Pride flags are used to celebrate Pride Month at the Stonewall National Monument at Christopher Park adjacent to The Stonewall Inn, in the Greenwich Village section of New York City, New York, U.S., June 23, 2021. (Reuters/Brendan McDermid/File)

- U.S. Supreme Court sides with Christian and Muslim parents who sued to keep elementary school children out of classes with LGBT storybooks.
- In a 6-3 ruling, justices overturn lower court's refusal to require Montgomery County's public schools to an opt-out from the classes.
- The court's conservative justices were in the majority and its liberal justices dissented from the ruling.
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WASHINGTON — The U.S. Supreme Court ruled on Friday in favor of Christian and Muslim parents in Maryland who sued to keep their elementary school children out of certain classes when storybooks with LGBT characters are read in a high-profile case involving the intersection of religion and LGBT rights.
The justices in a 6-3 ruling overturned a lower court’s refusal to require Montgomery County’s public schools to provide an option to opt out of these classes. The lower court had rejected the argument made by a group of parents who sued the school district that its policy prohibiting opt-outs violated the Constitution’s First Amendment protections for the free exercise of religion.
“Today, we hold that the parents have shown that they are entitled to a preliminary injunction. A government burdens the religious exercise of parents when it requires them to submit their children to instruction that poses ‘a very real threat of undermining’ the religious beliefs and practices that the parents wish to instill,” wrote conservative Justice Samuel Alito, who authored the decision.
The court’s conservative justices were in the majority and its liberal justices dissented from the ruling.
Sotomayor Authors Dissenting Opinion
Liberal Justice Sonia Sotomayor said in the dissent that public schools educate children of all religions and backgrounds and help them live in a multicultural American society.
“That experience is critical to our Nation’s civic vitality. Yet it will become a mere memory if children must be insulated from exposure to ideas and concepts that may conflict with their parents’ religious beliefs. Today’s ruling ushers in that new reality,” Sotomayor wrote.
The court has expanded the rights of religious people in several cases in recent years, including in cases involving LGBT people. For instance, the court in 2023 ruled that certain businesses have a right under the First Amendment’s free speech protections to refuse to provide services for same-sex weddings.
The school board in Montgomery County approved in 2022 a handful of storybooks that feature LGBT characters as part of its English language-arts curriculum in order to better represent the diversity of families living in the county.
The storybooks are available for teachers to use “alongside the many books already in the curriculum that feature heterosexual characters in traditional gender roles,” the district said in a filing.
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District Ended Opt-Outs in 2023
The district said it ended the opt-outs in 2023 when the mounting number of requests to excuse students from these classes became logistically unworkable and raised concerns of “social stigma and isolation” among students who believe the books represent them and their families.
Opt-outs are still allowed by the district for sex education units of health classes.
The plaintiffs — who are Muslim, Roman Catholic and Ukrainian Orthodox — said in their lawsuit that the storybooks “promote one-sided transgender ideology, encourage gender transitioning and focus excessively on romantic infatuation – with no parental notification or opportunity to opt out.”
They said the First Amendment protects their right to instill religious beliefs and practices in their children, including on gender and sexuality that are “crucial for their children’s ability to fulfill religious aspirations concerning marriage and family.”
In another religious rights case involving education, the Supreme Court in a 4-4 ruling on May 22 blocked a bid led by two Catholic dioceses to establish in Oklahoma the first taxpayer-funded religious charter school in the United States.
(Reporting by Andrew Chung; Editing by Will Dunham)
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