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Idaho Attorney General tells schools to ban 'Everyone is Welcome Here' signs

everyone is welcome here sign at protest in Boise Idaho demanding womens rights and bodily autonomy April 2025
Sheepdogg Photography via Shutterstock

Idaho's Republican attorney general said that signs telling children "Everyone is Welcome Here" are actually "political statements."

Idaho's Republican attorney general said that signs telling children "Everyone is Welcome Here" are actually "political statements."

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It seems not everyone is welcome in Idaho after the state's attorney general ordered schools to prohibit signs that read “Everyone is Welcome Here" under a new state law.

H.B. 41, which went into effect July 1, bans the display of banners or flags in K-12 classrooms that represent “political, religious, or ideological views, including but not limited to political parties, race, gender, sexual orientation, or political ideologies." Republican Raúl Labrador issued guidance on how schools should apply the law, determining that the policy applies even to vague messages promoting kindness.

Labrador specifically referenced signs hung by Sarah Inama, a sixth grade history teacher at Lewis and Clark Middle School who went viral in March after she revealed that Ada School District administration ordered her to remove signs in her classroom that read “In This Room, Everyone Is Welcome, Important, Accepted, Respected, Encouraged, Valued, Equal,” and “Everyone Is Welcome Here.”

"These signs are part of an ideological/social movement which started in Twin Cities, Minnesota following the 2016 election of Donald Trump," he wrote. "Since that time, the signs have been used by the Democratic party as a political statement. The Idaho Democratic Party even sells these signs as part of its fundraising efforts."

The "movement" that began in Minnesota referenced by Labrador was a group of local moms who carried pastel signs that stated "All are Welcome Here" in protest of someone tagging their children's high school with racist graffiti following Trump's election, as reported by Kare11. Some local businesses also displayed the sign in solidarity, but it is not the same design or slogan as the one in Inama's classroom, which instead featured a row of hands with varying skin tones.

Per Labrador's guidance, even children's artwork could be prohibited under the law "if it meets the statutory definitional criteria of a 'banner,'" though there is "an exception for a 'brief curriculum-based educational purpose' display which may apply to
the artwork."

After refusing to remove the signs for several weeks, Inama ultimately resigned. She told local station KTVB when the controversy first began that "I was told that 'everyone is welcome here' is not something that everybody believes. So that's what makes it a personal opinion."

"I don’t agree that this is a personal opinion," she said. "I feel like this is the basis of public education.”

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Ryan Adamczeski

Ryan is a reporter at The Advocate, and a graduate of New York University Tisch's Department of Dramatic Writing, with a focus in television writing and comedy. She first became a published author at the age of 15 with her YA novel "Someone Else's Stars," and is now a member of GALECA, the LGBTQ+ society of entertainment critics, and the IRE, the society of Investigative Reporters and Editors. Her first cover story, "Meet the young transgender teens changing America and the world," has been nominated for Outstanding Print Article at the 36th GLAAD Media Awards. In her free time, Ryan likes watching the New York Rangers and Minnesota Wild, listening to the Beach Boys, and practicing witchcraft.
Ryan is a reporter at The Advocate, and a graduate of New York University Tisch's Department of Dramatic Writing, with a focus in television writing and comedy. She first became a published author at the age of 15 with her YA novel "Someone Else's Stars," and is now a member of GALECA, the LGBTQ+ society of entertainment critics, and the IRE, the society of Investigative Reporters and Editors. Her first cover story, "Meet the young transgender teens changing America and the world," has been nominated for Outstanding Print Article at the 36th GLAAD Media Awards. In her free time, Ryan likes watching the New York Rangers and Minnesota Wild, listening to the Beach Boys, and practicing witchcraft.