MEMORANDUM
The school board and officials argue that the teachers who brought suit lack standing to represent students and claim no harm to themselves other than a general grievance about governmental conduct affecting all citizens. We need not consider the argument that the teachers lack standing to make claims on behlaf of their students, because they plainly have standing to make their claims on their own behalf. The teachers hаve sufficiently shown injury in fact because as teachers in the community, and as president оf the teachers’ association and president of the teachers’ union, they have reason to and do regularly attend the school board meetings where the invocations they claim violate the Constitution are recited. As attendees at the meetings, they have, if the prayers are unconstitutional, suffered “injury in fact” “fairly traceable” to the challenged conduct that “would be redressed” by the declaratory and injunctive relief they seek. Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
We need not determine whether prayers at school board meetings are more like prayers in state legislatures, as in Marsh v. Chambers,
And we need not decide whether the prayers “in the Name of Jesus” would be a permissible solemnization of a legislature-like body, provided that invocations were, as is traditional in Congress, rotated among leaders of different faiths, sects, and denominations. Cf. Marsh at 783 n. 13,
The school board argues, and we agree, that the prayers did not disparage other religious faiths, and did not proselytize. But that is not enough. Even assuming that the school board can be treated like a state legislaturе, which we do not decide, its invocations must not “advance any one ... faith or belief.” Marsh at 782-83,
The school board’ practice of almost аlways praying “in the Name of Jesus” to commence its meetings necessarily has the effect of “making adherence to a religion relevant” to the plaintiffs’ “standing in the political community.” They sought to participate in and influence this political community, but they do not share the Christian religious beliefs with the school board member who generally perfоrmed the invocation and cannot honestly proceed “in the Name of Jesus.” The Establishment Clause requires that “one religious denomination cannot be officially preferred over another.” Larson v. Valente,
The school board’s argument that restricting the invocations would impinge on First Amendment rights is frivolous. The First Amendment prohibits government from establishing a preferred religion, by speech or other means. Of course its members are as individuals entitled to pray as they choose, but the board is not entitled to incorporate in its agenda regular prayers that endorse and give privileged govemmentally endorsed status to one religiоus faith. Injunctions against governmental prayers violative of the Establishment Clause are rоutinely granted. See e.g., Lee v. Weisman,
REVERSED.
Notes
This disposition is not appropriate for publication and may not be cited to or by the courts of this circuit except as provided by Ninth Circuit Rule 36-3.
