Speaker of the House Nathaniel Ledbetter described the bills as “common sense” while members of the Democratic caucus condemned the legislation as “a waste of taxpayer money” that “won't bring down the cost of eggs.”
The legislation is part of a widespread effort in conservative states to regulate how schools handle social issues, a mission that has been championed by President Donald Trump.
Alabama joins at least 20 states that have considered legislation in 2025 that would mandate the display of the Ten Commandments in public schools or state buildings, according to an Associated Press analysis using the bill-tracking software Plural.
The sponsor of Alabama's Ten Commandments bill, Rep. Mark Gidley, said that he did not want to promote one particular religion. Instead, he said the bill recognizes the Ten Commandments, which appear in the Old Testament of the Bible, as "one of the principal foundational documents that guided the ideas that created this great country." The legislation said that the display should be supplemented by materials that emphasize its historical context.
In 2024, Louisiana became the first state to require that the Ten Commandments be displayed in every classroom in public schools and colleges. The law was blocked by a federal judge last year who ruled the law had an "overtly religious" purpose.
The push for the Ten Commandments in public places is far from new in Alabama.
But in past weeks, the bills have drawn vocal protest from religious leaders around the state who believe the slate of religious legislation will violate the First Amendment and create a hostile environment for religious minorities in Alabama public schools.
Steve Silberman, a rabbi who has worked at a synagogue in Mobile for 35 years, testified at a March committee hearing that he is concerned the Ten Commandments bill “unfairly sidelines Alabamians who may have diverse views of religious traditions.”
On Thursday, many legislators came forward in support of the bill.
"If you look around our nation, if you look around the world, we see so much of our Western civilization crumbling because we have forsaken the roots and foundations upon which we were built,” Republican Rep. Ernie Yarbrough said.
Bills would expand ‘Don’t Say Gay' law
On the same day, representatives also swiftly passed two separate bills that would ban drag performances at public schools and libraries without parental consent, and ban teachers from displaying pride flags or facilitating formal discussion on LGBTQ+ issues.
Rep. Neil Rafferty, Alabama’s only openly gay legislator, testified against the bill.
“When we ban their identities from the classroom, we are telling them that the best they can hope for is silence," Rafferty said.
He added, "I won’t help silence them, because I’ve been there, because I know what that silence feels like.”
Arkansas, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky and North Carolina are among the states with versions of Alabama's existing "Don't Say Gay" law, passed in 2022, which already prohibits formal class discussion about gender and sexuality that is not "age appropriate" for students below the fifth grade. The proposed law would extend that ban to all grade levels.
A similar Florida law was rolled back in a legal settlement last year between civil rights groups and the state education department.
Also on Thursday, the Alabama Senate also advanced legislation that would put a politically appointed board in control of the Alabama Department of Archives and History. The change was first proposed last year after some lawmakers became upset about the department hosting a 2023 lecture on LGBTQ+ history.
Republican Sen. Chris Elliott, the sponsor of the bill, on Thursday praised the work of the department, but said the change is needed to ensure there is “accountability of the board back to elected officials.”
At a recent rally outside of the statehouse, Chuck Poole, who was a Baptist pastor for 45 years across Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia, said he feels the recent slate of religious bills in Alabama are part of a broader push to promote Christian nationalism across the country.
“I think it’s rooted in fear, and it’s a fear that America is changing and we are losing power and control,” Poole said.
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Associated Press writer Kim Chandler contributed reporting from Montgomery, Alabama.
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Riddle is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.
Credit: AP
Credit: AP
Credit: AP
Credit: AP