logo
Federal judge blocks parts of Mississippi ban on DEI in public schools

Federal judge blocks parts of Mississippi ban on DEI in public schools

Yahoo8 hours ago
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — A federal judge has blocked portions of Mississippi's ban on diversity, equity and inclusion practices in public schools from being enforced while a lawsuit against it is underway.
The provisions blocked by U.S. District Judge Henry Wingate on Monday seek to prohibit public schools from discussing a list of 'divisive concepts' related to race, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation and national origin. They would also prevent public schools from maintaining programs, courses or offices that promote DEI or endorse 'divisive concepts,' and ban diversity training requirements.
The preliminary injunction does not block other portions of the law, including those that prevent schools from giving preferential treatment based on race, sex, color or national origin and that penalize students or staff for their refusal to embrace DEI concepts.
The law, which took effect in April, aims to prevent public schools from 'engaging in discriminatory practices' by banning DEI offices, trainings and programs. Any school in violation of the act could lose state funding.
A group of teachers, parents and students is suing the state, arguing that the law violates their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights.
Wingate wrote in his ruling that he finds the law to be at odds with the First Amendment and the public interest of the state.
'It is unconstitutionally vague, fails to treat speech in a viewpoint-neutral manner, and carries with it serious risks of terrible consequences with respect to the chilling of expression and academic freedom,' he wrote.
Wingate also granted the plaintiff's request to add class action claims to the lawsuit, meaning the injunction will apply to teachers, professors and students across the state. The plaintiff's lawyers sought the addition after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in June limited the ability of federal judges to grant sweeping injunctions.
Jarvis Dortch, the executive director of the ACLU of Mississippi, which is helping litigate the case, said he was thankful for Wingate's stance.
'The Court sees the law for what it plainly is — an attempt to stop the proper exchange of ideas within the classroom," Dortch said in a statement.
Wingate's ruling follows a temporary restraining order he granted to the plaintiffs in July.
At an Aug. 5 hearing, lawyers representing the plaintiffs argued the law is too confusing, leaving parents, teachers and students wondering what they can and cannot say and whether they could face consequences as a result of their speech.
Cliff Johnson, a professor at the University of Mississippi Law School and Mississippi director of the MacArthur Justice Center, testified that he and his students often discuss what could be considered 'divisive topics.'
Johnson said he did not believe the law would allow him to teach about the First, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments; the court case that paved the way for the internment of Japanese citizens during WWII; portions of the Civil Rights Act; or the murders of Emmett Till and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
'I think I'm in a very difficult position. I can teach my class as usual and run the serious risk of being disciplined, or I could abandon something that's very important to me,' Johnson testified. 'I feel a bit paralyzed.'
The Mississippi Attorney General's Office argued that public employees do not have First Amendment rights.
'They are speaking for the government and the government has every right to tell them what they need to say on its behalf,' said Lisa Reppeto, an attorney at the state attorney general's office.
She added that the First Amendment does not give students the right to dictate what their school does or does not say.
Reppeto also said the consequences of the law are aimed at the schools — not students or teachers — and that the plaintiffs' 'argument is not consistent with what is in the statute.'
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

9/11 victims' fund architect slams changes to New Hampshire abuse settlement program
9/11 victims' fund architect slams changes to New Hampshire abuse settlement program

San Francisco Chronicle​

time14 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

9/11 victims' fund architect slams changes to New Hampshire abuse settlement program

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — An attorney who helped design and implement the 9/11 victims' compensation fund says New Hampshire lawmakers have eroded the fairness of a settlement program for those who were abused at the state's youth detention center. Deborah Greenspan, who served as deputy special master of the fund created after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, recently submitted an affidavit in a class-action lawsuit seeking to block changes to New Hampshire's out-of-court settlement fund for abuse victims. She's among those expected to testify Wednesday at a hearing on the state's request to dismiss the case and other matters. More than 1,300 people have sued the state since 2020 alleging that they were physically or sexually abused as children while in state custody, mostly at the Sununu Youth Services Center in Manchester. Most of them put their lawsuits on hold after lawmakers created a settlement fund in 2022 that was pitched as a 'victim-centered' and 'trauma-informed' alternative to litigation run by a neutral administrator appointed by the state Supreme Court. But the Republican-led Legislature changed that process through last-minute additions to the state budget Gov. Kelly Ayotte signed in June. The amended law gives the governor authority to hire and fire the fund's administrator and gives the attorney general — also a political appointee — veto power over settlement awards. That stands in stark contrast to other victim compensation funds, said Greenspan, who currently serves as a court-appointed special master for lawsuits related to lead-tainted water in Flint, Michigan. She said it 'strains credulity' to believe that anyone would file a claim knowing that 'the persons ultimately deciding the claim were those responsible for the claimant's injuries.' 'Such a construct would go beyond the appearance of impropriety and create a clear conflict of interest, undermining the fairness and legitimacy of the settlement process," she wrote. Ayotte and Attorney General John Formella responded by asking a judge to bar Greenspan's testimony, saying she offered 'policy preferences masquerading as expert opinions' without explaining the principles beyond her conclusions. 'Her affidavit is instead a series of non sequiturs that move from her experience to her conclusions without any of the necessary connective tissue,' they wrote. The defendants argue that the law still requires the administrator to be 'an independent, neutral attorney' and point out that the same appointment process is used for the state's judges. They said giving the attorney general the authority to accept or reject settlements is necessary to give the public a voice and ensure that the responsibility for spending millions of dollars in public funds rests with the executive branch. As of June 30, nearly 2,000 people had filed claims with the settlement fund, which caps payouts at $2.5 million. A total of 386 had been settled, with an average award of $545,000. One of the claimants says he was awarded $1.5 million award in late July, but the state hasn't finalized it yet, leaving him worried that Formella will veto it. 'I feel like the state has tricked us,' he said in an interview this week. 'We've had the rug pulled right out from underneath us.' The Associated Press does not name those who say they were sexually assaulted unless they come forward publicly. The claimant, now 39, said the two years he spent at the facility as a teenager were the hardest times of his life. 'I lost my childhood. I lost things that I can't get back,' he said. 'I was broken.' Though the settlement process was overwhelming and scary at times, the assistant administrator who heard his case was kind and understanding, he said. That meeting alone was enough to lift a huge burden, he said. 'I was treated with a lot of love,' he said. 'I felt really appreciated as a victim and like I was speaking to somebody who would listen and believe my story.' Separate from the fund, the state has settled two lawsuits by agreeing to pay victims $10 million and $4.5 million. Only one lawsuit has gone to trial, resulting in a $38 million verdict, though the state is trying to slash it to $475,000. The state has also brought criminal charges against former workers, with two convictions and two mistrials so far. The 39-year-old claimant who fears his award offer will be retracted said he doesn't know if he could face testifying at a public trial. 'It's basically allowing the same people who hurt us to hurt us all over again,' he said.

Qatar urges a Gaza ceasefire after a 'positive response' from Hamas

timean hour ago

Qatar urges a Gaza ceasefire after a 'positive response' from Hamas

JERUSALEM -- A key mediator on Tuesday stressed the urgency of brokering a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip after Hamas showed a 'positive response' to a proposal from Arab countries, but Israel has yet to weigh in as its military prepares an offensive in some of the territory's most populated areas. The prospect of an expanded assault on Gaza City and other areas sheltering hundreds of thousands of civilians has sparked international outrage. Palestinians say there is nowhere to flee after 22 months of war that has already killed tens of thousands and destroyed much of the territory. 'They are talking about a 60-day truce, and after Israel gets its (hostages) they will strike us again,' said Huda Rishe, who has been displaced four times since the start of the war. 'We will return to Gaza City and then leave again. We have lost hope.' AP reporters saw some families arriving in central Gaza after fleeing Gaza City. Many Israelis, who rallied in the hundreds of thousands on Sunday, fear the offensive will further endanger the remaining hostages in Gaza. Just 20 of the 50 remaining are thought to be alive. 'If this (ceasefire) proposal fails, the crisis will exacerbate,' Majed al-Ansari, a spokesperson for Qatar's Foreign Ministry, told journalists, adding they have yet to hear from Israel on it. Al-Ansari said Hamas had agreed to terms under discussion. He declined to provide details but said the proposal was 'almost identical' to one previously advanced by U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff. That U.S. proposal was for a 60-day ceasefire, during which some of the remaining hostages would be released and the sides would negotiate a lasting ceasefire and the return of the rest. 'If we get to a deal, it shouldn't be expected that it would be instantaneously implemented,' al-Ansari said. 'We're not there yet.' That cautious assessment came a day after the foreign minister of Egypt, the other Arab country mediating the talks, said they were were pushing for a phased deal and noted that Qatar's prime minister had joined the negotiations with Hamas. Witkoff has been invited to rejoin the talks, Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty told The Associated Press. Witkoff pulled out of negotiations less than a month ago, accusing Hamas of not acting in good faith. It was not clear how Witkoff has responded to the invitation. Abdelatty held a series of phone calls Tuesday with foreign ministers from the United Kingdom, Turkey and the European Union, seeking to put pressure on Israel to accept the ceasefire proposal. 'The ball is now in Israel's court,' Abdelattay said in a statement. An Israeli official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive talks, said the government's position has not changed. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said he will pause the fighting to facilitate the release of hostages, but that the war will continue until all the hostages are returned and Hamas is defeated and disarmed. Hospitals in Gaza said they had received the bodies of 34 Palestinians killed Tuesday, including women and children, as Israeli strikes continued across the territory. Nasser Hospital said an airstrike killed a mother, father and three children in their tent overnight in Muwasi, a camp for hundreds of thousands of civilians. 'An entire family was gone in an instant. What was their fault?' the children's grandfather, Majed al-Mashwakhi, said, sobbing. Israel's military did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the strikes. Nasser Hospital said nine people were killed while seeking aid in areas where U.N. convoys have been overwhelmed by looters and desperate crowds, and where people have been shot and killed while heading to sites run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, or GHF, an Israeli-backed American contractor. Another two people were killed near a GHF site in central Gaza, according to Al-Awda Hospital. GHF said there were no violent incidents at any of its sites on Tuesday. Witnesses, health officials and the U.N. human rights office say Israeli forces have killed hundreds of people seeking aid from GHF sites and U.N. convoys since Israel eased a 2 1/2 month blockade on Gaza in May. The military says it has only fired warning shots at people who approached its forces. The overall Palestinian death toll in the war surpassed 62,000 on Monday, according to Gaza's Health Ministry, which is part of the Hamas-run government and staffed by medical professionals. The ministry does not say how many of the dead were civilians or combatants, but says women and children make up around half of them. In addition to that toll, other Palestinians have died from malnutrition and starvation, including three reported in the past 24 hours, the ministry said Tuesday. It says 154 adults have died of malnutrition-related causes since late June, when it began counting such deaths, and 112 children have died of malnutrition-related causes since the war began. Hamas-led militants started the war when they attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducting 251. Most of the hostages have been released in ceasefires or other deals. Hamas says it will only free the rest in exchange for a lasting ceasefire and an Israeli withdrawal. Aid groups continue to struggle to deliver supplies to Gaza, where most of the population is displaced, large swaths are in ruins and experts say the 'worst-case scenario of famine is currently playing out." Israel imposed a full blockade in March, then allowed limited aid to resume two and a half months later. The Israeli military body in charge of humanitarian aid to Gaza, COGAT, said 370 trucks of aid entered Tuesday — still below the 600 per day that the United Nations and partners say is needed. COGAT said Tuesday that 180 pallets of aid were airdropped into Gaza with help from countries including Jordan, the United Arab Emirates and France. The U.N. and partners have called airdrops expensive, inefficient and even dangerous for people on the ground.

LIZ PEEK: Trump declares war on woke—and this beloved museum is in his crosshairs
LIZ PEEK: Trump declares war on woke—and this beloved museum is in his crosshairs

Fox News

timean hour ago

  • Fox News

LIZ PEEK: Trump declares war on woke—and this beloved museum is in his crosshairs

President Donald Trump wants to make our government institutions Great Again, by scrubbing the DEI and anti-American messaging left behind by the Biden administration. One target of this clean-up effort is the Smithsonian Institution, which, as the president rightly claimed in an executive order earlier this year, has "come under the influence of a divisive, race-centered ideology." As we look forward to celebrating the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence next year, Trump wants the Smithsonian to ditch its customary "narratives that portray American and Western values as inherently harmful and oppressive." Consider this statement from our country's leading (taxpayer-supported) museum group: "Our mission is to explore the history and legacy of race and racism in the United States and globally. We seek to spark positive social change and build a more equitable shared future through interdisciplinary scholarship, creative partnerships, dialogue, and engagement." AMERICAN HISTORY WON'T BE DISPLAYED 'IN A WOKE MANNER' AT SMITHSONIAN, TRUMP SAYS The museum website states as its purpose: "The increase and diffusion of knowledge about the history and legacy of racism while building pathways towards a more equitable shared future." To be clear: these are not the notes attached to a single exhibition or presentation. Racism is the Smithsonian's central theme, stretching across its 21 museums, libraries and even the National Zoo. Most Americans probably thought the Smithsonian was dedicated to presenting to the world our nation's greatest art and our proud history, showcasing the brave souls who explored and settled the nation, who fought a war to free the slaves imported from Africa, who defeated fascism in World War II and the Soviet Union in the Cold War. They might expect the Smithsonian to highlight American exceptionalism, including our country's leadership in technological, medical and financial innovation – like the Wright Brothers' daring development of airplanes and the Apollo moon mission, for example. CNN'S JENNINGS SAYS SAME CRITICS OF TRUMP'S SMITHSONIAN REVIEW WERE CHEERING DESTRUCTION OF MONUMENTS IN 2020 They would be wrong. Applauding our country is so yesterday. Instead, the museum's vision is to use "history and reconciliation to contextualize and transform our understandings and responses to race and racism." That won't cut it under President Trump. The White House recently wrote to the Smithsonian's secretary, Lonnie Bunch III, announcing a planned review of the museum's exhibitions and materials, aiming "to ensure alignment with the President's directive to celebrate American exceptionalism, remove divisive or partisan narratives, and restore confidence in our shared cultural institutions." Liberals are outraged. The Wall Street Journal quotes Sarah Weicksel, executive director of the American Historical Association, saying the White House's effort was an affront to the historians and curators trained to ensure historical accuracy. "If those things are taken out of the hands of historians," according to Weicksel, "the public stands to lose a great deal in having reliable and engaging content that tells a whole and complex story of the American past." WHITE HOUSE REVIEWING ALL SMITHSONIAN MUSEUM, EXHIBIT CONTENT BEFORE AMERICA 250 CELEBRATION IN 2026 The "whole and complex story" of America told by our leftist intelligentsia is invariably unflattering. Our nation is portrayed as racist, misogynist and exploitative in college curriculums and by historical societies. Our children are taught not to love our country, but to despise it. The existence of liberal bias on college campuses is undeniable; our leading historians are similarly leftist. Consider Pulitzer Prize-winning Jon Meacham, who, while spinning out his liberal interpretations of U.S. history, acted as Joe Biden's speechwriter and booster, said this in a speech at the 2020 Democratic convention: "Our democracy is under assault from an incumbent more interested in himself than he is in the rest of us." There's also registered Democrat Doris Kearns Goodwin, another Pulitzer awardee, who worked for LBJ, admires Hillary Clinton and once claimed Trump "doesn't have the temperament to be president." CLICK HERE FOR MORE FOX NEWS OPINION Lonnie Bunch III, registered Democrat, the first African American director of the Smithsonian and founding director of the National Museum of African American History and Culture, fits right in. When confronted by Republicans in Congress about a graphic posted online by the African American history museum in 2020 that described "hard work," "individualism" and "the nuclear family" as part of "white culture," Bunch simply noted the offensive item had been removed. As the New York Times reported, Bunch wrote, in an introduction to an exhibition called "In Slavery's Wake," that a "strong current of political leaders wants to prevent the public from engaging with Black history, which they deem 'too divisive,' and create a culture of silence." Defaming our nation is expensive. Taxpayers coughed up $1.09 billion last year, more than triple the $350 million appropriated in 2000. The increased budget hasn't attracted bigger crowds: in 2000 the Smithsonian reported having 40 million visitors, compared to only 16.8 million last year. In 2000, attendance was boosted by "standing-room-only shows," according to the annual report, like the Natural History Museum's Nordic blockbuster, "Vikings: The North Atlantic Saga." Another stand-out was the Star-Spangled Banner's conservation lab and exhibit, which drew nearly half the museum's visitors. Some of today's exhibitions at the National Museum of American History include: "Latinas Report Breaking News," a "bilingual exhibition [that] showcases the work of seven Latina journalists on Spanish-language television" and "American Enterprise," which chronicles the "tumultuous interaction of capitalism and democracy…" The three featured objects on the homepage include: a table used to draft a declaration of women's rights, an 1861 badge that "may" have belonged to a bricklayer in South Carolina who joined an independent African American volunteer fire company, and a sign that hung outside a D.C.- based community health center founded by "nurse Maria Gomez, a Colombian immigrant, to serve pregnant Latina immigrants." CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP The Smithsonian has not only gone woke, mission creep has taken it beyond our borders, providing programs overseas like: "Hands-on science education in Mexico," "Supporting museums in Oman," science centers at Tibetan monasteries and studying sunken slave ships off Mozambique. Some of this may count as valuable "soft diplomacy," but I doubt most taxpayers would be on board. Trump is right; the Smithsonian should show our country as the "shining city on a hill" it is, attracting millions from all over the world. It needs a thorough overhaul. CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM LIZ PEEK

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store