Kennedy statement seems to drive religious refusal cases

The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday side-stepped yet another case pitting religious beliefs hostile to LGBT people against human rights laws that seek to protect them and, in doing so, seems to be beckoning the lower courts to find a “decent and honorable” reason for people to discriminate.

In the latest case, Klein v. Oregon, the Oregon Court of Appeals ruled in December that a baker could not cite her religious beliefs in order to violate a state law that prohibits discrimination based on sexual orientation in public accommodations.

The U.S. Supreme Court order June 17 vacated that state decision and asked the lower court to reconsider the case “in light of” Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado.

The action was not a win for either side, but LGBT legal activists were unhappy and anti-LGBT groups declared victory.

Jenny Pizer, Senior Counsel and Law & Policy Director for Lambda Legal, called the order “very disappointing.” Shannon Minter, legal director for the National Center for Lesbian Rights, said it was “puzzling, since there is no conflict between the Oregon [court’s] decision and Masterpiece Cakeshop.”

“Given the absence of conflict,” he said, “this may indicate that a majority or near-majority on the new [Supreme Court] is signaling that it is prepared to interpret Masterpiece differently or revisit it in the future.”

In Masterpiece Cakeshop last year, the Supreme Court ruled that two members of a seven-member Colorado Civil Rights Commission made statements that “might be seen as inappropriate and dismissive” of a Colorado baker’s religious beliefs against marriage for same-sex couples. No matter how meritorious the state law prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation might be, the Supreme Court majority felt the two Commission members’ comments crossed a line that made the Commission appear less than neutral in its deliberation.

In the Oregon baker’s case, the First Liberty Institute issued a press release saying the high court “reversed” the Oregon court decision. It did not. It only vacated the lower court decision and asked the court to reconsider the case.

While that may fall short of reversal, the Supreme Court action does seem to invite the state court to scour the record below in search of some expression of hostility to the Oregon baker’s religious beliefs that might justify letting her off the hook in this current violation of the state’s human rights law.

“The message from the court is clear, government hostility toward religious Americans will not be tolerated,” said First Liberty President Kelly Shackelford.

The Supreme Court’s two-sentence note on the orders list Monday did not convey such a message explicitly. It said only that the case was remanded for “further consideration in light of Masterpiece Cakeshop….”

But in Obergefell v. Hodges –striking down state bans on same-sex marriage– then Justice Anthony Kennedy said he thought there could be “decent and honorable religious or philosophical” reasons for opposing same-sex marriage. And in Klein, First Liberty is essentially arguing that the majority’s statement in Obergefell means the government must assume any reason a person gives to claim a “religious” basis for discrimination is “decent and honorable.”

“Kennedy’s evidently well-intentioned statement in Obergefell seemingly meant to calm the churning social waters,” said Lambda’s Pizer. “But it’s been seized as fuel by anti-LGBT religious extremists for their cases aiming to overturn long-settled free exercise law and get new religious rights to discriminate. … Kennedy’s sympathy for some religious people’s discomfort has emboldened those who are determined to retain their freedom to discriminate. Thus we see the alarming proliferation of cases” seeking a religious right to discriminate.

It seems inevitable that the U.S. Supreme Court will eventually have to decide whether a business of public accommodation can gain an exemption to a state human rights law by claiming its refusal to serve certain customers is based on personal religious beliefs.

Although the Supreme Court sent the Klein v. Oregon case back to the state court, it will soon have a very similar case before it: Arlene’s Flowers v. Washington. This is the same case that the Supreme Court sent back to the Washington Supreme Court in June of last year, with a vacate and reconsider directive “in light of Masterpiece Cakeshop.” The Washington Supreme Court reconsidered the case and again ruled that a business cannot claim a religious exemption from a state law prohibiting discrimination in public accommodations based on sexual orientation. The Alliance Defending Freedom immediately announced it would appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

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