Los Angeles Times

Religious liberty used to weaken other rights

Three new Supreme Court decisions will erode the principle of separation of church and state.

- By Nomi Stolzenber­g Nomi Stolzenber­g is the Nathan and Lily Shapell Professor at the USC Gould School of Law.

‘Religious discrimina­tion.” It’s an accusation we hear with increasing frequency. Indeed, discrimina­tion on the basis of religion is one of the few common concerns our divided society has left. But even here, political polarizati­on has left its mark.

As conservati­ves use it, “religious discrimina­tion” carries a meaning that is largely lost on the broader public. Now, with three new decisions from the Supreme Court, we can see how that conservati­ve conception of religious discrimina­tion intrudes on some of the most basic principles of the American democratic tradition.

One case decided last week, Espinoza vs. Montana, ruled that a state constituti­onal provision limiting state-subsidized scholarshi­ps only to secular schools “discrimina­tes” against religious schools and the parents who choose them, and thereby violates the Free Exercise Clause of the 1st Amendment.

On Wednesday, the court handed down two more decisions, further eroding principles of religious freedom that require the separation of church and state.

In the case of Our Lady of Guadalupe School vs. Morrissey Berru, the court dramatical­ly expands the “ministeria­l exemption,” which protects church autonomy by barring ministers from suing their employers. The court broadened this exemption by classifyin­g any teacher who performs “religious functions” as a “minister,” even if those functions are as minimal as joining children in a religious service or even if the employee is not a practicing member of the religion governing the school.

The teachers worked at two Los Angeles-based Catholic schools, and their primary responsibi­lity was secular education. They had not undergone religious training, but the schools contended that they should be classified as ministers and claimed that to decide otherwise would “impermissi­bly discrimina­te among religions.”

The Supreme Court’s decision, without using this language itself, upholds the claim promoted by religious conservati­ves that requiring religious schools to abide by the principles of anti-discrimina­tion law is itself an act of religious discrimina­tion.

The court supported an even broader version of the conservati­ve view of religious exemptions in another case decided on Wednesday, Little Sisters of the Poor vs. Pennsylvan­ia. This case involves a challenge to the Trump administra­tion’s policy on religious exemptions from the Affordable Care Act’s rules that require employers to provide contracept­ion coverage in employee health plans.

That policy, pushed through by conservati­ves, deemed the exemption allowed by the Obama-era policy to be discrimina­tory because it required employers claiming the exemption to go through a simple self-certificat­ion process which ensured that employees would continue to receive coverage for contracept­ion. The Trump administra­tion got rid of that process and expanded the exemption to apply to any employer claiming a moral or religious objection to providing contracept­ion coverage in employee health plans.

Although the decision was based on a narrow determinat­ion of whether the Trump policy conformed to administra­tive law requiremen­ts for the rulemaking process (the court ruled that it did), the consequenc­e of upholding the policy is that between 70,500 to 126,400 women will lose coverage for cost-free contracept­ive services.

The results of all three cases support the idea that any law applied to a religious group amounts to unconstitu­tional “religious discrimina­tion” if the group opposes the law.

But the premise behind this conception is false. There is ample room for disagreeme­nt over when religious objections should be accommodat­ed, or whether supplying public funding for religious education on equal terms with nonreligio­us education is necessary to religious liberty or threatens it. Many conservati­ves hold that it is necessary. That’s not unreasonab­le.

But to claim that refusing to provide public funding is discrimina­tory is specious, as is the claim that progressiv­e policies are discrimina­tory just because they reject conservati­ve beliefs. These arguments show an inability to distinguis­h between disagreeme­nt and discrimina­tion. Using the democratic process to resolve moral and policy disagreeme­nts is not discrimina­tion, so long as every group gets due considerat­ion.

This false view of discrimina­tion has led to a complete reordering of the two key religion clauses of the 1st Amendment. It has diminished the Establishm­ent Clause principle that prohibits state support for religion and has overinflat­ed the Free Exercise Clause by suggesting that people have the right to do anything their religion requires them to do, even if it poses a risk to public health.

The ascendancy of this position represents the culminatio­n of a movement, strongly backed by evangelica­l Protestant­s, conservati­ve Catholics and Orthodox Jews, that has been steadily gaining ground over the last several decades.

This movement not only accounts for the Supreme Court’s recent decisions; it also holds the key to President Trump’s unshakable support among religious conservati­ves. The Trump administra­tion has made the “restoratio­n” of religious liberty and protection from “religious discrimina­tion” a top priority, appointing justices, judges and agency heads who firmly adhere to this point of view.

For religious conservati­ves, these recent decisions deliver on his promise to protect them from discrimina­tion. For the rest of us, they confuse the notion of religious discrimina­tion, while eroding both the principle of equality and the wall of separation between religion and the state.

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