“Free-Exercise Protections”
The court is reversing many of the Civil Rights advances and gains (health care, labor protections, and antidiscrimination in public accommodations, etc.) for LGBTQ, women, etc. on the basis that such protections violates a religion’s practices. In essence legal protections for individuals, workers, etc. seeking to engage in ordinary commercial activity are subordinated to a religious belief. I watched such in action at a County Commission meeting as they passed a resolution to deny the right to abortion and birth control coverage for non-unionized women.
The Weaponization of the Free-Exercise Clause, The Atlantic, Howard Gillman and Erwin Chemernsky, September 2020
Some History:
There was a time when the Constitution’s protection of the “free exercise” of religion was a sort of shield, a protection for religious minorities from the prejudices of the powerful. No longer. The Supreme Court’s conservative majority is in the process of transforming this First Amendment clause into a sword that politically powerful Christian conservatives can use to strike down hard-fought advances in civil rights, especially for LGBTQ individuals and women.
At issue is whether religious believers who object to laws governing matters such as health care, labor protections, and antidiscrimination in public accommodations should have a right to an “exemption” from having to obey those laws. In recent years, religious pharmacists have claimed that they should not be required to fill prescriptions for a legal and authorized medical procedure if that procedure is inconsistent with their beliefs. A court clerk whose religion defined marriage as a union of a man and woman has claimed a free-exercise right to refuse marriage licenses to same-sex couples who have a constitutional right to marry. Religious business owners, such as bakers and florists, who object to same-sex marriage have claimed a right to refuse service to same-sex couples. And employers have successfully asserted a right to deny their workers health-care benefits that they would otherwise be entitled to, such as contraception or abortion counseling.
Providing such religious exemptions has required a dramatic change in the law by the Supreme Court. In 1990, in Employment Division v. Smith, the Supreme Court held that the free-exercise clause of the First Amendment cannot be used as a basis for an exception to a general law, no matter how great the burden on religion, unless the government’s action can be shown to be based on animus to religion. The case involved a claim by Native Americans for a religious exception to an Oregon law prohibiting consumption of peyote.
Justice Antonin Scalia wrote the opinion for the Court ruling against the Native Americans and explained that it would be impossible to provide religious exemptions from civic obligations whenever a person disagreed with the law—there are just too many civic obligations and too many different religious views about those obligations. Also, if the government were to begin down this path, it inevitably would face the impossible task of defining a “religious” belief. Such an approach would force the Court to make intrinsically controversial and discriminatory decisions about which religious views were most deserving of special accommodation and which social values should be considered less important than the favored religious views.
This decision was in line with the approach taken by the Supreme Court, in almost all cases, through American history. Courts long held that the Constitution did not require an exception to general laws on account of religious beliefs—that parents could not deny medical aid to their children, that they could not have them work in violation of child-labor laws, even if the work involved dispensing religious literature, that religious schools could not violate laws against racial discrimination, and that a Jewish Air Force psychologist could not ignore the uniform requirement by wearing a yarmulke.
Recent Decisions
The conservative justices on the current Court reject Scalia’s reasoning and may be about to overrule Employment Division v. Smith. If they do so, the Supreme Court’s conservative majority will in essence be saying that the views of Christian conservatives are more important than legal protections for workers and people who seek to engage in ordinary commercial activity without suffering discrimination.
The first sign of this shift came with the 2014 decision in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby, when for the first time in American history, the Court held that the religious beliefs of a business’s owner allowed it to refuse to provide employees with a benefit required by law. Under the Affordable Care Act, employers are required to provide health-insurance coverage, including coverage for contraceptives for women. The Affordable Care Act had already carved out an exemption for religious not-for-profit organizations, so that, for example, a Catholic diocese would not have to provide contraceptive care to its employees. (Legislatures can choose to give religious exemptions, even though the Constitution does not require them.) But at issue in Hobby Lobby were the rights of the owners of a purely secular business. The five conservative justices held that a family-owned corporation could deny contraceptive coverage to women employees based on the business owners’ religious beliefs.
In June 2020, the Court ruled in Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Morrissey Berru that teachers at a Catholic school could not sue for employment discrimination. The two cases before the Court involved a teacher who had sued for disability discrimination after losing her job following a breast-cancer diagnosis and a teacher who had sued for age discrimination after being replaced by a younger instructor.
in Hosanna-Tabor Lutheran Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. EEOC (2012), the Court said that a narrow exception protects religious organizations from being held liable for choices they make about their “ministers,” which traditionally have been considered “exclusively ecclesiastical questions” that the government should not second-guess. But now the Court has expanded that exception to all religious-school teachers, meaning that the schools can discriminate based on race, sex, religion, sexual orientation, age, and disability with impunity.
Dissenters
As you might expect, one dissenter who will be sorely missed is RBG. Dissenters pointed out that “the distinction between a community made up of believers in the same religion and one embracing persons of diverse beliefs, clear as it is, constantly escapes the Court’s attention,” and wondered about religious employers who were offended by health coverage of vaccines, or equal pay for women, or medications derived from pigs, or the use of antidepressants. At the very least, there is a compelling interest in protecting access to contraceptives, which the Supreme Court has deemed a fundamental right.
Expectations
With the addition of another conservative-based judge, we can expect the court to shift its rulings more to the right rather than seek a balance in protection the rights of as minority amongst the majority. The evolution of SCOTUS is more likely to expand the ability of businesses to discriminate based on their owners’ religious beliefs. A few years ago, the Court considered in Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission whether a baker could refuse, on account of his religious beliefs, to design and bake a cake for a same-sex couple. This should be an easy decision: People should not be allowed to violate antidiscrimination laws because of religious beliefs, or any beliefs. For more than half a century, courts have consistently recognized that enforcing antidiscrimination laws is more important than protecting freedom to discriminate on account of religious beliefs. A person cannot invoke religious beliefs to refuse service or employment to Black people or women. Discrimination by sexual orientation is just as wrong. Although the justices in this case sidestepped the question of whether the free-exercise clause requires such an exemption, a number of other courts have ruled that compliance with general antidiscrimination laws might impose an impermissible burden on the free exercise of the owner’s religious beliefs, at least when the beliefs are Christian and the protected class includes gay and lesbian people. Moreover, the religious right has demanded it be entitled to such exemptions.
Soon
The Court appears to be headed in the opposite direction. In the next term (October), the Court will consider (Fulton v. City of Philadelphia) whether free exercise was violated by a city’s barring a Catholic Social Services agency from participating in placing children in foster care due tio the agency refusal to certify same-sex couples as foster parents. Such discrimination is in violation of the city’s general nondiscrimination policy. One of the questions before the Court is whether to “revisit” Employment Division v. Smith.
Five justices may be about to do just that and further pave the way for the Court to allow religious organizations and persons to ignore nondiscrimination laws that protect the LGBTQ community, as well as ignore federal requirements to provide full health benefits to women.
Next up to be Determined?
Which religion or religious beliefs deserve special treatment beyond the generality adding to the detriment of true religious liberty, freedom of choice or from, etc. .
Irony becomes a swinging pendulum blade that cuts both ways when society lacks the ability to discriminate between right and wrong. The colonies were plagued with this as they kept slaves, stole land from natives, and burned witches. Such a perverse social conscience is beyond the grasp of lawmakers and public documents. Garbage in, garbage out.
Hi Ron:
I know Erwin and have talked (via email) to him from time to time on questions I have. We had met in the past on other issues, I am amazed of the magnitude of his intellect from which he speaks as compared to his appearance. He is is another Ruth Badger Ginsburg in intellect. We are lucky to have him. We fled Salem, MA during the judging of the witches after we had disagreed with the elders. Seems like we are always on the wrong side.
I am not well liked by the Baptists with whom we associated with as a family. The Jesuits and Christian Brothers who educated me have issues with my beliefs and intellect also.
Burning was a European phenomenon. Most accused and convicted witches were hanged in New England.
or pressed or dunked.
Free excercise of religions involving human sacrifice might cause problems.
Hi Bill,
I was raised Southern Baptist, but had an enlightened minister until he was voted out by the congregation. When church ladies complained to him that some of the GAs wanted to wear two piece bathing suits on a joint beach outing for the RAs and GAs he asked them “Some of these girls only have two piece bathing suits: which piece do you want them to wear?” He went along with my idea to plan to have a Sunday with combined services between our suburban white Baptist Church and the black Baptist Church in town. That appeared to be why he was voted out. He was replaced with a younger man whose activism was disposed to support political candidates from our church congregation and protest Bowl America for serving beer. I had been planning to go to seminary school to become a minister, but changed my mind after that.
Bob Dylan – With God on Our Side (Audio)
Separation of church and state is based upon a far older precedent established by Constantine and further advanced by Charlemagne, the separation of church and religion :<)
Bill H,
“…I am not well liked by the Baptists with whom we associated with as a family. The Jesuits and Christian Brothers who educated me have issues with my beliefs and intellect also…”
[Growing up my parents would not let me grow my hair long. Gaining their approval was never easy nor broadly available. There was always something about me that bothered them. OTOH, everyone else from Scout leaders to teachers to priests thought I was a nice, honest, moral and ethical young man.
When I left home and grew my hair long then I was judged a radical by my parents and everyone in a position of authority without really changing my attitude and ideas about anything. In my late thirties when I got into power boating as a sport fishing platform then the long hair had to go. Once again I was a nice, honest, moral, and ethical young man in the eyes of everyone in a position of authority.
I have a charismatic and engaging way about me in person. Lots of people have told me that I was their best friend that should not have. That personal intimacy that comes natural to me can either be threatening or disarming based mostly on one’s reception to my appearance at the time. Long haired and bearded then I am Charles Manson to some and Jesus Christ to others. Short haired and clean shaven then everyone likes and approves of me immediately without reservation. I truly believe that intellectuals do not understand how shallow most people really are including themselves.]
Worms, other than Frank Herbert’s “Dune” sandworms, do not turn and fight back against their attackers, but they do get the last laugh :<)
Most conservatives believe that their free exercise protections had been severely eroded by removal of Christian symbols and quotes from public spaces and Happy Holidays euphemisms. A viral interpretation of separation of church and state had limited free exercise protections. One may argue the right and wrong of it, but there is no denying that liberals have made more enemies than they can afford.
The only good enemy is a dead enemy. Make too many enemies among the living and your own life will become too burdensome to maintain.
IOW, if one grants others power over themselves then they should not complain when others exercise that power to their own ends. Anytime that one starts a fight that they cannot finish then they have bequeathed power over themselves to others.
There is such a thing as a tyranny of a minority who exert their believes over the majority at the expense of the majority.
Bill,
“There is such a thing as a tyranny of a minority who exert their believes over the majority at the expense of the majority.”
[Absolutely!
When we commit to the rule of law instead of the rule of men then we are fooling ourselves. The only laws that really matter are the laws than are enforced, that can be enforced. The rest comes down to some people have good manners and some people do not. We have selective enforcement of the law by choice and also by circumstance. It takes evidence to convict. There is no escape from the rule of men. Men make the laws. Men enforce the laws. Men buy off the justice system if they have enough money whether by the power of influence, quid pro quo, better lawyers, or cash bribes. We have not eliminated the rule of men, but we have greatly diminished the use of reasonable discretion and are proud of it. Transparency and engagement are the only protections that can insure justice. Trial by jury of our peers provides some protection against unjust prosecution, but nothing for unjust evasion of prosecution. Law has never been absolute and it is foolish to think that it is. Law works better for society when it is practiced only as a platform for maintaining justice rather than allowing it to be used to fuel vindictive culture wars. Consequences matter. Judgement that practices discretion over cost and loss can unite society rather than deepen divisions. We made sure no atheist or Moslem would have their feelings hurt by Christians just so some women later on might lose their healthcare. That was not a good trade. All things in moderation would be a better bet.]
Bill H,
The good news is that the far out right is so screwed up that we have a good chance now of governing again. So, let’s not screw it up. Biden actually seems to have half a clue, which is good for a politician, but he is just one guy in a big party and he is old. My point was that it would be ludicrous to believe that we got where we are today by no fault of our own. IF we keep believing that is the case, then conservatives will be back in power before they even loose their stacked SCOTUS control.
If we want to stop losing wars then we need to get a lot smarter about choosing our battles.
Ron:
No one will know who you are addressing, if you use Bill. Best to use run75441. If you google it, you will see it goers back decades.
Political parties shop voters with messaging that triangulates demographic groups that have ideally complementary self-interests and biases into effective electoral coalitions. Groups that have competing self-interests and biases are easily separated from coalitions. Voters shop political candidates mostly by party brand names without reading the list of ingredients or nutritional information. Advice to partisans – protect your brand.
The Court punted on Cake Jesus for a very simple reason: Allowing “religious” exemptions from civil law, i.e., making “religious” “belief” a complete defense to civil liability would end civil liability as we now know it. Once a court allows a civil defendant to come before it and essentially say, “Yes, I violated the plaintiff’s legal rights; yes, I caused the plaintiff to incur economic harm; however, complying with the law would have been against my religion, so I should not be held accountable for the harm I caused,” every civil defendant in every court in every jurisdiction will move for summary judgment on that ground, and win.
The <a href="https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2018/6/4/1769303/-SCOTUS-to-Judges-and-Commissioners-When-Litigants-Assert-Religious-Beliefs-Watch-What-You-Say"<message of the Masterpiece Cakeshop case is:
The problem with the decision, then, is that it left a crack open for the assertion of “religious” “beliefs” as a complete defense to civil liability, implying that a decision in Cake Jesus’s favor might have been possible but for the commissioner’s remarks, notwithstanding that he clearly (and admittedly) broke the law and religion has never been a valid excuse for lawbreaking.
So, if the Court decides that “complying with the law would be against my religion” provides a complete affirmative defense to civil liability (be it a statutory violation or under the common law), one of two things has to happen: (1) all pending and future civil litigation will be dismissed on that ground, and civil liability will end; or (2) courts will have to start evaluating “religious” “beliefs” on a case-by-case basis. Neither of these is an appealing option.
At the end of the day, courts and public officials should be indifferent to a litigant’s religious beliefs. The religious right won an important victory in the Cake Jesus case: they got the Court to conflate indifference with hostility.
Graf:
Bolded another part of you comment. Neutrality and sterility of emotion in the application of the law goes a long way towards making the point of discrimination as you point out. I think that is the way I want to say such. There are other attorneys here who may add to this.
There is no evidence that the “Constitution” and the laws that result from it’s alleged authority apply to anyone.
Laws are interpretive.
When Hobby Lobby was in the news, my thought was this was a question of who owns your “earned” compensation. Hobby Lobby claimed that they still owned their employees’ compensation and felt the moral obligation to make sure it was used “properly”. Although it is not really wise to base any argument on some Commentator’s comment, I was at a site where a man argued that employers have an obligation to be morally concerned about how employees are spending their “earned” pay. His solution was that employers ought to pay in script which can only be used to purchase “approved” items! Company store, here we come.
xulon:
Some companies do frown upon outside of normal business hour activities. I have not read of any court decisions on this topic as to how far a business interest extend once the work day ends. It would tend to me to be over reach if the activity was legal.
Run,
OK.
I agree with your basic thesis that what was meant to be a shield for minority protection has been turned into a sword in the hands of the majority. But your history of how this change came about is missing some important events. The decision against the right of the Native Americans to use peyote (and its implications of making it almost impossible for minority religious rights to be protected) inspired the passage of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA). This law, introduced by two Democrats and passed unanimously by the House and 97-3 by the Senate restored strict scrutiny as the standard by which cases involving the Free Exercise clause must be judged.
Larry:
My desire to post in brevity does at times leave out some detail. I am assuming you mean SCOTUS majority? Thank you for your addition.
RFRA gave us Hobby Lobby but not Cake Jesus; it applies only to federal governmental action (it was struck down as applied to the states in City of Boerne v. Flores), and does not create a “free exercise” defense to a private lawsuit. If it did, it would violate the Establishment Clause by providing an immunity to “religious” litigants that would not be not available to non-religious litigants.
State-level RFRAs have also tried, and failed, to create a de jure license to discriminate for “religious” merchants. Indeed, it would be incredibly easy for a state to do that if it wanted to: (1) pass an amendment to its existing civil rights law providing for a complete affirmative defense of “religious” “belief” to any discrimination lawsuit; and/or (2) pass a state constitutional amendment providing that, e.g., sexual orientation or gender identity shall not be protected characteristics under any state law pertaining to private discrimination. No state has ever tried either one, because (1) would violate the Establishment Clause and (2) would violate the Equal Protection clause.
Even the Mississippi law was struck down by the district court as plainly, almost laughably unconstitutional; the Fifth Circuit vacated on procedural grounds, not on the merits.
Hobby Lobby concerned enforcement of federal administrative regulations against a regulated business. It went the way it did, under RFRA, because the employees could still get what they were legally entitled to without having to inconvenience the business owners’ purported “beliefs.”
I would add that even under “strict scrutiny,” an anti-discrimination law or ordinance affecting commercial merchants, or the application thereof, would not be struck down. Preventing discrimination, viz., ensuring equal access to the commercial marketplace, is a compelling governmental interest; giving consumers the option to seek redress (whether in court or before an administrative tribunal) is the least restrictive means of accomplishing that objective.
Here is a link to the full Barber v. Bryant decision, 193 F. Supp. 3d 677 (S.D. Miss. 2016).
Graf:
You are really going all out on this. I will read it in a bit.