiduciaries must—guide their investing decisions, including their investment stewardship. Plaintiff United Church Funds (UCF) is a faith-based organization that provides investment services to United Church of Christ (UCC) churches and other faith-based nonprofit organizations nationwide.  Plaintiff Ceres is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the notion that accounting for sustainability is a financial imperative for companies.

The complaint goes on to contend: 

7. The State of Texas can disagree with ...  Plaintiffs ICCR’s and UCF’s view that their values and religious beliefs are relevant to investment-related decisions. What it cannot do is compel Plaintiffs to speak in furtherance of Texas’s views about these issues. 

75. ... SB 2337’s stated goal of “prevent[ing] fraudulent or deceptive acts and practices in this state,” S.B. 2337 § 1(4), is mere pretext for regulating disfavored views, rendering the Act’s stated interest unlikely to be genuine....

80. The Act discriminates based on the content of speech and is not narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest and thus violates the First Amendment.  

81. Because it subjects only certain speech with a certain viewpoint to rigorous regulation, SB 2337 discriminates based on viewpoint, in violation of the First Amendment. Worse, it compels private speakers to adopt and parrot the government’s viewpoint on hotly contested topics and to align with management views.

Baptist News Global reports on the lawsuit.

Tuesday, November 11, 2025

Texas AG Sues School District to Require Posting of 10 Commandments

Last week, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed suit in a Texas state trial court against the Galveston School District and its board members seeking to order them to display copies of the Ten Commandments in every classroom as mandated by Texas law. The complaint (full text) in State of Texas v. Galveston Independent School District, (TX Dist. Ct. filed 11/7/2025) reads in part:

Defendants are openly violating the law in Texas. In order to prevent irreparable harm to the State of Texas’s interests and to bring Defendants back into the bounds of the law, the State of Texas requests temporary and permanent injunctive relief from this Court. 

In August 2025, a Texas federal district court enjoined eleven school districts from complying with the Texas statute that requires posting of the Ten Commandments in classrooms. (See prior posting.) The Galveston district is not one of those eleven. Attorney General Paxton has directed school districts that were not defendants in that case to comply with the display requirement. (See prior posting).

Friendly Atheist blog discusses the lawsuit.

Monday, November 10, 2025

Supreme Court Denies Review in Same-Sex Marriage Case

In a closely watched case, the U.S. Supreme Court today denied review in Davis v. Ermold, (Docket No. 25-125, certiorari denied 11/10/2025) (Order List.)  In the case, the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a $100,000 damage award to a same-sex couple who were refused a marriage license by Rowan County, Kentucky Clerk Kim Davis who had religious objections to same-sex marriage. The certiorari petition asked the Court to decide whether she, as a public official, had a First Amendment free exercise defense to a claim for damages for emotional distress stemming from her refusal. More broadly, it asked the Court to overrule Obergefell v. Hodges which gave constitutional protection to same-sex marriage. AP reports on the court's action.

Supreme Court Hears Arguments Today in RLUIPA Damages Case

The Supreme Court hears oral arguments this morning in Landor v. Louisiana Department of Corrections. At issue in the case is whether an action for damages lies under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act in a suit against a prison official in his personal capacity. Plaintiff, a Rastafarian, had his dreadlocks forcibly shaved by prison guards.  The Supreme Court has previously held that a damage action under RFRA can be brought against federal prison personnel, but the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals held that it would violate the Spending Clause to recognize a similar remedy under RLUIPA, which is a statute based on Congress' Spending Clause authority. Oral arguments can be heard live at 10:00 AM at this link. Links to all the briefs and pleadings in the case, as well as related material can be found on the SCOTUS blog case page for the case. A transcript and audio of the full oral arguments will be available later today on the Supreme Court's website here.

UPDATE: Heare are the links to the transcript and recording of oral arguments in the case. And SCOTUSblog has a review of the oral arguments.

6th Circuit En Banc: Banning Student-on-Student Use of Biological Pronouns Violates Free Speech Rights

In Defending Education v. Olentangy Local School District Board of Education, (6th Cir., Nov. 6, 2025), the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals in a 10-7 en banc decision held that the free speech rights of public-school students are infringed when the school prohibits them from calling fellow-students who are transgender by their biological pronouns rather than the pronouns preferred by their fellow students.  A 3-judge panel of the 6th Circuit had reached an opposite conclusion. (See prior posting.) Plaintiff students and parents hold religious beliefs that gender is immutable. Opinions in the en banc case span 112 pages. The en banc court's majority opinion said in part:

A school district may not restrict personal speech on matters of public concern unless the speech would “materially and substantially disrupt” school activities or infringe the legal “rights of others” in the school community.  Tinker v. Des Moines Indep. Cmty. Sch. Dist., 393 U.S. 503, 513 (1969).  In this case’s current posture, the school district has fallen far short of meeting this demanding standard.  It introduced no evidence that the use of biological pronouns would disrupt school functions or qualify as harassment under Ohio law....

 ... [T]he School District has regulated personal expression—the use of biological pronouns to convey a student’s scientific and religious beliefs—that addresses a “sensitive topic of public concern.” ... As part of the broader debate over transgender rights, the question whether speakers should use preferred pronouns to refer to transgender individuals—and whether we should treat the commonplace (and non-antagonistic) use of biological pronouns as proper or offensive—has stirred a “passionate political and social debate” in our society....

... [T] the School District has not just entered this policy debate.  It has taken a side.  The School District has “targeted” a speaker’s use of biological pronouns as improper while allowing students to use preferred pronouns (no matter how novel)....

... The School District is right that schools may bar abusive “invective” that targets “specific” students—whether transgender students, religious students, female students, Hispanic students, or any others.... That is, a school could bar a student from abusively ridiculing a transgender classmate’s “physical characteristics” in the same way it could bar a student from abusively ridiculing a smaller student’s physical characteristics.... But the School District is wrong to treat the use of biological pronouns alone as analogous to this abusive invective.  Defending Education’s members want to use biological pronouns not because they seek to ridicule others but because they want to speak what they view as the truth.... 

Ohio law defines “harassment, intimidation, or bullying” to cover speech directed at another student only if the speech both “[c]auses mental or physical harm to the other student,” and “[i]s sufficiently severe, persistent, or pervasive that it creates an intimidating, threatening, or abusive educational environment for the other student.”  Ohio Rev. Code § 3313.666(A)(2)(a).  And the School District has offered no evidence that the commonplace use of biological pronouns would create an intimidating, threating, or abusive environment....

Judge Batchelder filed a concurring opinion, saying in part:

... [E]ven if the School District were to produce overwhelming evidence of disruption, that evidence would still not justify the compelled-speech or viewpoint-discrimination aspects of its preferred-pronoun policies.

Judge Kethledge filed a concurring opinion, saying in part:

 ... [T]o determine whether the plaintiffs here should prevail on their First Amendment claim, we should begin with the right question:  namely, whether the historic common law would have subjected a student to punishment (as a matter of public law or private) for referring to a classmate with biological pronouns that the classmate had insisted the student not use.  Considering the speech alone, the answer is likely no.  For one thing, as noted above, offense or dignitary harm was not cognizable at law....  And the right to express one’s opinions in good faith would almost certainly protect the speech at issue here....

A final point is hortatory rather than legal.  That the law permits certain action does not mean that an individual should necessarily engage in it....

Judges Thapar and Nalbandian filed a concurring opinion, saying in part:  

In the end, the School District’s policy “mandates orthodoxy, not anti-discrimination,” and fails to recognize that “[t]olerance is a two-way street.”...  The District chose a side in a hotly contested debate and tried to squelch the opposing viewpoint by imposing an ideological speech code.  When it did so, it unlawfully discriminated based on viewpoint.  And while we appreciate the majority’s thoughtful Tinker approach, we worry that students’ rights to speak freely on important matters of public interest should not hang in the balance while district courts perform ad hoc inquiries into how “disrupt[ive]” they find the students’ viewpoint....

Judge Bush filed a concurring opinion, saying in part:

Rather than employ the traditional monsieur (for a man) and madame or mademoiselle (for women) or use longstanding aristocratic titles..., the French revolutionaries replaced those words with the masculine citoyen or feminine citoyenne (both translated as “citizen”) to refer to all men and women, respectively, regardless of station....  

Like the French revolutionaries, communists also sought to revolutionize forms of address for political ends.  Communist regimes strongly encouraged and sometimes mandated use of “comrade” instead of traditionally employed honorifics to refer to another person, just as the French revolutionaries insisted on the use of “citizen.”  That was not surprising.  “[T]he history of authoritarian government . . . shows how relentless authoritarian regimes are in their attempts to stifle free speech . . . .” ...

Governments in the United States—federal or state—never operated that way.  Our Constitution forbids mandatory use of certain titles to refer to others....

American history and tradition uphold the majority’s decision to strike down the school’s pronoun policy.  Over hundreds of years, grammar has developed in America without governmental interference.  Consistent with our historical tradition and our cherished First Amendment, the pronoun debate must be won through individual persuasion, not government coercion.  Our system forbids public schools from becoming “enclaves of totalitarianism.”

Judge Stranch joined by Judges Moore, Clay, Davis, Mathis, Bloomekatz and Ritz, filed a dissenting opinion, saying in part:

In this case, the School District has repeatedly affirmed that the children of Defending Education members will have the right to express beliefs about transgender identities.  Those children will be permitted to express the view that sex is immutable.  But it is not viewpoint discrimination to require those students to share those beliefs in a manner that does not disrupt the education of others....

The District made clear in its Policies that the purpose of the ban on intentional use of non-preferred pronouns is to prevent disruption in the form of trauma to transgender or nonbinary students of a degree likely to hamper those students’ ability to learn.  Evidence of that purpose was before the district court.....

Though the record satisfied Tinker’s requirement that the School District’s forecast be reasonable, the majority opinion concluded otherwise, positing and applying a new approach:  that “the closer the speech resembles political expression at the First Amendment’s core, the more evidence a school must present of the potential disruption or violation of rights.”...

... Existing precedent provides educators—those most attuned to the issues in their schools—with a reasonable level of agency to develop productive, civilized educational settings while protecting both student rights and student safety.

Columbus Dispatch reports on the decision.

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