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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums(When) Will SCOTUS Hold that the Establishment Clause Violates the Free Exercise Clause?
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Eric Segall
@espinsegall
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Read @dorfonlaw: "the brakes on the movement to displace the Establishment Clause with a hyper-charged Free Exercise Clause are less a matter of logic than what the 6 conservatives...think the American public....will tolerate." http://dorfonlaw.org/2022/06/when-will-scotus-hold-that.html
9:26 AM · Jun 22, 2022
Eric Segall
@espinsegall
·
Follow
Read @dorfonlaw: "the brakes on the movement to displace the Establishment Clause with a hyper-charged Free Exercise Clause are less a matter of logic than what the 6 conservatives...think the American public....will tolerate." http://dorfonlaw.org/2022/06/when-will-scotus-hold-that.html
9:26 AM · Jun 22, 2022
http://www.dorfonlaw.org/2022/06/when-will-scotus-hold-that.html
Because of its low population density, Maine cannot afford to provide local public schools for all children in the state. Instead, parents of students in various rural districts throughout the state can receive tuition assistance (what I'll call vouchers) to pay for (some, most, or all of, depending on tuition) their children's education at an accredited private school, so long as the education the school provides is "nonsectarian," i.e., not religious. Until twenty years ago--when the Supreme Court decided Zelman v. Simmons-Harris--it would have been very plausible to argue that Maine's exclusion of religious schools from its voucher program was constitutionally required by the First Amendment's Establishment Clause. Zelman rejected that view and upheld what the Court deemed a neutrally structured system of vouchers that were redeemable at religious along with secular schools. Yesterday's 6-3 ruling in Carson v. Makin held that the state's failure to fund religious schools through its vouchers program is itself an unconstitutional violation of the parents' right to free exercise.
Thus, in the space of two decades, education vouchers redeemable at private religious schools went from (1) arguably unconstitutional as a violation of a core no-aid-to-religion principle to (2) constitutionally permissible if vouchers are also redeemable at secular private schools to (3) constitutionally mandated if vouchers are also redeemable at secular private schools. Or as Justice Sotomayor put the point in her dissent yesterday, "the Court leads us to a place where separation of church and state becomes a constitutional violation."
As both Justice Sotomayor's dissent and a separate dissent by Justice Breyer (joined in whole by Justice Kagan and in substantial part by Justice Sotomayor) made clear, Carson appears to mark the effective end of a concept known as "play in the joints," according to which federal, state, and local government officials have some freedom to choose policies implicating religion that violate neither the Free Exercise Clause nor the Establishment Clause. Although the majority opinion of Chief Justice Roberts cites and does not purport to overrule leading play-in-the-joints cases like Locke v. Davey, he essentially confines those cases to their facts.
The dissenters (and I) lament the apparent demise of play-in-the-joints because that demise erodes democracy and federalism by judicializing all the difficult line-drawing issues in this area. But the fate of play-in-the-joints is ultimately less important than the larger process seemingly at work in Carson and other recent cases. After all, we can envision a regime that retains some space for play-in-the-joints but nearly eviscerates the Establishment Clause.
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