The U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear a landmark case concerning the establishment of the nation’s first publicly funded religious charter school in Oklahoma. This case raises important questions about the balance between religious freedom and the separation of church and state. Legal experts are analyzing the implications of this case, particularly in the context of recent changes in how the First Amendment is interpreted regarding religious liberty. The current Supreme Court majority has been noted for addressing issues related to school choice and the definition of what constitutes an 'establishment' of religion by the government.
Supreme Court to consider an effort to establish the nation’s first publicly funded religious charter school https://t.co/IVC20TIZlm
Hosts Greg Stohr and Lydia Wheeler chats with Daniel Cotter, a partner at Dickinson Wright about Trumps new executive orders and new cases the Supreme Court tacked on to the term, including one over a taxpayer-funded religious charter school in Oklahoma. https://t.co/j02GIZteix
The current SCOTUS majority has cleared away nonsense in how the First Amendment addresses religious liberty and what counts as the forbidden "establishment" of a government church. A good deal of the action has been in school choice. | @baseballcrank https://t.co/GAIZGzdYmJ