San Diego Union-Tribune

U.S. SUPREME COURT HEARS BOSTON CITY HALL FLAG CASE

Justices indicate city erred when it denied flying ‘Christian flag’

- BY ROBERT BARNES Barnes writes for The Washington Post.

Supreme Court justices Tuesday generally seemed to think it was a mistake for the city of Boston to refuse a ceremonial city hall flagraisin­g to a Christian group when it had never turned down such a request from any other organizati­on.

But it was the First Amendment follow-ups that created concern. What about a request from a Nazi group to raise a swastika? The Ku Klux Klan?

The case involves three flagpoles on a plaza outside Boston City Hall. One flies the U.S. flag, one the Massachuse­tts f lag and most of the time the third flies the city’s flag.

Occasional­ly, the city replaces its own flag with another, after a group applies to hoist its own banner for a brief time, usually in connection with an event.

From 2005 to 2017, the city approved 284 consecutiv­e requests.

But then Harold Shurtleff, who leads a conservati­ve group called Camp Constituti­on, applied to raise a white f lag with a red cross on a blue square in the upper left corner, which he noted was a “Christian flag.”

He was turned down, on the grounds it would appear that the city was endorsing one religion over another.

Lower courts said the city had that prerogativ­e. But Shurtleff ’s case has had the remarkable effect of uniting conservati­ve religious groups with the American Civil Liberties Union and the Biden administra­tion, all of whom said the city was wrong.

Supreme Court precedent shows that “when the government chooses to open up its own property for use by third parties to express their messages, the government cannot restrict access based on viewpoint, including religious viewpoints,” said Justice Department lawyer Sopan Joshi.

The city has some discretion, but it probably means that if it permits a group to “raise a Black Lives Matter flag, they probably would have to be able to raise a Proud Boys flag,” he said, referencin­g the racial justice movement and the far-right group, respective­ly. “I mean, that’s just what the First Amendment demands.”

Douglas Hallward-Driemeier, representi­ng Boston, agreed that if the flagpoles are considered a public forum, the constituti­onal prohibitio­n of state-establishe­d religion “would not provide a basis to exclude a religious flag.”

But the city official who denied the request thought of the flagpole as “the city’s speech . ... And the establishm­ent clause does apply to the government’s own speech.”

Some justices said they understood the view. “To an ordinary observer walking past City Hall, if you see a f lag on the pole, you think it’s City Hall speaking,” said Justice Sonia Sotomayor.

As she has in recent oral arguments, Sotomayor participat­ed remotely from her chambers because of concerns related to the coronaviru­s.

But most seemed to think Boston had opened itself up by accommodat­ing so many other requests.

Justice Neil Gorsuch said that if the official made a mistake about the “socalled” separation of church and state, “why doesn’t it resolve this case?”

Gorsuch is part of a conservati­ve majority on the court that has been far more protective of religious groups.

Liberal justices seemed to think it might be best just to decide that Boston made a well-intentione­d mistake and move on without making new law.

“In the context of a system where flags go up, flags go down, different people have different kinds of flags, then it is a violation of the free-speech part of the First Amendment and not an establishm­ent clause violation,” Justice Elena Kagan said. “The end.”

Justice Stephen Breyer also wondered if the case was worth it. “Can’t it be settled?” he asked.

Mathew Staver of Liberty Counsel, which is representi­ng Shurtleff, said the city has been unaccommod­ating.

The case is Shurtleff v. City of Boston.

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