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Roberts' testimony 'more encouraging' than his church-state record
By J. Brent Walker
Executive Director
Baptist Joint Committee
September 19, 2005
In analyzing memos, briefs and media reports prior to his confirmation hearings, the Baptist Joint Committee found Judge
John G. Roberts' previous church-state record troubling. Since he has been a judge only since 2003, that analysis was based
mainly on positions Judge Roberts had taken as a lawyer and presidential advisor. Although during the Senate Judiciary
Committee hearings he did not commit to any particular outcome on any church-state issue, his testimony was more encouraging.
The following points from the hearings counter some aspects of his writings and public positions.
1. In the lead up to the hearings, some expressed concern that Judge Roberts' religion would dictate his views of
church-state separation. However, in his testimony, Judge Roberts agreed with John F. Kennedy's sentiment expressed to the
Greater Houston Ministerial Association in the 1960 campaign that "I do not speak for my church on public matters, and the
church does not speak for me." Judge Roberts went on to declare that "there's nothing in my personal views based on faith or
other sources that would prevent me from applying the precedents of the court faithfully under principles of stare
decisis." Stare decisis generally requires the Court to adhere to previous decisions.
2. While the evidence was not voluminous, Judge Roberts' record suggested that he preferred an Establishment Clause
standard that would weaken church-state separation. In his testimony, Judge Roberts did not condemn the Lemon test,
which has been traditionally used to decide Establishment Clause cases and requires government neutrality in religion.
Although he testified that Lemon has resulted in what he regarded as inconsistent and unclear results, he recognized
its advantage (and disadvantage) as being "very sensitive to factual nuances," and acknowledged that the Court has found it
difficult to "come up with anything better." On several occasions he conceded that Lemon is a longstanding precedent
and, under the principle of stare decisis, cannot lightly be overruled.
3. Although Judge Roberts did not embrace, by name, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor's "endorsement test," one could hear
echoes of her views. O'Connor's test generally has operated to limit governmental preferences for one or all religions. She
has posited that the First Amendment prohibits government from "making adherence to a religion relevant in any way to a
person's standing in the political community." Her view also bans sending "a message to nonadherents that they are
outsiders, not full members of the political community. ..." Judge Roberts testified that "I think the animating principle of
the Framers, that's reflected in both of the religion clauses, is that no one should be denied the rights of full citizenship
because of their religious belief or their lack of religious belief."
4. In response to a question from Senator Richard Durbin, D-Ill., Judge Roberts made a statement that stands in contrast
to the basic church-state philosophy of his former boss, Chief Justice William Rehnquist. Roberts said that he agreed with
the idea that the religion clauses protect not only religious minorities but also nonbelievers. In that connection, he went
on to opine that it was not the Framers' intent "just to have a protection for denominational discrimination.
[emphasis added] It was their intent to leave this as an area of privacy aparta conscience from which the government
would not intrude."
Rehnquist consistently expressed the view that the Framers would allow government to aid religion over irreligion as long
as it does not discriminate among religions or denominations. Judge Roberts appears to reject this "nonpreferentialism"
theory when he says the Framers did not intend only to ban "denominational discrimination," but to keep government out of the
private consciences of its citizens and religion generally.
Judge Roberts repeated this point in answer to questions posed by Senator Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., when he said, "I think
that both of those [clauses] are animated by the principle that the Framers intended the rights of full citizenship to be
available to all citizens, without regard to their religious belief or lack of religious belief. ... [H]opefully the Court's
precedents over the years will continue to give life to that ideal."
In sum, one can never be certain about how a nominee would decide cases generally or church-state cases in particular.
Judge Roberts' testimony, however, gives those who value religious liberty and church-state separation cause to be more
optimistic than before he testified.
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