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By The Associated Press
Montanaās attorney general issued an opinion on Thursday labeling critical race theory and some anti-racism programs taught in schools as discriminatory and said they violate federal and state law.
Republican Attorney General Austin Knudsenās decision bans the activities ā which are also used for employee training ā in the state. It comes after Republican Superintendent of Public Instruction Elsie Arntzen requested earlier this month for Knudsen to weigh in on the issue.
The move makes Montana the latest of several Republican-controlled states to decry critical race theory.
Knudsenās binding opinion states that certain activities that fall under the umbrella of critical race theory teaching violate the U.S. and state constitutions.
Such activities include grading students differently based on race; forcing people to admit āracial privilegeā; assigning fault, blame or bias to a race; and offering training or assignments that force students or employees to support concepts such as racial privilege.
Schools and government and public workplaces could lose state funding and could be liable for damages from lawsuits if they offer critical race theory training or activities, Knudsenās office said in a statement.
āCommitting racial discrimination in the name of ending racial discrimination is both illogical and illegal,ā Knudsen said in a statement.
āMontana law does not tolerate schools, other government entities, or employers implementing CRT and antiracist programming in a way that treats individuals differently on the basis of race or that creates a racially hostile environment.ā
The attorney generalās office encouraged students and parents who believe they experience illegal discrimination under critical race theory programming to sue their schools directly or file complaints with the U.S. Department of Education.
Categories: U.S. News