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Religious Freedom

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Lemon v. Kurtzman/Earley v. DiCenso (1971) ... Lawsuit filed by Alton Lemon, a taxpayer and father of a child in public school. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Religious Freedom


1
Religious Freedom
  • The Establishment Clause

2
Establishment Clause Jurisprudence
  • The Court's decisions here tend to be the most
    controversial and the most and inconsistent in
    terms of legal reasoning.
  • A few important cases in the 1940's but most
    establishment clause cases came to the court
    starting in the 1960's to date.

3
Underlying judicial reasoning
  • 1. to avoid denominational hostilities among a
    heterogeneous population.
  • 2. a concern with religion staying private and
    personal.
  • 3. respect for feelings of the few who may be
    ostracized because of unconventional religious
    beliefs.

4
Wall of separation between Church and State
  • What does this phrase mean? That is
  • How did Jefferson mean it in the famous 1802
    letter to the Danbury Baptists?
  • How did other framers understand the
    establishment clause?

5
Wall of separation between Church and State
  • What does this phrase mean?
  • Separatist a solid wall of separation between
    religion and government (church state).
  • Accommodationist (2 versions)
  • Nondiscriminatory support or aid of all religions
    constitutionally permissible.
  • Establishment Clause only bars the adoption of an
    official national religion.

6
Original intent of framers
  • Many studies have shown that the framers
    disagreed on the meaning of establishment, but
    the majority likely agreed with an
    accommodationist position, as the text notes (p.
    145).
  • Yet those who were most influential in drafting
    the 1st Amendment Jefferson Madison were
    separatists.
  • Therefore, it is difficult to use the intent of
    the framers as a guideline.

7
Two perspectives on establishment framers intent
  • Non-preferentialist consistent with the
    accommodationist position
  • Preferentialist consistent with the separatist
    position.

8
Non-preferentialists
  • Non-preferentialists argue that the framers did
    not intend to end government support of religion,
    only support that gives preference to one
    denomination over another.
  • They argue that many court rulings instead of
    being neutral to religion, have been hostile,
    with government favoring non-religion over
    religion. To be neutral, government should
    support religious activities the same as it
    supports nonreligious.

9
Non-preferentialists
  • In addition, they believe the framers intended
    for the 1st Amendment only to bar the
    establishment of a national church. Federal
    action that benefits several religions is
    permissible.
  • They argue that the framers saw religion as
    important to government, because it instills
    important civic values like honesty. You can see
    this reasoning in the dissent of Justices Burger
    and Rehnquist in Wallace v. Jaffree.

10
Preferentialists
  • Preferentialists argue that at the time of the
    framing of the 1st Amendment, state governments
    already were rejecting formal church
    establishment, but most still provided aid to
    churches on a non-preferential basis. This was
    the status quo situation that the framers
    intended to restrict. Otherwise, there would have
    been no need to add this provision in the Bill of
    Rights.
  • They believe that government should be neutral
    between religion and non-religion.

11
Preferentialists
  • Appears to have been Madisons view, both while
    he was in Virginia and later in the White House.
    Like Jefferson, he opposed setting up a national
    holiday to thank God (Thanksgiving) and the
    appointment of chaplains for Congress and the
    military, on the grounds that they violated the
    establishment clause.

12
Everson v. Board of Education (1947)
  • Facts of the case

13
Everson v. Board of Education (1947)
  • Facts of the case
  • A New Jersey law permitted local school boards to
    cover transportation costs for children attending
    either public or private nonprofit schools. One
    town reimbursed parents for transportation costs
    to its four Catholic schools. Taxpayer Arch
    Everson filed a suit against the board of
    education, challenging this as a violation of the
    establishment clause.

14
Everson v. Board of Education (1947)
  • Court ruling

15
Everson v. Board of Education (1947)
  • Court ruling 5/4 not a violation.
  • Court reasoning authored by Justice Black.

16
Everson v. Board of Education (1947)
  • Court reasoning The establishment clause means
    government cant set up a church, pass laws to
    aid one religion or all religions, give
    preference to a religion, levy a tax, compel
    church attendance, etc. In the words of
    Jefferson, the clause was intended to erect a
    wall of separation between church and State....
    that must be kept high and impregnable. In this
    case, he ruled, the wall had not been breached.
    The program was general and benefited children.
    Black drew a parallel with police and firemen
    providing services.

17
Everson v. Board of Education (1947)
  • Dissents?

18
Everson v. Board of Education (1947)
  • Dissent (Jackson) Majority ignores how key
    education is to the Catholic faith. This aid is
    the same as if given directly to the Church.
    Program is not neutral because it covers only
    public or private Catholic schools (not private
    secular or other religion). The analogy about
    firemen and police is flawed. The true analogy
    is if the police shall protect pupils on the way
    to or from public schools and Catholic schools
    but not while going to or coming from other
    schools. The tax benefit essentially sets up a
    religious test.

19
Everson v. Board of Education (1947)
  • Dissent (Rutledge) Any law respecting an
    establishment of religion is forbidden. The 1st
    amendment requires a complete and permanent
    separation of the spheres of religious activity
    and civil authority. Free exercise
    establishment clauses correlate, and any
    government tax support interferes with individual
    free exercise. These funds raised by taxation
    used to encourage religious instruction.

20
Everson ruling outcomes
  • Applied the Establishment Clause to the states
    through the 14th amendment.
  • Stressed certain core ideas wall of separation
    in general, but Court would consider if purpose
    of the aid is secular beneficiaries are
    children, not religious institutions state is
    neutral in relations between believers and
    non-believers.
  • Illustrated how controversial this area would
    become (text, pp. 151-152).

21
Everson test different rulings
  • Court sent mixed signals after Everson.
  • Table 4-1 In the seven establishment clause
    cases from 1947 to 1968, half reflected an
    accommodationist view and half a separatist view.
  • Emerging test articulated in Abington Township v.
    Schempp (1963)

22
Emerging test in Abington Township
  • Two questions
  • What is the purpose of the law?
  • What is the primary effect of the law?
  • To be constitutional, it must have a secular
    legislative purpose and neither advance nor
    inhibit religion.

23
Emerging test after Walz v. Tax Commission of NYC
(1970)
  • The Burger Courts first establishment case
    upheld a state property tax exemption for
    religious institutions against a taxpayer
    challenge. Burger introduced a third question
    was there an excessive government entanglement
    with religion? In this case, the entanglement
    greater if no tax exemption. The exemption
    reinforced the separation between government and
    religion.

24
Lemon v. Kurtzman/Earley v. DiCenso (1971)
  • Facts of the case

25
Lemon v. Kurtzman/Earley v. DiCenso (1971)
  • Facts of the case Pennsylvania state law
    reimbursed nonpublic schools for teaching
    salaries, books and secular instructional
    materials for courses in math, language and
    physical education. Lawsuit filed by Alton
    Lemon, a taxpayer and father of a child in public
    school.
  • Rhode Island supplemented the salary of nonpublic
    school teachers who agreed not to teach religious
    subjects. It turned out that all worked at
    Catholic schools. Program challenged by the
    American Jewish Congress.

26
Lemon v. Kurtzman/Earley v. DiCenso (1971)
  • Court ruling 8-0 8-1 to strike down the laws.
  • Court reasoning

27
Lemon v. Kurtzman/Earley v. DiCenso (1971)
  • Court reasoning Burger brought together the
    three criteria in earlier cases to create the
    Lemon test
  • 1. the statute must have a secular legislative
    purpose.
  • 2. its primary effect must be one that neither
    advances nor inhibits religion.
  • 3. it must not foster an excessive government
    entanglement with religion.
  • Where did these statutes fail this test?

28
Lemon v. Kurtzman/Earley v. DiCenso (1971)
  • First prong - secular legislative intent fine.
  • Second prong - primary effect unclear
  • Third prong excessive government entanglement
    clearly fails. To monitor compliance, government
    has to be continuously involved in examining
    church records surveilling teachers. Further,
    in Pennsylvania, the funds go directly to the
    schools, not the teachers or parents.
  • A broader entanglement also arises, because of
    the divisive political potential of these state
    programs. Could result in political campaigns
    based on people's religious faith.

29
Lemon v. Kurtzman/Earley v. DiCenso (1971)
  • Concurrence (Douglas) Tax payer funds cannot be
    used even for the secular portion of a parochial
    school, because a school is a single organism
    operating under one budget. Public subsidies of
    secular activities frees up funds for those
    schools to use for religious instruction.

30
Lemon v. Kurtzman/Earley v. DiCenso (1971)
  • Dissent in DiCenso (White) the plaintiffs
    provided no evidence that non-secular lessons
    were taught in secular classrooms in religious
    schools. He argued that the 1st amendment
    permits state funds to supplement salaries of
    teachers of secular subjects.

31
Cases in the 1980s early 1990s
  • Aguilar v. Felton (1985)
  • Zobrest v. Catalina Foothills School District
    (1993)
  • Board of Education of Kiryas Joel Village v.
    Grumet (1994)
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