Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Alito says virus has brought ‘ previously unimaginab­le’ restrictio­ns on liberty

- BY JESSICA GRESKO

WASHINGTON — Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito last week sounded an alarm about restrictio­ns imposed because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, saying they shouldn’t become a “recurring feature after the pandemic has passed.”

“The pandemic has resulted in previously unimaginab­le restrictio­ns on individual liberty,” Alito said Thursday in an address to the conservati­ve Federalist Society, which is holding its annual convention virtually because of the pandemic.

Alito said that he was “not diminishin­g the severity of the virus’ threat to public health” or saying anything about “whether any of these restrictio­ns represent good public policy.” He cautioned against his words being “twisted or misunderst­ood.”

But he said it is an “indisputab­le statement of fact” that “we have never before seen restrictio­ns as severe, extensive and prolonged as those experience­d for most of 2020.”

“Whatever one may think about the COVID restrictio­ns, we surely don’t want them to become a recurring feature after the pandemic has passed,” said Alito, who was nominated to the court by President George W. Bush.

Alito was particular­ly critical of two cases earlier this year where the court sided with states that, citing the coronaviru­s pandemic, imposed restrictio­ns on the size of religious gatherings. In both cases, the court divided 5- 4 in allowing those restrictio­ns to continue with Chief Justice John Roberts siding with the court’s liberals.

In May, the high court rejected an emergency appeal by a California church challengin­g attendance limits at worship services. The justices turned away a similar challenge by a Nevada church in July. Alito said in both cases the restrictio­ns had “blatantly discrimina­ted against houses of worship” and he warned that “religious liberty is in danger of becoming a second- class right.”

Both cases came to the court before the death in September of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. The liberal justice’s replacemen­t by conservati­ve Justice Amy Coney Barrett could change how the court might come out on similar cases in the future. Currently before the court is a case involving the Catholic church and limits on in- person services in New York.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/ AP ?? Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito ( shown last year) cautioned in an address last week against his words being “twisted or misunderst­ood.”
SUSAN WALSH/ AP Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito ( shown last year) cautioned in an address last week against his words being “twisted or misunderst­ood.”

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