Tag Archives: Free Exercise Clause

The Only Protected Class — White Evangelicals

For the past several decades, the U.S. Supreme Court has been on a crusade to end the “special status” of minority groups.  While it is abundantly clear that the purpose of the Civil War Amendments and the various Civil Rights Acts were to help, first African-Americans, and then women, achieve equality, the current majority of the U.S. Supreme Court want to act as if the law requires a “color-blind” (and implicitly a “gender-blind”) approach in which any effort by the government (or private institutions) in taking steps to assure that minority and women have a chance at success will be struck down.   Simply put, African-Americans, Hispanics, and women are no longer going to benefit from a “most-favored nation” status in civil rights laws.  On the other hand, the favored group of the Republican Party (White evangelicals) are entitled to such status.

This week saw the new legal order exemplified in three opinions.

First, and most obvious, was the decision in Students” for “Fair” Admissions, Inc, vs. President and Fellows of Harvard College.  While the outcome of the case is not surprising as an exercise in raw power by the six Republicans on the Supreme Court, the bottom line is the equal protection clause and Title VI ban any attempt to help African-Americans overcome centruries of discrimination by giving them a “plus” in consideration for spots at “selective” universities and professional schools.  The opinion does leave a limited exception in recognizing that these universities use essays as part of the admissions process and, of course, free speech would bar the government from implementing a ban on references to the racial background of the applicant in these essays.  The Supreme Court directs, however, that in considering these essays, admissions offices should solely consider how these essays reflect barriers that the applicant has overcome or other aspects of the applicant’s character.  Of course, nothing in the majority opinion bans giving a plus to “legacy” candidates even if legacy candidates will be primarily composed of wealthy whites.  The one positive aspect of these opinions is that, like with last year’s abortion decision, this decision costs Republicans their wedge issue.  For the past fifty years, affirmative action has placed minorities against those with lower levels of white privilege for the last spots in government program and kept both groups from focusing on the slots that were reserved for those with Privilege.  Whether, with affirmative action no longer around, the powers that be in the Republican Party can keep folks from taking a look at the preferences given to the children of alumni and wealth donors that take aways spots from both middle class whites and minorities who actually earned a slot at the top colleges will be a big question going forward. Continue Reading...

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Supreme Court — The Last Week

As we have discussed for the past several weeks, the Supreme Court is nearing the end of its term.  After two opinion days this past week, we are down to ten cases left on the docket (or eight if you treat the two Affirmative Action cases and two student loan cases as one case each).  At this point in time, we know that Tuesday will be an opinion release day.  It is almost certain that there will be opinions on Wednesday or Thursday (or maybe both days).

As noted in past posts, the Supreme Court tries to keep things balanced within each month (i.e. if there are fewer than nine cases to be decided from one of the “monthly” argument sessions, it is highly unlikely that any justice will be assigned multiple opinion) and across the term as a whole.  In the past weeks, we still had enough cases left undecided from March and April to leave things murky.  But things are now looking very clear (with the understanding that authorship can shift if the assigned justice loses the majority or a case gets dismissed).  But none of the cases issued so far look to have flipped and the one dismissed case was not pending long enough to get assigned.

That balance for the term is key for the projection for November and February.  We are likely looking at a total number of opinions for the term in the mid-fifties.  That means that no justice should have more than seven opinions for the term, and, if any justice has seven opinions, the rest should have six opinions. Continue Reading...

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Supreme Court — October 2022 Term — First Look at the Remaining Cases

It’s the first full week of June.  And that means that the clock is rapidly ticking to the end of this year’s Supreme Court term.  By custom, the Supreme Court tries to issue all of the opinions from the term before the Fourth of July holiday.  (It then spends the last three months of the term handling emergency motions and preparing for the next term.)

As we look ahead, some basics about how the Supreme Court operates.  During the argument portion of the term, the Supreme Court holds seven “monthly” — October through April — argument sessions (not quite as sessions often occur partly in two months but that is the convention used to describe the sessions).  In each session, the court hears arguments on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday (with some days skipped for federal and religious holidays).  Then on Friday, they discuss that week’s cases (along with applications for review) and take a tentative vote on each case.  After the vote, the “senior justice in the majority” (either the Chief Justice or the longest serving Associate Justice in the majority if the Chief Justice is the minority) chooses which justice gets to write the first draft of the opinion.  Typically, the justices assigning the opinions try to assure a balanced assignment of cases within the session (i.e., if there were nine cases, each justice would get one opinion to write) and across the term as a whole.   When we reach this point of the term, we have enough opinions from individual argument sessions to try to guess who will have the opinion.

Starting with October, we are down to one outstanding case — the Alabama voting rights case.    The bad news is that there are only two justices without an opinion from October — the Chief Justice and Justice Thomas.  It is slightly more likely that the Chief Justice has the case   He tends to like writing election cases.  While both are very likely to write an opinion that would undermine the Voting Rights Act, Justice Thomas is more likely to want to write an opinion that reverses the decision entirely (with no further proceedings) and the Chief Justice is more likely to send it back to the trial court for further consideration (in light of a standard which allows Alabama to dilute minority votes) so there is a slim chance that the Chief Justice ended up on the wrong side of a 5-4 split.  But my hunch is a 6-3 opinion that ignores the plain language of the Voting Rights Act. Continue Reading...

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Supreme Court — October Term 2022 Preview (Part 2)

The Supreme Court begins its annual term this upcoming Monday, October 3.  Unofficially, the term begins later today when the Supreme Court holds its opening conference (at which it will start selecting the cases that will start to fill out its January and February argument sessions).  In Part 1, we covered the cases that have been scheduled for argument in October and November.  In this post, we will cover the cases that were previously accepted for argument back in the Spring but which have yet to be assigned to an argument docket (as of yesterday).  Any day now, we should have a list of the December cases (which will actually begin on November 28 and be half in November and half in December).

Percoco vs. United States and Ciminelli vs. United States are related cases involving bidding fraud and government contracting.  One aspect of the cases is whether a lobbyist with political connections (here a former campaign manager) can be found guilty for “honest services fraud” (a means of holding elected officials liable for their part in going along with fraud).

Moore vs. Harper may be the biggest election law case of the term.  The Constitution grants initial power over federal elections to state legislatures.  The two elections clauses — one for congressional elections and one for the choosing of presidential elections — have typically been interpreted as referring to the state legislative power rather than specific bodies (recognizing that, even in the 1780s, there were differences between the states in how they structured their governments).  This traditional interpretation recognized that the people of the states had the authority to enact restrictions on election laws in their state constitutions.  In recent years, conservatives have come up with the “independent state legislature” theory.  Under this theory, the federal elections clauses granted power to the state legislatures that are beyond the control of state constitutions and state laws and rules.  In relevant part, absent an express grant in the state election laws, this theory contends that state courts may not invalidate state elections laws related to federal elections based on state constitutions and that state executive branch officials may not deviate from the express commands in those state elections laws.  This case arises in the context of congressional redistricting, but the theory of the North Carolina legislature would open up a convoluted mess of when a court or an election authority is merely interpreting the relevant state statues and when they are altering it. Continue Reading...

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The Most Dangerous Branch — End of Term Reflections

In the Federalist Papers, the Judiciary was called the “Least Dangerous Branch.”  The thought was that the Supreme Court relied on the other branches to follow through on court orders.  However, in our legal system, court orders are usually obeyed.  And, between gerrymandering, filibusters, and the equality of the states in the Senate, it is very hard to get the types of majorities that allow real change in the “political” branches.  Courts, however, simply require a majority to act.  And the relentless campaign of the far right has left us with a Supreme Court that borders on being as political as any other branch of government.  That is not to say that every decision is political.  There are lots of legal issues that are not partisan in nature.  And there are some issues that split conservatives.  However, on this Court, when there is a clear partisan divide over an issue, the result is a foregone conclusion regardless of what the true facts and precedent dictate.    The last week of the term gave us three cases in which Senator Mitch McConnell’s abuse of Senate rules resulted in rulings that we would not have gotten in 2015.

The first case is Kennedy v. Bremerton School District.  What makes this case significant is that this case is ultimately about what version of the facts one chooses to belief.  The normal rule is that appellate courts take the facts as found by the lower courts or in the light most favorable to the lower court.  In this case, however, a major conflict between the two opinions is their characterization of the facts.  The majority sees the practice of the petitioner — a public high school coach kneeling on the football field at the end or the game — as a private act of worship.  The dissent (and the lower courts) saw the act as a public display by a government employee in the course of his employment.  The normal practice when the case is this fact-dependent and the facts are unclear is to “dismiss as improvidently granted.”  Instead, the majority picks and chooses the disputed evidence that supports the legal rules that it wishes to establish notwithstanding compelling evidence supporting a contrary reading of what happened.  In doing so, the Supreme Court announces that the Lemon test for the Establishment Clause has been discarded (as well as other tests for an Establishment Clause violation) and replaced by (wait for it) a historical analysis of what would have been considered an establishment of religion.  It should shock nobody that this approach means that very little will be a violation of the Establishment Clause.  With the Establishment Clause neutered, that just leaves the Free Exercise Clause and the Free Speech Clause.  Given the fact that the Supreme Court has greatly expanded the impact of these two clauses, the end result for the forces of protecting the rights of Christian Theocrats over the rights of everybody else is a foregone conclusion.

The second case Oklahoma v. Castro=Huerta.  This case involves criminal jurisdiction on tribal lands in Oklahoma.  Several years ago, in a 5-4 decision (with Justice Ginsburg) on the Supreme Court, Justice Gorsuch and the four liberal justices ruled that no treaty or act by Congress ever formally disestablished the native reservations in Eastern Oklahoma even as non-Natives bought the land on the reservation.  As such, the lands were still legally part of those reservations.  Under federal statute, crimes by natives against natives on reservations have to be tried in tribal court or federal court (depending on the offense).  The new case involved crimes against natives by non-natives.  With Justice Barrett instead of Justice Ginsburg, there were five votes against tribal authority and in favor of state authority.  As such, the majority — thanks to a rushed confirmation by Senator McConnell in the fall of 2020 — found that Oklahoma also had the authority to try such cases in state court.   Now, both this decision and the earlier decision are based on statutes.  In theory, Congress could fix the laws related to the relationship between tribal authority and state authority to fix the issues brought out by cases (or actually appropriate the money to hire enough prosecutors, public defenders, and judges to handle a large number of cases on tribal lands in Oklahoma), but the deadlock in Congress makes this highly unlikely. Continue Reading...

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The Supreme Court — Faux Originalism and the Reactionary Ascendency

This is a hard week to post about.  There were three opinion days this week.  And each one featured a new decision that ripped at the fabric of modern society and featured a rewriting of history in the service of originalism to allow the reactionary members of the court to push through an agenda that lacks electoral support based on a misreading of the Constitution.

Tuesday started off the week with Carson vs. Makinthe Maine school voucher case.   Traditionally, there have been two prongs to the Free Exercise Clause — one prong involves the power to follow one’s religious beliefs without penalty and the other prong involves discrimination based on religion.  Posed against the Free Exercise Clause is the Establishment Clause which forbids the government from establishing an official religion or religions.  Traditionally, the big fights have been in the “no penalty” prong.

On the penalizing religion prong, the battle has always been the reasonableness of the proposed accommodations measured against the significance of the government interest.  And in the late 1980s, after one of the low points of religious freedom in which Justice Scalia basically limited this prong to the right to have beliefs without penalty for those beliefs (but no right to act on those beliefs), Congress overreacted by enacting the Religious Freedom Restoration Act which went to the other extreme.  The RFRA and the Free Exercise Clause are on the verge of being interpreted as allowing people to claim religious exemptions from civil rights laws.  And we are likely to see another case in this prong later this week allowing a coach at a public school to pray publicly while on the job at a school function. Continue Reading...

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Supreme Court — End of Term Preview 2022

Normally, by this time of the year, the Supreme Court term is coming into focus.  With three weeks to go, typically, there is one or two cases left from the Fall.   While there are always question marks, it is possible to try to figure out results in the key case by who is in the running for getting the remaining opinions from a month.

This year is different.  There are still 29 opinions outstanding out of 62 cases.  While there have been years with more opinions outstanding heading into the last three weeks, those years were back when the Supreme Court was hearing a lot more cases per year.

To date, almost all of the opinions have been in cases that (other than the parties) mostly interested those practicing in that field.  The biggest attention getting case was the decision reinstating (at least for now) the death penalty against the surviving Boston Marathon bomber.  The legally biggest case of the year so far also came from Boston in a Free Exercise/Free Speech case involving Boston’s refusal to let a Christian group use one of the city’s flagpoles in connection with an event even though it routinely gave such permission to nonreligious groups.  That decision may be an indicator of the likely result in some of the remaining cases, but it was merely a continuation of the recent trend in Free Exercise cases. Continue Reading...

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Supreme Court October Term 2021 — Part II

Last week, we took a look at the upcoming Supreme Court Term with a focus on the cases scheduled for the October and November argument sessions.  This week, we take a look at the cases set for December and those with no argument date yet (most likely January) with some comments on pending applications.

The big case on the December docket is Hobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization — the Mississippi abortion case.  Putting the media hype to the side, the technical issue is “whether all pre-viability prohibitions on elective abortions are unconstitutional.”   Roe and Casey both allow some pre-viability restrictions on abortion.  What they do not allow is a pre-viability ban on all abortions.  The real issue for this case will be how the majority tries to chip away at Roe and Casey to allow more restrictions on abortion.  My expectation is for some plurality opinion written by the Chief Justice or Justice Kavanaugh that makes it likely that the lower courts will nominally uphold Roe and strike down this statute while making it easier for states to regulate abortion in ways that will make it harder for women to get abortions in red states.

There are a couple of cases involving Medicare reimbursements.  One of these two cases involves issues of Chevron deference — the principle that, if a statute is ambiguous, courts should defer to the interpretation made by agency charged with applying the statute.  Conservatives have been chipping away at Chevron deference for many years.  The typical approach has been to use the tools of statutory construction to find that the statute is not ambiguous.  In this approach, Chevron deference is a tie-breaker at the end of the interpretive process, and you rarely get a tie at the end of the interpretive process. Continue Reading...

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Supreme Court — Thursday Blockbusters

Normally, at this time of the year, I am posting a look at the big cases to be decided in the last two to three weeks.  I got a little delayed this year by the redistricting posts, and  The Supreme Court beat me to the punch by releasing two of the biggest opinions of the term  — Texas vs. California and Fulton vs. Philadelphia.  

Texas is the latest, and hopefully last, round of the Republicans attempts to use the courts to accomplish what they can’t do in Congress — repeal the Affordable Care Act.  The latest theory was that, by repealing the tax penalty that is part of the individual mandate, Congress effectively repealed the entire Affordable Care Act.

Understanding the issues in the case requires a brief detour into the back history of the case and some basic things that most lawyers learn in law school (but which the dissent kindly forgets).  Before the New Deal, there were a lot of doctrines that a conservative Supreme Court used to block progressive legislation.  And, as will be discussed in the post on the remaining cases, it is important to understand that many in the Federalist Society think that the “Old Court” got it right and oppose the changes that the Supreme Court made in the 1940s to those doctrines.  One of those changes was a much broader definition of the power of the federal government to regulate economic matters under the Commerce Clause.  And when the Affordable Care Act was enacted, most thought that the individual mandate was authorized by the Commerce Clause.  And when the Republicans first challenged the individual mandate, the defense of the mandate relied, in part, on its significance in the overall scheme.  Unfortunately for the future of the Affordable Care Act, when the Supreme Court first analyzed the Affordable Care Act, the Chief Justice sided with the conservatives on the Commerce Clause issue but was willing to find that it was authorized as a tax.  When Republicans managed to repeal the tax in 2017, conservatives saw an opportunity to use that repeal to take a second run at the individual mandate and the Affordable Care Act. Continue Reading...

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October Term 2020 — Supreme Court Preview (Part One)

Last night, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg lost her fight against cancer.  In the upcoming days, much will be written commemorating her long fight for justice.  Much will also be written about the politics of appointing her replacement (and I will almost certainly be putting in my two cents).  But very little pauses the Supreme Court calendar, and the Supreme Court’s term effectively begins next week when the justices will meet (either with appropriate social distancing in a large conference room or via teleconferencing) for the annual “long” conference that reviews all of the applications for review that have piled up over the summer.  The following week — on the First Monday in October — the Supreme Court will commence hearing argument on this term’s cases.

Before starting a look at the cases on the docket, three key things to note.  First, until the Ginsburg vacancy is filled, there will only be eight justices on a case (barring a recusal).  That creates the possibility of a 4-4 tie.  In the case of a 4-4 tie, there are two options.  On the one hand, the Supreme Court can “affirm by an equally divided court.”  Such a decision leaves the lower court ruling in place for the parties involved in the case, but is not a precedent for future cases.  On the other hand, the Supreme Court can set the case for re-argument when there is a full court.  It is really up to the justices to decide which option to take.   Second, who ultimately fills the vacancy will impact the outcome of a small number of cases, but those cases tend to be the most significant.  Third, at least for the October argument session (the Supreme Court term typically consists of seven argument sessions of two weeks each) and probably for most of this term, the Supreme Court will be holding its arguments by teleconference with each justice, taking turns by seniority, getting approximately three minutes per party to ask questions to the attorney.  The audio from these arguments will be livestreamed by several news organizations.

October is likely to be the calm before the storm.  Back last Spring, the Supreme Court had to cancel the March and April argument sessions.  The Supreme Court decided to hold a special May argument session, but only put the most important (and politically sensitive) cases into that argument session.  That left about half of the cases that would have been heard in March or April on the docket.  Those cases are being heard in October.  The biggest case in October is probably the first case up for argument — Carney v. Adams.  This case arises from Delaware.  Delaware requires that judges on the top three courts be balanced with no more than a one-judge majority for either major party with the other judges coming from the other major party.  So, on a seven judge court, there would likely be four Democratic judges and three Republican judges.   The claim presented to the Supreme Court is that conditioning eligibility for a judicial vacancy on an applicant’s partisan affiliation violates the First Amendment rights of potential judicial applicants. Continue Reading...

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