U.S. Supreme Court takes aim at separation of church and state
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[June 28, 2022]
By Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The
conservative-majority U.S. Supreme Court has chipped away at the wall
separating church and state in a series of new rulings, eroding American
legal traditions intended to prevent government officials from promoting
any particular faith.
In three decisions in the past eight weeks, the court has ruled against
government officials whose policies and actions were taken to avoid
violating the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment prohibition on
governmental endorsement of religion - known as the "establishment
clause."
The court on Monday backed a Washington state public high school
football coach who was suspended by a local school district for refusing
to stop leading Christian prayers with players on the field after games.
On June 21, it endorsed taxpayer money paying for students to attend
religious schools under a Maine tuition assistance program in rural
areas lacking nearby public high schools.
On May 2, it ruled in favor of a Christian group that sought to fly a
flag emblazoned with a cross at Boston city hall under a program aimed
at promoting diversity and tolerance among the city's different
communities.
The court's conservative justices, who hold a 6-3 majority, in
particular have taken a broad view of religious rights. They also
delivered a decision on Friday that was hailed by religious
conservatives - overturning the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that legalized
abortion nationwide - though that case did not involve the establishment
clause.
Cornell Law School professor Michael Dorf said the court's majority
appears skeptical of government decision-making premised on secularism.
"They regard secularism, which for centuries has been the liberal
world's understanding of what it means to be neutral, as itself a form
of discrimination against religion," Dorf said of the conservative
justices.
In Monday's ruling, conservative Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote that the
court's aim was to prevent public officials from being hostile to
religion as they navigate the establishment clause. Gorsuch said that
"in no world may a government entity's concerns about phantom violations
justify actual violations of an individuals First Amendment rights."
'WALL OF SEPARATION'
It was President Thomas Jefferson who famously said in an 1802 letter
that the establishment clause should represent a "wall of separation"
between church and state. The provision prevents the government from
establishing a state religion and prohibits it from favoring one faith
over another.
In the three recent rulings, the court decided that government actions
intended to maintain a separation of church and state had instead
infringed separate rights to free speech or the free exercise of
religion also protected by the First Amendment.
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Anti-abortion activists hold a cross in front of the U.S. Supreme
Court building during the annual "March for Life" in Washington,
U.S., January 21, 2022. REUTERS/Jim Bourg/File Photo
But, as liberal Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote in the
Maine case, such an approach "leads us to a place where separation
of church and state becomes a constitutional violation."
Opinions vary over to how much flexibility government officials have
in allowing religious expression, whether by public employees, on
public land or by people during an official proceeding. Those who
favor a strict separation of church and state are concerned that
landmark Supreme Court precedents, including a 1962 ruling that
prohibited prayer in public schools, could be imperiled.
"It's a whole new door that (the court) has opened to what teachers,
coaches and government employees can do when it comes to
proselytizing to children," said Nick Little, legal director for the
Center for Inquiry, a group promoting secularism and science.
Lori Windham, a lawyer with the religious liberty legal group
Becket, said the court's decisions will allow for greater religious
expression by individuals without undermining the establishment
clause.
"Separation of church and state continues in a way that protects
church and state. It stops the government from interfering with
churches but it also protects diverse religious expression," Windham
added.
Most of the religious-rights rulings in recent years involved
Christian plaintiffs. But the court also has backed followers of
other religions including a Muslim woman in 2015 who was denied a
retail sales job because she wore a head scarf for religious reasons
and a Buddhist death row inmate in 2019 who wanted a spiritual
adviser present at his execution in Texas.
The court also sided with both Christian and Jewish congregations in
challenges based on religious rights to governmental restrictions
such as limits on public gatherings imposed as public safety
measures during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Nicole Stelle Garnett, a Notre Dame Law School professor who joined
a brief filed with the justices backing the football coach, said the
court was merely making clear that governments must treat religious
people the same as everyone else.
Following Monday's ruling, many issues relating to religious conduct
in schools may be litigated anew under the court's rationale that
the conduct must be "coercive" in order to raise establishment
clause concerns.
"Every classroom," Garnett said, "is a courtroom."
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung; Editing by Will
Dunham and Scott Malone)
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