Landmark Accomplishments: How CPRC Is Winning the Fight for Parental Rights

Accomplishments at a Glance

In 2025, CPRC made meaningful strides in our mission to protect children's health, defend parental rights, and secure women's privacy, safety, and equal opportunities against the harms of transgender ideology. We now see that those victories are bearing fruit in 2026. Through strategic litigation and amicus support, we advanced cases that expose school secrecy, challenge ideological overreach, and reaffirm constitutional protections for families.

Our key contributions include:

  • Two Landmark Parental Rights Cases at the Supreme Court: Our petitions in Littlejohn v. Leon County Schools and Foote v. Ludlow School Committee—both targeting secret school gender transition policies—are now before the U.S. Supreme Court, which has signaled serious consideration. Partnering with co-counsel, such as Alliance Defending Freedom in Foote, we are pushing for nationwide precedent to end these policies that violate parents' fundamental rights under precedents like Troxel v. Granville and Pierce v. Society of Sisters.
  • A Major Appellate Win for Student Safety: Our victory in Blair v. Appomattox County School Board revived Title IX deliberate indifference claims, affirming that schools can be held liable for harms—including horrific sexual trauma—stemming from secrecy around gender policies. This ruling creates new accountability for districts that endanger young girls behind secrecy walls.
  • Contributing to a Win for Religious Freedom: Through an amicus brief on behalf of parents, CPRC supported the Supreme Court's ruling in Mahmoud v. Taylor. The decision affirmed that schools cannot compel children into instruction violating family religious convictions, requiring notice and opt-out options—a strong precedent bolstering our ongoing efforts.

These achievements reflect CPRC's focus on rigorous, constitutional arguments that drive real change.

Why These Milestones Matter for the Future

Our work exposes systemic violations of parental rights in schools and demonstrates courts' increasing rejection of policies that sideline families. We are dismantling secrecy that infringes on 14th Amendment due process and First Amendment religious exercise as we press forward the strategic advantages gained in Littlejohn and Foote, Blair, and Mahmoud.

These interconnected wins build precedent and momentum. As Vernadette Broyles notes: “Our strategic advocacy is delivering results that will safeguard families for generations—but the opposition is intensifying, and the battle continues.”

The Path Ahead

With Supreme Court conferences approaching, we must sustain this momentum. Your partnership provides the resources to pursue these high-stakes cases relentlessly.

Our Commitment:

CPRC remains dedicated to protecting children from transgender ideology harms, upholding parental authority, and securing lasting legal precedents. Recent advances shows great progress. Now in 2026 we're building toward permanent victories.