Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump boosts school prayer, faith groups as he rallies base

President proposes removing ‘regulatory burdens,’ easing access to federal programs for religious organizati­ons

- By Collin Binkley and Elana Schor

In a bid to solidify his evangelica­l base, President Donald Trump took steps Thursday to give religious organizati­ons easier access to federal programs and he reaffirmed students’ rights to pray in public schools.

Under orders from Trump, nine Cabinet department­s proposed rules intended to remove “regulatory burdens” on religious organizati­ons participat­ing in federal programs by eliminatin­g a requiremen­t that they refer people to alternativ­e providers upon request. Much of that follows through on an executive order Trump from 2018 that aims to put religious groups on equal footing when competing for federal grants and other funding.

At the same time, the Education Department issued its first updated guidance on school prayer since 2003. While Trump promised “big action” this month, the new guidance appears to make few major changes.

The expansion of faith-based groups’ ability to participat­e in government programs is a significan­t show of support for an evangelica­l constituen­cy long a vital part of Trump’s base and it follows a Christian magazine’s call for his removal from office.

Trump planned to announce the guidance on school prayer at a White House event later Thursday. A directive orders states to verify that school districts have no policies limiting constituti­onally protected prayer and to refer violators to the Education Department. That’s much like the 2003 guidance, but the directive goes further in requiring states to provide ways for making complaints against schools.

Students can pray on their own or together during lunch or other free times, for example, and student speakers can pray at assemblies or sports games as long as they weren’t chosen to speak based on their religious perspectiv­es, according to the guidance.

“Our actions today will protect the constituti­onal rights of students, teachers, and faithbased institutio­ns,” Education Secretary Betsy DeVos said in a statement.

Hours before Trump’s event, federal agencies announced moves to bolster faithbased organizati­ons. For example, a proposal from the Department of Health and Human Services would eliminate a requiremen­t that religious-based social service organizati­ons inform clients that they can also receive services from groups without connection to a particular religion.

Civil rights advocates said the administra­tion risked empowering discrimina­tory behavior in the name of religious freedom.

The regulation­s “will make it more difficult to access critical social services, just because someone is LGBTQ or a different faith,” the American Civil Liberties Union tweeted. “It’s 2020 and religious freedom is STILL not a license to harm others.”

But Johnnie Moore, a member of Trump’s evangelica­l advisory board, lauded the moves as a fresh sign of Trump’s commitment to religious freedom.

“The White House isn’t saying whether one should pray or to whom or what they should pray to,” Moore said by email. He added that “they are simply making it clear that in the United States students have First Amendment rights also, and our ‘separation of church and state’ wasn’t intended to suppress a vibrant religious life in America but to facilitate it.”

About 8 in 10 self-identified white evangelica­l Protestant­s approved of Trump’s performanc­e, according to AP-NORC polling last month. But the president has nonetheles­s moved to shore up his already strong connection to this bloc since an editorial in the magazine Christiani­ty Today called for his removal from office. By returning attention to school prayer, Trump could revive a debate that had largely fallen to the periphery of national politics in recent years. Calls for stronger school prayer protection­s reached a crescendo in the 1980s and 1990s, with champions including President Ronald Reagan.

Public schools have been barred from leading students in classroom prayer since 1962, when the Supreme Court said it violated a First Amendment clause forbidding the establishm­ent of a government religion. Later decisions extended the ban to school graduation ceremonies and, under certain circumstan­ces, school athletic games. Civil liberties groups say the firewall protects religious minorities and ensures fair treatment of all faiths. But many on the Christian right say courts and schools have pushed too far against the right to free religious expression.

Also Thursday, the White House Office of Management and Budget said in a memo that agencies must work to bring grant-making by entities that receive federal money, as well as their own grant-making, in line with the Supreme Court’s interpreta­tion of the First Amendment.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos speaks at a roundtable discussion on school choice last month with Arizona community leaders, educators, parents and students, in Scottsdale, Ariz. DeVos talked about her $5 billion plan to fund tuition for private and charter school students, prior to addressing the American Legislativ­e Exchange Council.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos speaks at a roundtable discussion on school choice last month with Arizona community leaders, educators, parents and students, in Scottsdale, Ariz. DeVos talked about her $5 billion plan to fund tuition for private and charter school students, prior to addressing the American Legislativ­e Exchange Council.

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