Next LGBTQ rights legal battle looms after Supreme Court victory
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[June 16, 2020]
By Lawrence Hurley and Jan Wolfe
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme
Court's ruling protecting LGBT rights in the workplace sets the stage
for another major legal fight over the scope of religious-rights
exemptions to certain federal laws that could dilute the landmark
decision's impact.
The justices ruled 6-3 on Monday that federal employment law safeguards
gay and transgender employees from discrimination but failed to resolve
some related legal questions. One of them is whether the court, which
has 5-4 conservative majority, will expand the ability of individuals,
businesses and organizations to cite religious beliefs when contesting
government actions such as enforcement of anti-discrimination laws.
In their next term, which starts in October, the justices will decide
whether Philadelphia violated the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment
rights of freedom of speech and religion in how it dealt with an
organization that is part of the city's Roman Catholic archdiocese. City
officials barred Catholic Social Services from participating in
Philadelphia's foster-care program because the organization barred
same-sex couples from serving as foster parents, a violation of its
anti-discrimination policies.
A ruling in favor of Catholic Social Services could make it easier for
people to cite religious beliefs when seeking exemptions from widely
applicable laws, potentially even in employment cases.
"There are absolutely ways it could come out that would mean there's a
constitutional right to discriminate," said American Civil Liberties
Union lawyer James Esseks as the justices consider various options for
deciding the dispute.
Catholic Social Services has asked the court to overturn a 1990 Supreme
Court ruling in the case Employment Division v. Smith that limited such
exemptions. Overturning that ruling "would open up a whole panoply of
religious defenses," said John Bursch, a lawyer with the conservative
Christian legal group Alliance Defending Freedom.
RELIGIOUS FREEDOM RESTORATION ACT
Even if the court does not do so, employers can still mount
religious-based defenses under a 1993 federal law called the Religious
Freedom Restoration Act.
R.G. and G.R. Harris Funeral Homes Inc of Detroit, one of the employers
named in the discrimination cases the Supreme Court decided on Monday,
had cited that law in its defense after a transgender former employee,
Aimee Stephens, sued the company.
The Supreme Court did not decide the Religious Freedom Restoration Act
issues. Justice Neil Gorsuch, the ruling's author, wrote that "how these
doctrines protecting religious liberty interact with Title VII (the
section of the civil rights law at issue) are questions for future
cases."
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Joseph Fons holding a Pride Flag, stands in front of the U.S.
Supreme Court building after the court ruled that a federal law
banning workplace discrimination also covers sexual orientation, in
Washington, D.C., U.S., June 15, 2020. REUTERS/Tom Brenner
Employers have a "pretty good start" in making a religious rights
claim following a 2014 Supreme Court ruling that allowed that law to
be invoked by companies, University of Miami School of Law
constitutional law professor Caroline Mala Corbin said.
Beyond the religious rights issue, there is the question of whether
other federal laws barring sex-based discrimination, including those
involving bias in housing and education, should be interpreted as
covering sexual orientation and gender identity. If so, that could
affect the ongoing dispute over whether transgender students can be
barred from using the bathroom that corresponds with their gender
identity, as a Virginia school district did in a case pending in the
lower courts.
The Supreme Court in recent years has sent mixed messages on the
intersection between gay and religious rights. It backed gay rights
in a series of rulings culminating in the 2015 decision legalizing
same-sex marriage nationwide. But it also bolstered religious
rights, including in the 2014 ruling allowing owners of businesses
to raise religious objections against the government.
The justices in 2018 handed a victory on narrow grounds to a
Colorado baker who refused based on his Christian beliefs to make a
wedding cake for a gay couple, but stopped short of setting a major
precedent letting people claim religious exemptions from
anti-discrimination laws.
Central to those cases was conservative Justice Anthony Kennedy, who
retired in 2018. President Donald Trump appointed Brett Kavanaugh to
replace him. Kennedy wrote the gay marriage ruling, joining with the
court's liberals, but joined with his fellow conservatives in the
religious-rights and baker decisions.
Kavanaugh, like Gorsuch, has shown sympathy toward religious liberty
claims. Kavanaugh dissented in Monday's ruling.
Bursch said there is a "strong possibility" that the 6-3 vote
breakdown in Monday's ruling would not be replicated when the court
decides the foster care case, with a ruling due by the end of June
2021.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley and Jan Wolfe; Editing by Will Dunham)
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