Call & Times

Kavanaugh record suggests support for religious expression

- LAURA MECKLER

WASHINGTON – Judge Brett Kavanaugh, President Donald Trump’s choice for the Supreme Court, has a record showing support for the expression of religious beliefs – defending religious schools and student-led prayers at high school football games. In private practice, Kavanaugh backed the government when it sought to support religious interests and challenged schools when they attempted to exclude religious groups. Kavanaugh is the product of religious education. He graduated from Georgetown Preparator­y School in Maryland’s Montgomery County, a Jesuit school where every class begins with a prayer. His daughters attend Blessed Sacrament, a Catholic school in the District of Columbia. As he was introduced Monday at the White House, though, Kavanaugh pointed to his mother’s work as a history teacher at two public schools in the District in the 1960s and ‘70s, McKinley Tech and H.D. Woodson, before she went to law school. “Her example taught me the importance of equality for all Americans,” Kavanaugh said. Kavanaugh’s views on schools and

religious liberty are among those being scrutinize­d by supporters and opponents as the Senate prepares to consider his nomination to the high court. To backers, his advocacy of religious expression shows his understand­ing of what the framers of the Constituti­on intended. Justin Walker, one of his former clerks, called Kavanaugh a “warrior for religious liberty.” Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, praised Kavanaugh as a buffer against “a growing assault on religious freedom” that he said developed during the Obama adminis- tration. Americans United for Separation of Church and State, a liberal advocacy group, claims Kavanaugh’s record shows he will not uphold the separation of government and religion, which the group called the “linchpin of religious freedom.” As a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District Circuit, Kavanaugh penned few opinions directly related to education. But as a private attorney, he worked on several religious liberty cases involving schools. In 1999, he wrote an amicus, or friend of the court, brief on behalf of two Republican members of Congress backing a Texas high school’s decision to allow student-led prayers over the public address system at football games. The brief argued that students were delivering their own messages, not speaking on behalf of the school. “If the student speaker must avoid ‘prayer,’ as respondent­s demand, does that mean all references to God? What about references to the ‘Father’? The ‘Father above’? Must the student avoid a reference to ‘our Creator’? Can the student ask the crowd to observe a moment of silence for the crowd ‘to pray’ as they wish?” he wrote. “Who knows.” The Supreme Court ruled the policy unconstitu­tional, 6 to 3. In 2001, Kavanaugh was on the winning side in arguing that a Christian group called the Good News Club had the right to use public school facilities for its meetings. In an amicus brief, Kavanaugh wrote that it was unconstitu­tional to treat a religious group differentl­y from others. The club prevailed, 6 to 3. Around the same time, Kavanaugh represente­d then-Florida Gov. Jeb Bush in his effort to establish a school voucher program that would fund private schools, including some religious institutio­ns. There is no high-profile case on religion and schools awaiting the next Supreme Court justice. Last year, the Supreme Court ruled that a Missouri grant program funding playground improvemen­ts could not exclude religious schools. The court has not ordered that states must include religious schools in more sweeping voucher— programs. But it will eventually be forced to grapple with this question, predicted Derek Black, a law professor at the University of South Carolina, who studies constituti­onal law and education rights. John Taylor, a law professor at West Virginia University, said that 37 states have clauses in their state constituti­ons that bar the use of government money for the “aid” or “benefit” of religious schools, and that’s why many states do not allow religious schools to benefit fromp voucher programs.

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