Texas Ag Ken Paxton calls for prayer time in schools



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(Newsnation) – The Texas Prosecutor Ken Pixon encourages schools in his term to “implement a time for prayer and read the Bible,” according to a press statement on September 2.

This announcement follows the latest legislation of the Senate Law 11 in Texas on September 1, allowing “school paintings to adopt policies to allocate time for voluntary prayer and reading the Bible or other religious texts,” according to the statement.

The draft law directs the prosecutor’s office to “defend any school or rented school that adopts such a policy,” according to the statement.

Buckston encourages schools to start the “legal process” to bring prayer to separation.

“In the classroom in Texas, we want to open the word of God, raised the ten commandments, and the prayers were raised,” Buckston said in a post on X.

Paxon wanders against Senator John Corn in the elementary race in Texas in the upcoming Senate. The two traded footage on social media over and over again, while increasing progress in the preliminary elections in March.

“There you go again. The commandments are ten for you, but not for me, eh, Ken?” Corn said in response to Paxon, in a post on X.

So far, Corn is one of the three members of the Republican Senate who sprayed for his re -election and who have not received presidential support, according to the Texas Tribune.

The Buckston advertisement follows a wider batch of Republicans in Texas to integrate religion into public schools.

In May, the Senate Bill in Texas was enacted, which requires schools to place the ten commandments in each semester. The draft law faced legal audit and is defined by students of students throughout the state.

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