The religious conservatives
who traded their integrity for Supreme Court seats collected their payoff this
term in the form of three decisions favoring their distorted vision of
religious liberties. It was a Faustian bargain from the onset to support a presidential
candidate who mocks Christian values on a daily basis but who promised to
appoint judges and justices who would bow down to the evangelicals’ golden
calf.
The evangelicals traded away
their integrity a second time when they provided critical support to Brett
Kavanaugh’s confirmation as President Trump’s second Supreme Court justice
after he was plausibly accused of attempted rape as a privileged teenager. With
Kavanaugh anchoring the Court’s conservative majority, the Court engaged in a
burst of judicial activism in the last few weeks to give religious schools and
religious employers special rights to disobey validly enacted laws that the
rest of use are obliged to follow.
The trifecta of decisions
belie the conservatives’ complaint that the Roberts Court has gone rogue with a
few liberal decisions favoring LGBT rights and abortion rights and blocking
Trump’s effort to rescind protections for “dreamers.” The back-and-forth debate
about those decisions dominated the blogosphere even as the justices were
drafting the end-of-term opinions giving the religious right almost everything
it could have expected.
Religious conservatives had
weighed in with amicus briefs in all three cases. They kept their eyes on the
prize even as most Court watchers were preoccupied with the Trump subpoena
cases. In the first of the three decisions, the Court gave a windfall to
private religious schools by overriding constitutional provisions in
thirty-eight states that prohibit public funding of sectarian schools. The 5-4
decision in Espinoza v. Montana Department of Revenue [June
30] overrode the Granite State’s “no-aid” provision by holding, under the Free
Exercise Clause, that the state’s scholarship program for private school
students had to include religious schools.
In his opinion for the
Court, Roberts gave no weight to the state’s interest in avoiding entanglement
with religion at the risk of Establishment Clause issues. The ruling cheered
school choice advocates intent on keeping religious conservatives in their camp
and conversely alarmed public school advocates fearful of further defunding of
financially struggling public schools.
A week later, the Court
gave religious schools another windfall: a get-out-of-jail-free card in the
form of a decision that largely exempts them from federal job discrimination
laws. The 7-2 decision in Our Lady of Guadalupe School v.
Morrissey-Berru [July 8] allowed two Catholic schools in the Los
Angeles area to get out of federal court lawsuits filed by former teachers who
said they were fired in violation of federal civil rights laws.
One of the teachers claimed
the school replaced her with a younger teacher in violation of the Age
Discrimination in Employment Act; the other teacher claimed that her school let
her go in violation of the Americans With Disabilities Act after she asked for
medical leave to pursue treatment for breast cancer. Both schools cited
deficient performance by the teachers, but rather than defend the suits in
court they asked for immunity under a recent Supreme Court decision giving
religious schools a “ministerial exception” for teachers in religion classes.
The new decision expands
that exception to include almost anyone that a religious school identifies as
having a minister-like role at the school: athletic coaches, probably, and
maybe even custodians. In her dissent, Sotomayor correctly said that the
decision denies federal civil rights protection to “countless” numbers of
religious school employees nationwide.
The decision flagrantly
disregards Jesus’s teaching on the relationship between religion and state, as
quoted in Matthew 22:21: “Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s and to
God the things that are God’s.” In his letter to the Romans, Paul similarly
stressed that Christians enjoyed no superior rights to disregard the law. “Let
every person be subject to the governing authorities,” Paul wrote in Romans
13:1.
In the third of the
decisions, the Court returned to the attack by religious conservatives on the
Obamacare mandate that employers provide coverage for contraceptives in
employee health benefits plans. The 7-2 ruling in Little Sisters of
the Poor v. Pennsylvania expanded the exemption already created for
private employers with religious objections to the mandate. In the new
decision, the Court upheld a Trump administration regulation expanding the
exemption to employers with either religious or moral objections to including
contraceptives in their health benefit plans.
All told, the decisions
bear out the observation by the New York Times’ semi-retired
Supreme Court correspondent Linda Greenhouse that Roberts is on a “mission” to rewrite religious
liberty jurisprudence. The decisions, Greenhouse wrote in a recent article [July 16],
amount to “insisting on organized religion’s entitlement to public benefits as
a matter of equal treatment while at the same time according religion special
treatment in the form of relief from the regulations that everyone else must
live by. Benefits without burdens, equal treatment morphing into special
treatment.”
True, religious
conservatives suffered a defeat in the ruling to extend Title VII to LGBT
employees (Bostock v. Clayton County). In writing the
opinion, however, Gorsuch made clear that employers with religious objections
to hiring LGBT individuals are welcome to come back and claim a religious
liberty to discriminate. Those claims are likely to find a receptive audience
among the Roberts Court majority, in open mockery of the Court’s
carved-in-marble motto: “Equal Justice Under Law.”
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