Featured

Reitz Supports Ten Commandments in Public Schools

Texas Attorney General candidate Aaron Reitz (R) is defending a new state law mandating the display of the Ten Commandments in public school classrooms.

After announcing his candidacy for Texas Attorney General, Reitz touted the support of President Donald Trump (R). Reitz now says that he’s “100%” behind the Ten Commandments being displayed in public classrooms, calling them “the bedrock of Western civilizations and the bedrock of our kids’ education system going back hundreds of years.”

During an interview with Matt Gaetz on One America News, Reitz shared his support for the “great law.” For him, the effort is a necessary pushback against what he argues is decades of secular influence in education.

“This law is a great law, and it’s already getting litigated by the secular left groups that want to take religion out of our schools,” Reitz said. “They’ve been running the same plays for the past 60 to 70 years.”

The legislation, passed by Texas lawmakers earlier this year, requires all public K-12 classrooms to prominently display the Ten Commandments. Civil liberties organizations such as the ACLU and Americans United for Separation of Church and State have already filed legal challenges, arguing the law violates constitutional protections regarding the separation of church and state.

Reitz said that enforcing such laws requires strong leadership from the attorney general’s office, which he argues that he will provide. “Unless you have an AG who is like what President Trump said about me when he brought me into the Justice Department – ‘a true MAGA attorney and a warrior for the Constitution’ – the laws are just dead letters on the books,” he said.

After the bill was signed into law, the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas, the ACLU, Americans United for Separation of Church and State, and the Freedom From Religion Foundation, issued a statement, calling the law "blatantly unconstitutional."

Daniel Molina

Daniel Molina is a managing editor and legislative correspondent with a decade of experience covering the evolving political landscape of the American South and Southwest.

Recent Posts

LONESTAR — 6.2.2026 — New Bill Promises to Track AI's Footprint — Trump Cancel's 'America 250' Concert — and More...

New Bill Targets Data Centers to Track AI's Footprint As AI-driven data centers expand across…

9 minutes ago

Trump Eyes Deal While Iran Hits Pause

As members of Congress return to Washington, D.C., this week, the tabled issue of ending…

18 hours ago

Matrix Renewables Breaks Ground on $750 Million Solar Project

Matrix Renewables and EPC Contractor SOLV Energy have officially begun construction on the Tormes Solar…

20 hours ago

Energy Prices May Explode in Coming Weeks, ExxonMobil VP Warns

ExxonMobil's Senior Vice President Neil Chapman warned the public that energy prices may explode in…

20 hours ago

Texas Immigration Crackdown Advances After Appeals Court Steps In, Clearing Senate Bill 4

A federal appeals court handed Texas a major legal victory Friday, allowing a first-of-its-kind state…

21 hours ago

Ken Paxton Wins Temporary Restraining Order Against Discord

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) announced that he has secured an emergency Temporary Restraining…

21 hours ago