
Florida Attorney General Issues Terse Refusal to Demand He Rescind His View on Religious Funding
(JNS) – James Uthmeier, attorney general of Florida, issued a terse response to a demand that he either reconsider a legal opinion expanding access to public benefits for religious institutions or resign.
“Dear Mr. Line: No. Sincerely, James Uthmeier,” he wrote in an April 28 response to Christopher Line, legal counsel at Freedom From Religion Foundation.
The "Freedom From Religion Foundation" asked me to reconsider my opinion on religious liberty or resign from office.
My answer is simple: No. pic.twitter.com/Wpvpjxg0Sa
— Attorney General James Uthmeier (@AGJamesUthmeier) April 28, 2026
The state attorney general argued in an April 2 memo that government entities can’t exclude religious organizations, including charter schools, from public programs, such as scholarships or grants, due to their religious status. He said that his office will not enforce or defend a law that violates “the right of religious people and entities to participate in public programs and benefits like everyone else.”
“Some Florida laws prohibit religious schools from accessing public funds, and we will not enforce unconstitutional laws,” he said.
The Freedom From Religion Foundation called on Uthmeier “to resign if he is unwilling to carry out his constitutional obligations.” It said earlier this month that the attorney general’s “attempt to justify directing taxpayer funds to religious charter schools fundamentally misrepresents recent Supreme Court decisions.”