Orlando Sentinel

Court’s ‘hostility’ ruling could hit ‘Muslim ban’

- By David G. Savage david.savage@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court resolved the case of a Christian baker who refused to make a wedding cake for a samesex couple by ruling the government may not show “hostility” to religion.

As Justice Anthony Kennedy put it: “The Free Exercise Clause (of the First Amendment) bars even ‘subtle departures from neutrality’ on matters of religion.” He cited the comments of one member of the Colorado Civil Rights Commission who had lectured baker Jack Phillips about the role religion has played throughout history to justify bigotry, slavery and the Holocaust.

Such words suggested “that religious beliefs and persons are less than fully welcome in Colorado’s business community,” Kennedy wrote, adding the state had “violated its duty under the 1st Amendment not to base laws or regulation­s on hostility to a religion or a religious viewpoint.”

But the majority’s condemnati­on of what it saw as the commission’s lack of respect for Phillips’ Christian beliefs raises questions about another big pending case: Is President Donald Trump’s travel ban based largely on hostility toward Muslims?

Lawyers who closely follow the court were quick to say that Kennedy’s insistence on strict “neutrality” toward religion should spell trouble for the president and his legal team in defending entry restrictio­ns imposed on citizens of several Muslim-majority countries.

“If the court is serious about what it said, it should rule the entry ban violates the First Amendment because the process that resulted in the ban was infected by the president’s expressed animus and hostility toward Muslims,” said Leah Litman, a law professor at University of California at Irvine and a former law clerk for Kennedy.

In recent years, two entirely separate claims of religious discrimina­tion have moved through the courts. On the right, social conservati­ves have sued and sought religious exemptions from laws that call for equal treatment for gays and lesbians or require the dispensing of contracept­ives. Their lawyers contended traditiona­l beliefs were under attack, and those concerns have been echoed by some of the conservati­ve justices.

When the court upheld same-sex marriages three year ago, Justice Samuel Alito Jr. said he feared the ruling “will be used to vilify Americans who are unwilling to assent to the new orthodoxy . ... They will risk being labeled as bigots and treated as such by government­s, employers and schools.”

Meanwhile, on the left, liberals have voiced concern over bias against Muslims and other minorities. Those worries grew with the rise of Trump’s presidenti­al campaign. In December 2015, he called for a “total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States” and said later, “I think Islam hates us.” In his first week in the White House, he issued the first of three proclamati­ons to block visitors and travelers from several Muslimmajo­rity nations.

The Supreme Court this term was asked to resolve religious bias claims from both sides. The case of the Christian cake maker was brought by the Alliance Defending Freedom, a social conservati­ve group based in Arizona.

Meanwhile, the American Civil Liberties Union and immigrants’ rights advocates won rulings on the West Coast and the East Coast that declared Trump’s travel ban unconstitu­tional because it discrimina­ted based on religion. The court heard the administra­tion’s appeal in April and will rule this month on Trump v. Hawaii.

Neal Katyal, the Washington lawyer who argued for those challengin­g the travel ban, told the court that the First Amendment “forbids the government from enacting policies that denigrate or exclude members of a particular faith. Yet any reasonable observer who heard the president’s campaign promises (or) read his thinly justified orders” would see they were targeted at Muslims.

Until Monday, it was expected that the baker’s case would be decided on free speech grounds, not religion. His lawyers had argued he was a “cake artist,” and as such, should not be forced to express a message to celebrate a same-sex marriage that conflicted with his religious beliefs.

By a 7-2 vote, the court opted for a narrow ruling that held the Colorado civil rights commission­ers had displayed “hostility to religion” in some comments.

The ACLU’s legal director, David Cole, said the court’s opinion should lead to a ruling striking down the travel ban.

“If the justices express this level of concern about a few, offhand comments by a member of a low-level state commission, then they should have a much greater concern about a president who made much more explicitly anti-religious statements. And he put them into practice, precisely what he promised he would do,” Cole said. “I don’t how they could reconcile that the Masterpiec­e (cake maker) case is about religious intoleranc­e, but the Muslim ban is not.”

But Stanford law professor Michael McConnell, an expert on religion and the First Amendment, applauded Monday’s ruling. “In these days of intense culture conflict, the 7-2 majority demonstrat­es that concern about hostility and intoleranc­e toward religious views is not a rightwing distractio­n, as some people say, but a broadly held and fundamenta­l part of our constituti­onal values.”

He added, “Courts and commission­s have a special obligation of neutrality to the parties.”

During the oral argument in April, the court’s conservati­ves showed little interest in whether the travel ban reflected bias.

 ?? ERIC THAYER/GETTY 2017 ?? Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote of even “subtle departures from” the state’s mandated “neutrality” on religion.
ERIC THAYER/GETTY 2017 Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote of even “subtle departures from” the state’s mandated “neutrality” on religion.

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