With thousands of other people commenting on yesterday's Supreme Court decision allowing school vouchers and Wednesday's 9th Circuit Court of Appeals decision banning the Pledge of Allegiance, you don't need any more commentary from Weblog (Actually, just finding all these stories took so long this morning that there's no time left to write.) Those aren't the only big stories going on, either—keep scrolling down for more.
The battleground shifts | The ruling would seem to hold at least the potential of a turnaround for a movement that has attracted an unusual assortment of advocates—from conservatives to religious leaders to parents in urban minority neighborhoods to a sitting president of the United States—but that has seemed in danger of drifting off the horizon (The New York Times)
Voucher backers see opening for a wider agenda | Legislators around the country are likely to begin exploring ways of spending money previously reserved for public education (The New York Times)
Ruling could galvanize school choice advocates | Coucher or tax-credit programs might soon be enacted in the District of Columbia, Texas, Minnesota and Colorado (The Plain Dealer, Cleveland)
Decision gives few hints of how high a wall remains | Validating school vouchers, the Supreme Court either did little more than apply well-worn constitutional precedents, or else it made a profound shift in doctrine on religion issues (The Boston Globe)
Vouchers pass court test, face real-world challenge | Whether this constitutional green light will spur educational reform is far from certain—particularly if states seize on the ruling to build voucher programs that aren't focused on those who need them most: poor students in failing schools (Editorial, USA Today)
Vouchers have overcome | Free at last, private school choice is free at last (Editorial, The Wall Street Journal)
The wrong ruling on vouchers | The Supreme Court's decision on school vouchers was a bad decision on constitutional grounds, and a bad one for American education (The New York Times)
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