Briefing shows ACLU has abandoned religious freedom for 'culture wars,' critic says

Little Sisters of the Poor SCOTUS Little Sisters of the Poor outside the Supreme Court in 2016, for the Zubik v. Burwell case. | Addie Mena/CNA.

Longtime critics of religious freedom protections, among them the American Civil Liberties Union, have formed a partnership to oppose the Trump administration policies and actions that aim to protect several Catholic institutions.

But for Matthew Franck, a Princeton University politics lecturer and senior fellow at the Witherspoon Institute, this course will advance conflict and coercion, not freedom.

"The American Civil Liberties Union used to take an active interest in protecting everyone's religious freedom, as well as the other protections of the Bill of Rights. But no longer," Franck told CNA May 26. "In the culture wars generated by the sexual revolution, the ACLU now ranges itself against the constitutional right of religious freedom and on the side of coercion."

Franck said the ACLU is supporting claims to civil rights not grounded in the U.S. Constitution. When those claims come into conflict with the religious freedom of individuals, religious associations, religious schools and religious charities, he suggested, the result is sometimes government coercion.

Those claims include "women seeking employer-provided contraceptives and abortifacients, or same-sex couples that want to compel church-sponsored adoption agencies to place children with them, or gay teachers who marry their partners and want to keep on working for Catholic schools that consider their teachers bound by the Church's moral teachings, or same-sex couples who want a Christian baker to make them a custom wedding cake," Franck said.

The American Civil Liberties Union and the Center for American Progress have launched a joint project, with material titled "Connecting the Dots." The ACLU produced a legal briefing while the Center for American Progress released a short video May 19 linking to the briefing.

The advocacy is the product of a partnership between the two groups and the Movement Advancement Project, a strategic communications and development organization in LGBT advocacy founded by the influential millionaire Tim Gill.

"Freedom of religion is a fundamental American value-but that freedom does not give institutions or individuals the right to harm others," the Center for American Progress said May 19. "Since President Donald Trump's inauguration, his administration has expanded religious exemptions in an attempt to gut civil rights protections and codify discrimination against people of minority faiths, women, and people who are LGBTQ."

The ACLU's May 2020 briefing paper "Connecting the Dots," argued that the Trump administration was working to "create a license to discriminate across the country."

"In the name of religious liberty, Trump and his allies have pursued a strategy to legalize discrimination based on religion and sex - including sexual orientation and gender identity - and other personal characteristics," the briefing said.

"Freedom of religion is a fundamental American value, so fundamental that it is protected by the First Amendment to our nation's Constitution. But that freedom does not give institutions or individuals the right to harm others, including by discriminating and especially with taxpayer dollars," it continued.

The ACLU said that the Trump administration authorized or expanded religious exemptions "that enable institutions, businesses, and individuals to refuse to comply with laws they assert interfere with their religious beliefs." Such laws, in the legal group's view, include non-discrimination laws, health care laws, and adoption and foster care laws.

For his part, Franck rejected the legal group's claims.

"What the ACLU calls 'discrimination' is not, under federal statutes as currently interpreted, unlawful," Franck told CNA. "That may change if the Supreme Court willfully misreads Title VII in two pending cases. But whatever happens in these cases, the fact that the ACLU and the Center for American Progress call the defense of personal and institutional conscience an 'abuse' of the religious freedom protected by the First Amendment says more about those organizations' abandonment of the traditions of American freedom than it does about the Trump administration."

"The Obama administration, sadly, 'normalized' all these attacks on religious freedom as administration policies. The Trump administration deserves credit for working to reverse such policies," Franck said.

Several topics in the ACLU briefing concern cases where Catholic institutions are involved.

The legal group opposed accommodations for employers with religious or moral objections to providing health care plans that cover contraception, including drugs that can cause abortion. The Little Sisters of the Poor, a Catholic religious congregation that provides care for the indigent elderly, are still tied up in court over the coverage mandate, which dates back to the middle of the Obama administration.

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The briefing objected to the Trump administration's September 2019 statement of interest in a fired high school teacher's lawsuit filed against the Archdiocese of Indianapolis. The archdiocese had ruled that the teacher violated archdiocesan policy and Catholic teaching by contracting a same-sex civil marriage and said that the Catholic high school must terminate his job to maintain its Catholic affiliation.

The ACLU characterized the Trump administration's action as "arguing against employees who are fired for being gay."

Regarding a California legal case against a Sacramento-area Catholic hospital, the ACLU briefing claims its client, Evan Minton, was "turned away from a religious hospital for being transgender."

Minton, who presents as a transgender man, filed a lawsuit against the Dignity Health Catholic health system after a Catholic hospital refused to perform a planned elective hysterectomy. Health system officials arranged for Minton to be transferred to a hospital not affiliated with Catholicism. In September 2019, a California court allowed Minton's lawsuit to proceed, overturning a lower court's decision that the transfer of Milton was sufficient to avoid charges under state anti-discrimination law.

"Catholic hospitals do not perform sterilizing procedures such as hysterectomies for any patient regardless of their gender identity, unless there is a serious threat to the life or health of the patient," Dignity Health said in September 2019.

A 2016 letter to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services signed by the general counsel for the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, together with other groups, affirmed that the denial of surgery to someone seeking to change their gender would not be discriminatory. The letter rejected claims that it is discriminatory to decline to perform a mastectomy or a hysterectomy on a healthy woman who is "seeking to have the appearance of a man."

The ACLU's briefing criticized the creation of the Conscience and Religious Freedom Division at the Department of Health and Human Services, and objected that this new division is better funded than divisions related to information privacy and civil rights.

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The legal group objected to religious freedom protections for prospective foster and adoptive parents and for adoption agencies that receive federal funds. Several Catholic and other Christian adoption agencies have been forced to close by law or by denial of funds because they could not in good conscience place children with same-sex couples.

The ACLU also objected to the Trump administration's amicus brief in the Masterpiece Cakeshop Supreme Court case. The case concerned a Colorado bakery that declined to make a wedding cake for a same-sex ceremony on the grounds of religious objections. The briefing charged that the Trump administration argued "on behalf of a business' right to discriminate."

The briefing claimed the Trump administration required departments and agencies to implement "a distorted interpretation of religious liberty" that in the ACLU's view excessively favors religious claims. It criticized then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions' creation of a Religious Liberty Task Force to implement federal guidance, claiming this could "open the door to widespread discrimination in employment and government-funded services." The ACLU said the government has denied requests seeking to determine who is on the task force.

The May 2019 action of the Housing and Urban Development on gender identity also drew criticism from the ACLU. The group said this action this allows shelters "to exclude transgender and gender nonconforming people from appropriate shelters, including on the basis of the shelter's religious beliefs." The group said that self-identified transgender women should be able to have shelter that "conforms with their gender identity."

The Department of Labor's rules allowing religious associations to obtain federal contracts also drew criticism, as did a May 2018 executive order allowing faith-based and community organizations to receive federal funds in grants, contracts and program funding "to the fullest opportunity permitted by law."

The ACLU, the Center for American Progress, and the Movement Advancement Project are part of a multi-million dollar social and political change advocacy network aiming to limit religious freedom protections. Major funders of this network include the Ford Foundation, the Proteus Fund, and the Arcus Foundation. The Arcus Foundation, founded by billionaire Jon Stryker, also funds Christian groups which reject traditional Christian teaching on LGBT issues and abortion.

The Center for American Progress was founded by John Podesta, a former chief-of-staff for President Bill Clinton and campaign manager for Hillary Clinton's unsuccessful 2016 presidential run. In 2016, Podesta drew attention after leaked emails implied he had backed several political Catholic groups for a "Catholic Spring" revolt against the bishops.

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