TBA Law Blog


Posted by: Julia Wilburn on May 6, 2026

Alabama has joined Texas and Florida in removing the American Bar Association (ABA)-accredited law school graduation requirement for bar exam eligibility, part of a broader push to reduce the ABA's influence over lawyer licensing. Reuters reports that the move stems from an ongoing conflict between the ABA and the Trump administration over a number of issues. The U.S. Department of Education also is reviewing whether to strip the ABA of its official law school accreditor status. Tennessee is weighing a similar change, framing it as an access-to-justice issue, and received backing from both the FTC and DOJ's Antitrust Division, who argued the ABA's outsized role limits the supply of lawyers and drives up costs. The ABA maintains that national accreditation is the "gold standard" and prevents a state-by-state patchwork of requirements. Read the TBA's comment filed April 30 with the Tennessee Supreme Court.