Medicine Hat News

Religious freedom could top Sessions’ civil rights priorities

- SADIE GURMAN

WASHINGTON When President Donald Trump spoke to the National Prayer Breakfast this month, he underscore­d his vow to defend the religious rights of the conservati­ve Christians who helped propel him to power.

Now, they expect the Justice Department under new Attorney General Jeff Sessions will reposition itself as a champion of what they see as that religious freedom.

It would be a welcome change for conservati­ve Christians who say their concerns were marginaliz­ed under the Obama administra­tion in favour of First Amendment and LGBT issues.

Exactly how Sessions will approach the issue remains to be seen, but he has given them plenty of reasons to be hopeful.

As a Republican senator from Alabama, Sessions, a devout Methodist, argued that the separation of church and state is unconstitu­tional, and that the First Amendment’s bar on an establishm­ent of religion has been interprete­d too strictly, while its right to free exercise of religion has been diminished.

Asked at his confirmati­on hearing whether a “secular person” has “just as good a claim to understand­ing the truth as a person who is religious,” Sessions replied, “Well. I’m not sure.”

That backdrop suggests Sessions’ Justice Department could more eagerly insert itself into religion-oriented cases such as that of the bakery fined for refusing to make a gay wedding cake, or the highschool football coach fired for praying on the field after games, who Trump repeatedly mentioned during his campaign.

“Religious conservati­ves have sort of been the forgotten people,” said Hiram Sasser, deputy chief counsel for First Liberty Institute, a law firm that specialize­s in issues of religious liberty. “Now, we have a refreshing sort of reboot to be able to have at least a voice, and to be able to once again have a seat at the table.”

Sessions could bring major changes throughout the Justice Department. But the department's civil rights division traditiona­lly is subject to the most radical shift in agendas with each change in presidenti­al administra­tion. Where the Obama Justice Department wanted to leave its mark on reforming troubled police department­s, Sessions will likely use its resources differentl­y.

It’s unclear exactly what priorities Sessions will pursue when it comes to the civil rights division. The Justice Department declined to comment on his plans for enforcemen­t of religious freedom. He has faced intense criticism of his record on civil rights with regard to race.

A renewed focus on religious causes would be “especially troubling in light of the fact that increasing numbers of Americans are not religious,” said Marci Hamilton, a Yeshiva University legal expert on religious liberty. “This landscape is radically different.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/SUSAN WALSH, POOL ?? In this Feb. 9 photo, Attorney General Jeff Sessions holds a meeting with the heads of federal law enforcemen­t components at the Department of Justice in Washington. When President Donald Trump spoke to the National Prayer Breakfast this month, he...
AP PHOTO/SUSAN WALSH, POOL In this Feb. 9 photo, Attorney General Jeff Sessions holds a meeting with the heads of federal law enforcemen­t components at the Department of Justice in Washington. When President Donald Trump spoke to the National Prayer Breakfast this month, he...

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