Marriage
Equality and Religious Liberty
by
Adrienne Fulco
On June 26, after months of robust
public debate, two full days of oral argument, and blanket media coverage,
the Supreme Court issued opinions in two same-sex marriage cases,
Hollingsworth v. Perry and U.S. v. Windsor. The cases generated a
record 156 amicus curiae (friend of the court) briefs, of which more
than 30 were filed by a broad array of religious and faith-based
organizations.
The religious briefs included as
signatories, among others: the Becket Foundation for Religious Liberty,
Catholics for the Common Good, the National Association of Evangelicals, the
Southern Baptist Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the Evangelical Lutheran Church of
America, the Thomas More Law Center, the Family Research Council, the United
States Council of Catholic Bishops, the American Humanist Association, the
American Jewish Committee, the Bishops of the Episcopal Church (11 states),
the Anti-Defamation League, and the California Council of Churches. Not to
mention the Westboro Baptist Church.
In other words, it’s fair to say that
most of the organized American religious world expressed its opinion on
same-sex marriage to the court. But was the court listening?
There is little evidence to suggest
that this avalanche of amicus submissions affected the justices in
either case. A review of the citations to legal briefs in the court’s
opinions reveals that no references were made to any of the legal briefs
filed by religious organizations.
The lack of impact can be explained in
part by the fact that Hollingsworth v. Perry, which mounted a direct
constitutional challenge to California’s ban on same-sex marriage, was not
decided on the merits. Instead, the Court determined that Dennis
Hollingsworth, the Republican state senator who represented supporters of
the ban, did not have standing to bring the case before the Court. As a
result, the Court gave no indication of how it might have incorporated the
legal arguments about the constitutional status of bans on same-sex marriage
presented in the 96 amicus briefs filed in the case, including those
of the religious organizations.
The Court did, however, address the
merits in U.S. v. Windsor, which involved the claim of 84-year-old
Edith Windsor that Section 3 of the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA)
denied her the right to be exempt from paying income taxes on the
inheritance left to her by her same-sex spouse of 40 years. Windsor’s
contention was that by preventing legally married same-sex couples from
receiving federal benefits, DOMA was discriminatory and should be found
unconstitutional.
Although the Windsor case did
not require the Court to reach a conclusion about the constitutional status
of same-sex marriage per se, in a close 5-4 decision authored by Justice
Anthony Kennedy, DOMA was found to be unconstitutional because it violates
the equal protection and due process rights guaranteed to all by the
Constitution. According to Justice Kennedy, “DOMA’s avowed purpose and
practical effect are to impose a disadvantage, a separate status, and so a
stigma upon all who enter into same-sex marriages made lawful by the
unquestioned the authority of the states, and the principal effect is to
identify and make unequal a subset of state-sanctioned marriages.”
Kennedy went on to say, “What has been
explained to this point should more than suffice to establish that the
principal purpose and the necessary effect of this law are to demean those
persons who are in a lawful same-sex marriage.” He concluded that the court
was therefore required “to hold, as it now does, that Section 3 of DOMA is
unconstitutional as a deprivation of the liberty of the person protected by
the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution.”
In a dramatic victory for Edith Windsor
and the opponents of DOMA, the court’s majority thus established that
same-sex couples are entitled to all federal benefits that previously had
been withheld from them. But it is important to emphasize that the court did
not engage the arguments made by religious organizations and faith groups in
their amicus briefs concerning the question of whether same-sex
marriage is a fundamental constitutional right. In Windsor as in
Perry, neither the majority nor the dissenters referenced those briefs
even though Justice Scalia’s opinion in the Windsor case certainly coincides
with views expressed by many of religious groups who argued that DOMA should
be sustained.
Tempting as it may be to dismiss the
amicus briefs filed by faith groups and their affiliates in these cases
as little more than public relations exercises, in fact they establish the
battle lines in a war over constitutional rights that will be fought over a
series of upcoming cases, including the contentious contraception mandate of
the Affordable Care Act.
Those on the conservative
side—including the Becket Foundation, the National Association of
Evangelicals, the Southern Baptist Convention, and the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints—contend in the Perry case that
California’s Proposition 8 referendum banning same-sex marriage was properly
enacted by a democratic majority; that the state of California has a
legitimate interest in reserving marriage to heterosexuals; that the charge
that Proposition 8 supporters are animated by bigotry or hate is false; that
heterosexual marriage as the foundation of society; and that the state has
the power to base laws on religious and moral teaching.
But the crux of their argument lies
elsewhere—with religious liberty. It is most clearly laid out in the
double-barreled Becket brief, which covers both cases in 188 pages.
The same-sex marriage debate, the brief
begins, is “best resolved not by judicial decree, but by the legislative
process, which is more adept at balancing societal interests, including
religious liberty.” What follows is an elaborate exploration of the ways in
which religious liberty will be imperiled if the court finds California’s
ban on same-sex marriage to be unconstitutional.
Religious institutions and individuals
that object “will face an increased risk of lawsuits under federal, state,
and local anti-discrimination laws, subjecting religious organizations to
substantial civil liability if they chose to practice their religious
beliefs.” Moreover, “religious institutions and individuals will face a
range of penalties from federal state and local government, such as denial
of access to public facilities, loss of accreditation and licensing, and the
targeted withdrawal of government contract and benefits.”
The bottom line: “These foreseeable
conflicts implicate the fundamental First Amendment rights of religious
institutions, including the rights of freedom of religion and freedom of
association.” Those individuals and institutions that have “conscientious
objections” to same-sex marriage thus face threats to their religious
liberty from public accommodation laws, public housing laws, and employment
discrimination laws.
The anti-discrimination laws
discrimination will, Becket asserts, open up new avenues of civil liability
because a court decision cannot carve out the kinds of exemptions than only
a legislature acting on these matters can properly address. For that reason,
the courts should not decide the issue.
With respect to the penalties that
state and local governments might apply to religious dissenters, Becket
anticipates exclusion from government facilities and forums, loss of
licenses or accreditation, disqualification from government grants and
contracts, loss of state and local tax exemptions, and loss of educational
and employment opportunities. To support this argument, the brief includes a
101-page index with supporting evidence for each category and applicable
state laws.
But what about Employment Division
v. Smith, the 1990 decision that declared that “neutral and generally
applicable laws” could not be challenged as violations of the First
Amendment’s protection of religious liberty? Wouldn’t that render same-sex
marriage proof against religious liberty claims?
To the contrary, Becket argues,
Smith “specifically invited states to consider protections for religious
activity that go beyond what the Free Exercise Clause protects.” It was
therefore rational for California voters to enact Proposition 8 as a means
of doing so.
Becket closes by urging the court not
to strike down Proposition 8 and DOMA but instead leave same-sex marriage to
legislatures—the only institutions fully capable of “arriving at workable
compromises regarding religious liberty.” Only then will the justices avoid
generating another irreconcilable conflict as they did by “freezing the
debate” over abortion in 1973 with Roe v. Wade, which has generated
litigation ever since.
Common claims are also made on the
liberal side, in the briefs of such organizations as the Anti-Defamation
League, the American Jewish Committee, and the American Humanist
Association. These sketch a history of society’s changing views of same-sex
marriage, insist on a fully secular reading of the Constitution, and use the
14th Amendment’s guarantees of equal protection and due process
to argue for a right to same-sex marriage.
Most importantly, several of the briefs
directly address the religious liberty arguments made by Becket.
Stating that it is “principally devoted
to the serious issues of religious liberty that arise in the wake of
same-sex marriages,” the American Jewish Committee (AJC) brief by Marc
Stern, Douglas Laycock, and Thomas Berg rejects the idea of prohibiting
same-sex marriage in order to protect religious liberty because in their
view “[n]o one can have a right to deprive others of their important liberty
as a prophylactic means of protecting his own.”
“The proper response to the mostly
avoidable conflict between gay rights and religious liberty is to protect
the liberty of both sides,” the AJC argues, going on to remind the court of
the “doctrinal tools available to protect religious liberty with respect to
marriage,” including the “ministerial exception established” last year in
Hosanna-Tabor v. EEOC that prevents the government from “’interfer[ing]
with an internal church decision that affects the faith and mission of the
church itself.’”
Recognizing that conflicts with
anti-discrimination laws can arise when religious organizations offer
services to the general public and engage in “external” aspects of their
mission, the AJC then explores the meaning of the “neutral and generally
applicable” rule created in Employment Division v. Smith. If, for
example, an anti-discrimination law provides for secular exceptions, similar
exceptions must be made for religious conscience claims of individuals or
organizations.
Moreover, the AJC argues, should the
Defense of Marriage Act be overturned, the 1993 Religious Freedom
Restoration Act “will protect against any substantial burdens imposed on
religious liberty.” The brief concludes by recommending that in an
appropriate future case “the Court should be open to reconsidering the rule
announced in Employment Division v. Smith” to clarify the issues
associated with religious objections to same-sex marriage.
Taking a different approach to
the issues raised by Becket and other conservative faith groups, the
amicus brief submitted by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) emphasizes
the way in which justifications rooted in religious and moral disapproval
have resulted in discriminatory treatment of minority groups. The ADL
maintains that slavery, segregation, and bans on interracial marriage have
all been repudiated because “[r]eligious justifications for discriminatory
laws vanish as popular support for those forms of discrimination fade.”
In addition, the ADL contends that as
public opinion and attitudes change, “this Court no longer relies on
religious and moral disapproval alone to uphold laws, particularly laws
burdening minority groups.” As evidence, the brief points out that Justice
Anthony Kennedy’s majority opinion in Lawrence v. Texas (2003), which
struck down a Texas law that criminalized same-sex sodomy, relied in part on
the principle that the “[g]overnment may not act against a particular
group based solely on a majority’s view of what morality or religion
commands” [emphasis in the original].
The court thus “reaffirmed an essential
constitutional principle: that enforcing majoritarian morals, standing
alone, offers no rational basis for a law that disfavors unpopular groups.”
For that reason, “the religious and morality based arguments advanced by the
Petitioner’s amici in the same-sex marriage cases lack persuasive
power.”
Finally, the ADL turns to religious
freedom:
No matter how framed, the religious
freedom argument can gain no traction in a case, like this one, involving a
challenge to a discriminatory law; this Court is not in the habit of
upholding discriminatory laws to protect religious prerogatives. Amici
would do better to recognize that religious liberty is best safeguarded
when religious groups retain the freedom to define religious marriage for
themselves, remembering that civil marriage is an institution of the
government, which is prohibited from establishing laws reflecting particular
religious viewpoints” [emphasis in original].
According to the ADL, in other words,
religious freedom can only be protected if no particular view of religious
marriage is enshrined in government policy and civil law, as would be the
case if the Court upheld Proposition 8’s limitation of marriage to
heterosexuals.
The arguments about religious freedom
proffered by the various amici in the same-sex marriage cases
received little attention from the news media prior to the Court’s decision
in June. What’s important to recognize is that the same arguments will be
front and center in cases now making their way onto the Court’s docket.
As the ADL made clear, the old
morality-based arguments deployed by religious advocacy groups in the past
were refuted by Justice Kennedy in Lawrence v. Texas and so no longer
constitute credible legal discourse—as Justice Antonin Scalia acknowledged
by writing, in his Lawrence dissent, that the decision
“effectively
decrees the end
of all morals
legislation.”
Conservative
religious advocacy groups have thus been deprived of one of their most
potent lines of argument in cases that pit the rights of religious believers
against the claims of those who assert that the very exercise of those
rights constitutes discrimination. It is for that reason that several of the
more seasoned conservative religious advocacy groups have pivoted to the
religious freedom argument.
To the extent
that arguments about discrimination can be turned into arguments about the
religious freedom of those who are accused of doing the discriminating, the
court will be called upon to do something very different from weighing the
strength of particular, religiously based moral claims.
When Becket
argues that the recognition of same-sex marriage threatens the religious
liberty of sectarian organizations and individual believers, it challenges
the court to decide whether same-sex couples or religious believers have a
stronger constitutional claim. Looking ahead, it is clear that the meaning
of religious liberty will frame the arguments of some of the most important
matters coming before the Court, most notably the contraception mandate in
the Affordable Care Act, which requires businesses and non-profit
organizations to include contraceptive coverage for female employees.
Not
surprisingly, Becket is spearheading efforts to challenge this provision,
claiming that the mandate violates the religious liberty of both business
owners and non-profit organizations that oppose contraception on religious
grounds. Becket has brought suit on behalf of a variety of Catholic
organizations and is seeking class action status for them.
As of now,
two federal appeals courts have issued contradictory rulings on the question
of whether for-profit, secular companies can avoid the mandate by way
of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. Meanwhile,
the federal
government has filed a petition asking the justices to resolve the question.
“I think it’s likely the Supreme Court
is going to end up deciding this thing,”
Mark Rienzi,
Becket’s senior counsel for Becket, told The Hill in August. There’s
every reason to think he’s right. |