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A federal appeals court on Friday blocked Louisiana from enforcing a law requiring the display of the Ten Commandments in all classrooms of the state's public schools and universities.
Louisiana Republican Governor Jeff Landry enacted the classroom display requirement in June 2024, mandating poster-sized presentations of the Ten Commandments across all public-school facilities.
Louisiana has become the first state to require public schools to display the Ten Commandments in every classroom in June 2024, under a new law signed by Republican Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry. A ...
The Louisiana law, signed by Landry in June 2024, requires that the Ten Commandments be displayed in a posted or framed document that is “at least eleven inches by fourteen inches” and ...
The conversation comes after Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry signed a bill into law on Wednesday requiring the Ten Commandments to be on display in every public school classroom in the state ...
The Louisiana Legislature has decreed that, beginning this year, every classroom in every public school must prominently display the Ten Commandments. Republican Gov. Jeff Landry, who triumphantly ...
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit ruled Friday that Louisiana's law to display the Ten Commandments in classrooms is unconstitutional.
AUSTIN, Texas — Texas will require all public school classrooms to display the Ten Commandments under a new law that will make the state the nation's largest to attempt to impose such a mandate.
The Arkansas law is similar to a Louisiana requirement that was signed in June 2024 by Gov. Jeff Landry. The Louisiana law was later blocked by a federal judge who declared it unconstitutional.
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