The
Supreme Court’s conservative supermajority effectively declared on Tuesday that
the separation of church and state—a principle enshrined in the
Constitution—is, itself, unconstitutional. Its 6–3 decision in Carson v. Makin requires
Maine to give public money to private religious schools, steamrolling decades
of precedent in a race to compel state funding of religion. Carson is
radical enough on its own, but the implications of the ruling are even more
frightening: As Justice Stephen Breyer noted in dissent, it has the potential
to dismantle secular public education in the United States.
Carson challenges
Maine’s effort to provide quality civic education to every child in the state.
The government created a tuition assistance program to help families who live
in remote, sparsely populated regions without any public schools. Under the
program, parents can send their kids to certain private schools, and the state
covers the cost of tuition. To qualify, these schools must give students a
secular education. They may be affiliated with, or even run by, a religious
organization. But their actual curricula must align with secular state
standards.
Two
families challenged this limitation, arguing that it violated the First
Amendment’s free exercise clause. Just two decades ago, this claim would’ve
been laughed out of court: SCOTUS only permitted states to
subsidize religious schools in 2002; at
the time, it would’ve been absurd to say that states have a
constitutional obligation to subsidize them. Beginning in
2017, the court began to
assert that states may not exclude religious schools from public
benefits that are available to their secular counterparts. And in 2020, the
conservative justices forced
states to subsidize religious schools once they began subsidizing
secular private education.
Tuesday’s
decision in Carson takes this radical
theory to a new extreme, ordering Maine to extend public education
funds to religious indoctrination.
The
upshot of Chief Justice John Roberts’ opinion for the court is that states have
no compelling interest in providing public, secular education to children.
Indeed, Roberts suggests that the very concept of secular schooling is a
smokescreen for “discrimination against religion”—a pretext for
unconstitutional animus toward pious Americans. His opinion reaches far beyond
Maine. About 37 states have amendments to
their constitutions that bar government funding of religious institutions,
including schools. Carson essentially invalidates those laws
while undermining the broader constitutional basis for the nation’s public
school system.
Roberts reached this astonishing result by
overruling broad swaths of precedent respecting states’ authority to separate
church and state more strictly than the U.S. Constitution requires. The court
previously upheld states’ interest in avoiding the
“establishment” of religion by refusing to underwrite the indoctrination of
students into a particular faith. No longer. Roberts condemned Maine’s efforts
to guard against religious establishment as nothing more than “discrimination
against religion”—an effort to “exclude some members of the community” from
public benefits “because of their religious exercise.” He also overruled a line
of cases that let the government withhold funding on the basis of religious use (like indoctrination) but not religious status (like affiliation with a church). That distinction, he wrote,
“lacks a meaningful application not only in theory, but in practice as well,” tossing
it in the precedential dumpster.
The chief justice maintained that Carson’s rule only kicks in once a state starts sending taxpayer
dollars to private schools through vouchers, tax credits, or scholarships. So,
in theory, a state can send all its money to public schools and avoid
constitutional concerns. Even if that’s true, the consequences are sweeping: Most states offer at least one of these programs, so Carson gives millions of families an opportunity to bail out of the
public school system and demand public money for parochial education.
But
can this distinction hold? Roberts’ bright line dims under scrutiny: Maine,
after all, wanted private schools to replace public education for some
students, not supplement it. And yet the court found no good reason for the
state to insist that these substitute schools adhere to secular standards.
Indeed, the chief justice’s rhetoric depicts education not as a state-sponsored
benefit for all, but rather as a personal matter best left up to parents. There
is, he claimed, no “historic and substantial state interest” in preserving
secular education. If that’s true, how can any state refuse to fund religious
schooling?
Breyer
raised these questions in dissent. Does Carson, he asked, “mean
that a school district that pays for public schools must pay equivalent funds
to parents who wish to send their children to religious schools?” In other
words, must every state begin cutting checks to parents who want to give their
kids a Christian education? Does Carson mean “school districts
that give vouchers for use at charter schools must pay equivalent funds to
parents who wish to give their children a religious education?” Can states even
mandate secular curricula at charter schools any more? Who knows? In the end,
the only limit on Carson is whatever five justices want it to
be.
It’s
worth pausing, as both Breyer and Justice Sonia Sotomayor did in dissent, to
reflect on the victims of Tuesday’s decision. The two Maine schools that may
now receive public funding are openly
discriminatory, expelling students and teachers who do not adhere to
evangelical Christianity. LGBTQ students, as well as straight children of
same-sex couples, are not welcome, nor are LGBTQ teachers. Even custodians must
be born-again Christians. One school teaches students to “refute the teachings
of the Islamic religion” and believe that men serve as the head of the
household. Another requires students to sign a “covenant” promising to glorify
Jesus Christ and attend weekly religious services.
“Legislators,”
Breyer wrote, “did not want Maine taxpayers to pay for these religiously based
practices,” as doing so might violate their own faith or conscience. The
majority tells these Mainers their own views don’t matter, because the First
Amendment forces them to foot the bill for other people’s religious
indoctrination. Doing so creates a “serious risk of religion-based social
divisions,” Breyer explained, exacerbating the “religious strife” that the
religion clauses “were designed to prevent.” Sotomayor put the point more
sharply: “While purporting to protect against discrimination of one kind,” she
wrote, “the court requires Maine to fund what many of its citizens believe to
be discrimination of other kinds.”
The conservative majority, however, has
perfected the art of ignoring genuine discrimination while perceiving
anti-Christian persecution where none exists. In the process, they are elevating the rights of one sect over all others. Carson will not benefit any religious minorities; there are not
enough Muslims or Jews to create a school in the far-flung corners of Maine.
Every time Roberts uses the word “religion,” he might as well be saying
“Christian.” The right will praise Carson as a triumph of religious liberty. But if you practice a
religion that does not stand to gain from the ruling, your liberty does not
matter to this Supreme Court.
-Mark Joseph Stern for Slate
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