Thursday, January 23, 2020

Supreme Court To Rule -- Separation of Church and State in Montana



What is “separation of church and state” in the United States? Do most citizens even know more than their own connotation of the legal concept of maintaining a secular state? I believe we would benefit from reviewing the often debated implications of this term.

The exact term is an offshoot of the phrase, "wall of separation between church and state,” as written by Thomas Jefferson in his letter to the Danbury Baptist Association in 1802. In that letter, referencing the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, Jefferson writes:

Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between Man & his God, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, & not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should 'make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,' thus building a wall of separation between Church and State."

Jefferson was describing to the Baptists that the United States Bill of Rights prevents the establishment of a national church, and in so doing they did not have to fear government interference in their right to expressions of religious conscience. Thus, the First Amendment not only allows citizens the freedom to practice any religion of their choice, but also prevents the government from officially recognizing or favoring any religion.

In this same letter, Jefferson explained the intent of the Establishment Clause and Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment to the Constitution, which reads:

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof…”

This, Thomas Jefferson said, built a “wall of separation of church and state.”

The government does not prohibit people from referencing or accommodating religion, nor is the government compelled to scrub all religious references from the public square.

Rather, the First Amendment ensures both that the government does not show preference to a certain religion and that the government does not take away an individual’s ability to exercise religion. In other words, the church should not rule over the state, and the state cannot rule over the church. Religion is too important to be a government program or a political pageant.

The Courts have affirmed this understanding time and time again.

Fast Forward to the U.S. Supreme Court in January 2020

Now, the U.S. Supreme Court's conservative majority seemed ready to invalidate a provision of the Montana state constitution that bars aid to religious schools. Such a decision could work a sea change in constitutional law, significantly removing the longstanding separation between church and state. The case at hand is Espinoza v. Montana. 

The focal point was a ruling by the Montana Supreme Court that struck down a tax subsidy for both religious and nonreligious private schools. The Montana court said that the subsidy violated a state constitutional provision barring any state aid to religious schools, whether direct or indirect.


The case involved a Montana program launched in 2015 to provide tax credits for people and businesses that donate to private schools. The organizations that receive the contributions then give financial aid to parents, who decided which private schools their children should attend.

Thirty-seven other states have no-aid state constitutional provisions similar to Montana's, and for decades, conservative religious groups and school-choice advocates have sought to get rid of them. Now, that seems a little closer.

Nina Totenberg, National Public Radio's award-winning legal affairs correspondent, feels it is important to know a little more about the present justices of the court …

Five of the justices at some time in their lives attended private Catholic schools, and some of them were particularly vocal. Justice Brett Kavanaugh said that the history of excluding religious schools from public funding has its roots in the 'religious bigotry against Catholics' in the late 1800s. He seemed to dismiss arguments made by the state's lawyer that Montana had completely rewritten its constitution in 1972, without any such bias.”

Attorney Mae Nan Ellingson, described as “a pillar of law” and having the distinction of being the youngest delegate to the 1972 Montana Constitutional Convention, said afterward that there were ministers and "people of all faiths" at the convention who overwhelmingly had supported the no-aid provision.

"We didn't think that public funds should be used to support private parochial education but rather that public funds need to support public education," she said. Now, the justices “seem” uninterested in that record.

Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito compared the exclusion of parochial schools from taxpayer-funded aid programs to unconstitutional discrimination based on race – a view suggesting that Wednesday's case has the potential for much broader public funding of parochial schools.

Although the Montana court has treated all private schools the same way and it has invalidated the tax subsidy for all private schools – whether they were religious or not – lawyer Richard Komer, representing the religious parents, maintained that the no-aid provision in the state constitution is itself a violation of the federal constitution. And he also argued that because the state constitution illegally discriminated against religious schools and families, the tax-credit program must be revived.

(Nina Totenberg. “Supreme Court Could Be Headed To A Major Unraveling Of Public School Funding.” NPR. January 23, 2020.)

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg asked how the Montana court’s decision discriminated against religion, since it canceled the scholarship program for all private schools. Justice Ginsburg said …

Under the Montana judgment, these parents are treated no differently than parents of children who are going to secular private schools. So where is the harm?”


Implications For Public Education

With a conservative Supreme Court, here we stand at a crossroads whose course may lead to sweeping changes in laws or constitutional provisions in 37 other states that currently bar public funding for schools and churches.

Are the direct implications of judgment more important than the decision in this case?

The Wall Street Journal reports …

The Supreme Court has been moving away from a strict separation of church and state through opinions that extend religious exemptions from general laws as well as other decisions forbidding government from denying some benefits to religious organizations. Conservative groups backing the Montana suit hope it will pave the way for broader taxpayer subsidy of religious schools through vouchers and other programs.”

Last week, President Trump rolled out guidance to reinforce religious freedom as he seeks to rally evangelical voters. And Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, in particular, has been a vocal advocate for expanding school choice and treating “faith-based education” equally.

However, lawyers for the Montana Department of Revenue argue that Montana's “No-Aid Clause,” prohibiting aid to sectarian schools, was enacted in 1972 to “protect religious liberty” and fulfill the goal of protecting this liberty by “creating a structural barrier between religious schools and government.” They wrote. “By striking down the statute in its entirety, it also ensured that no one is penalized for exercising their faith.”

Katie Reilly reported in Time

Teachers’ unions and some civil rights groups have argued that ruling in favor of the Montana parents would draw funding away from public schools. The American Civil Liberties Union has called the case 'the latest in a disturbing line of cases attacking the very foundations of the separation of church and state.' And GLSEN, which advocates for LGBTQ rights in schools, warned that it could allow public funds to go to schools that discriminate against LGBTQ students and employees.”

I agree with Mark Joseph Stern who wrote in Slate

Christian schools have a right to teach this ideology, and Christian parents have a right to send their children to these schools. But shouldn’t Montana taxpayers also have a right not to subsidize these teachings, which may violate their own religious beliefs or freedom of conscience?”

(Mark Joseph Stern. “The Supreme Court Could Force Taxpayers to Subsidize Religious Schools.” Slate. January 22, 2020.)

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, has called this case an “earthquake” and one that would “turn the First Amendment on its head.”

And, Lily Eskelsen GarcĂ­a, president of the National Education Association, said …

This case is not about improving education for schoolkids, it’s about expanding vouchers, privatization—the systematic effort to dismantle our neighborhood public schools. This represents just the latest stealth political attack on public education, and they’re using the Supreme Court to move their political agenda.”

It certainly seems that way, doesn't it?

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