News

The case, a major test of the separation of church and state, was an unexpected loss for religious rights advocates after a ...
The Supreme Court deadlocked 4-4, blocking the attempt to establish the nation's first religious charter school.
Attorney General Gentner Drummond, also a Republican, sued to stop the school. He called the 4-4 vote “a resounding victory ...
The U.S. Supreme Court decided Thursday that the state of Oklahoma will not be permitted to create the first-ever religious ...
The justices announced they were split 4-4 in a test case heard last month from Oklahoma, which blocks the new Catholic ...
A divided Supreme Court rejected a plan on Thursday to allow Oklahoma to use government money to run the nation’s first ...
In a major victory for religious freedom and public education, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed an Oklahoma Supreme Court ...
The U.S. Supreme Court voted 4-4, meaning the court automatically affirms the Oklahoma Supreme Court’s opinion about a ...
In a split decision, the U.S. Supreme Court voted to uphold a lower court decision that held a religious charter school cannot obtain public funding from the state of Oklahoma.
Oklahoma’s Republican attorney general had argued that drastic consequences would follow if the justices sided with the school.
The Oklahoma Supreme Court ruled against the proposed charter school, called St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual School, and the charter school board that approved it, last June, determining that ...
The court was deadlocked 4-4, which meant a state Supreme Court ruling that declared the school violated the constitutional separation of church and state remained in place.