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US Supreme Court authorizes school vouchers: a simultaneous
assault on freedom of thought and public education
By Don Knowland
2 July 2002
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The First Amendment to the United States Constitution sought
to guarantee freedom of thought in word and deedfreedom
of speech and freedom of the press; freedom to associate, peacefully
assemble, and petition the government for redress; and, critically,
freedom of and from religion.
Underscoring its signal importance to the countrys Enlightenment-steeped
founders, the very first clause of the First Amendment prohibited
Congress from making any law respecting the establishment of religion.
As Thomas Jefferson explained, the purpose of the Establishment
Clause was to build a wall of separation between Church
and State. That prohibition was later extended to the several
states shortly after the Civil War by the adoption of the Fourteenth
Amendment.
On June 27 the right-wing majority of the US Supreme Court
took a pile driver to that wall of separation. The Court decided
in a 5-4 ruling in the case Zelman v. Harris-Simmons that
Ohios school voucher program, which funds almost all of
the tuition for low-income Cleveland students who attend private
religious schools, did not violate the Establishment Clause.
To reach this result the Courts majority was forced to
depart sharply from longstanding Supreme Court jurisprudence,
and to otherwise engage in factual distortion and verbal and logical
subterfuge. That this sweeping social intervention occurred for
political reasons is transparent: school vouchers have long been
the main educational program of right-wing opponents of both public
education and constitutional prohibitions against government sponsorship
of religion.
The Courts ruling is not only an open assault on the
First Amendment. It also encourages the spread of school voucher
programs, and thus promotes the siphoning of tax dollars from
already under-funded public schools in order to subsidize private
institutions. It is an attack on public education and the democratic
and egalitarian impulses that historically underlay the establishment
of the public school system.
The facts in the Cleveland case are not complicated or obscure.
Clevelands largely minority school system has been a dismal
failure in educating its students, so much so that a federal court
ordered the Cleveland district placed under state control. The
Ohio State Legislature passed a law permitting parents of low-income
students in any school district placed under state control to
receive up to $2,250 a year in tuition aid if their children attended
a private school.
Over 80 percent of the private schools in Cleveland are religious,
and their tuition fees are, on average, much lower than those
of other private schools. As a result, in 1999-2000, the school
year considered by the Court, over 96 percent of those students
who attended private schools under the tuition aid program attended
sectarian schools. Over $8 million in public funds in that year
alone went to teach religious doctrine to 3,700 poverty-level
students.
The fact that a law authorizing the use of public funds to
pay for the indoctrination of school children in particular religious
faiths is a law respecting an establishment of religion within
the meaning of the First Amendment was seemingly settled by the
Supreme Court long ago. In 1947, in Everson v. Board
of Ed. of Ewing, which inaugurated the modern era of establishment
doctrine, the Court stated the principle in words from which there
was no dissent: No tax in any amount, large or small, can
be levied to support any religious activities or institutions,
whatever they may be called, or whatever form they may adopt to
teach or practice religion.
How did the Courts right-wing majority engineer its way
around this unequivocal ban? Through sophistry and chicanery.
In the opinion authored by Chief Justice William Rehnquist,
the majority conceded that past Supreme Court rulings uniformly
prohibited laws intended to aid religious schools, or laws whose
practical effect would be to advance religion. Then
the majority proceeded to ignore the inescapable fact that a program
under which almost all non-secular tuition is paid by public funds
necessarily advances religious instruction.
As Justice David Souter explained in his dissenting opinion,
the result of the ruling is that Public tax money will pay
at a systemic level for teaching the covenant with Israel and
Mosaic law in Jewish schools, the primacy of the Apostle Peter
and the Papacy in Catholic schools, the truth of reformed Christianity
in Protestant schools, and the revelation to the Prophet in Muslim
schools, to speak only of major religious groupings in the Republic.
The New York Times in a June 28 editorial put it no
less bluntly: Tax dollars go to buy Bibles, prayer books,
crucifixes and other religious iconography. It is harder to think
of a starker assault on the doctrine of the separation of church
and state than taking taxpayer dollars and using them to inculcate
specific religious beliefs in young people.
The majority wrongly purported to find support for its current
position in the trend revealed in cases decided over the last
half century. Beginning in 1969, the Court in some cases permitted
aid to religious schools if the aid was clearly used for secular
as opposed to religious purposes. But the proponent of the aid
had to overcome a presumption against such a conclusion.
For example, in the Nyquist case in 1973, the Court
struck down a New York program of tuition grants for poor parents
and tax deductions for more affluent ones who sent their children
to private schools. The Nyquist Court rejected the idea
that the aid passed to parents rather than directly to schools
immunized the program, since the effect of the aid was unmistakably
to provide financial support for nonpublic, sectarian institutions.
Instead the Court focused on what the public money bought when
it reached the endpoint of its disbursement.
Starting in 1983, the Court approved funding schemes, but only
if the amounts were small and hence unlikely to afford substantial
benefits to religious schools, and only when offered neutrally,
i.e., without regard to a recipients religious character,
and when paid to a religious institution only because of the substantively
free choice of some private individual. This shifting
of focus onto neutrality and private choice, in addition to the
issue of aiding religious activity, began with the Mueller
decision in 1983. There, Justice Rehnquist, who has long had an
unstated agenda of fostering religious education, first had a
chance to author an opinion on the subject and begin to chip away
at the wall. Nevertheless, subsequent cases permitted aid in neutral
and free choice situations only in circumstances where any aid
to religion was isolated and insubstantial.
Effectively ignoring those limits from prior cases, in the
current ruling Rehnquist and the Court majority hung their constitutional
hats on the supposed neutrality of the Ohio funding scheme and
the exercise of private choice by parents of school children.
As Justice Souter explained in his dissenting opinion in Zelman,
a majority of the Court has now for the first time effectively
junked the practical test of the extent to which government funds
are aiding religious schools as the key constitutional consideration,
in favor of the purely formal criteria of neutrality
in offering aid and private choice in directing it.
Yet, as Justice John Paul Stevens stated clearly in his separate
dissenting opinion, the voluntary character of the private choice
to prefer a parochial education over education in the public school
system is quite irrelevant to the question of whether
the governments choice to pay thousands of dollars for religious
indoctrination is constitutionally permissible. Justice Steven
Breyer in his dissent agreed: The majority makes no pretense
that substantial amounts of tax money are not systematically underwriting
religious practice and indoctrination. In fact, the scale
of the aid to religious schools approved today is unprecedented,
both in the number of dollars and in the proportion of systemic
school expenditure supported.
Either way, persons who oppose the religion of the sectarian
schools that receive the aid are forced to commit their tax dollars
to support religious indoctrination. Justice Stevens concluded:
[T]he Court seems to have decided that the mere fact that
a family that cannot afford a private education wants its children
educated in a parochial school is a sufficient justification for
this use of public funds.
What Justice Souters dissent politely calls the majoritys
empty formalism in applying this new, stripped-down
neutrality/private choice test is, in reality, playing fast and
loose with the facts. Rehnquist claims that because the Ohio law
provides that poor parents who choose to keep their children in
public school can receive aid to pay tutors, the law is neutral
as to choice between public and private schools. Rehnquist and
the majority choose to overlook the fact that the tuition subsidy
for public school students is only $324 for the poorest children,
thousands of dollars less than the tuition credit for private
schools.
Rehnquist and the majority further claim that the Ohio program
is more than neutral because spending on public school students
exceeds $4,000 per year, community schools (public schools with
their own governing boards) receive slightly more per year, and
magnet schools (public schools focused on one subject) receive
over $7,000 per pupil per year, all more than the private school
tuition credit. Rehnquist even argues that private and religious
school tuition is actually disfavored compared to public school
funding. But, as the dissents point out, none of this funding
passes through the private hands of parents, eliminating the logical
link of the majoritys private choice test.
As Justice Souter explains, the majoritys reasoning would
find neutrality in a scheme of vouchers available for private
tuition in districts with no secular private schools at all, and
thus no choice to avoid religious schools. Thus, neutrality
as the majority employs the term is, literally, verbal and nothing
more. It places no meaningful constitutional limits on religious
school use of public funds.
Apart from the majoritys warped logic and methodology,
the substance of the situation facing Cleveland school parents
belies any characterization of their choice as free.
For the overwhelming number of children in the voucher scheme,
the only alternative to the public schools is religious. Almost
two out of three families using vouchers to send their children
to religious schools did not embrace the religion of those schools.
Justice Breyer elaborates on this in his dissent: There
is, in any case, no way to interpret the 96.6 percent of current
voucher money going to religious schools as reflecting a free
and genuine choice by the families that apply for vouchers. The
96.6 percent reflects, instead, the fact that too few non-religious
school desks are available and few but religious schools can afford
to accept more than a handful of voucher students.
Both Justices Stevens and Breyer in their dissents express
concern about the risk of religious strife arising from the Courts
ruling and the consequent weakening of the foundation of democracy
and harm to the nations social fabric. The establishment
clause of the First Amendment was motivated in substantial part
by the desire of the founders to avoid the hundreds of years of
religious wars that had plagued Europe. Justice Stevens alludes
to current religious strife around the globe. Breyer points out
that establishment clause neutrality is even more important in
the present century, with the nation composed of numerous religions,
as compared to the few existing at the time of the countrys
founding.
Justice Clarence Thomas, in an opinion concurring with the
majority, would go even further in destroying the Constitution.
Thomass theory is that the states should be freer than Congress
to promote and establish religion. His pretext is that urban public
schools have failed minority and poor children, creating segregation
of educational opportunity years after Brown v. Board of Education
outlawed racial school segregation. He writes: Although
one of the purposes of public schools was to promote democracy
and a more egalitarian culture, failing urban public schools disproportionately
affect minority children most in need of educational opportunity.
Thomas utilizes the cynical and reactionary arguments of black
nationalism to justify further attacks on educational opportunities
and democratic rights for all children, black as well as white.
He writes contemptuously: While the romanticized ideal of
universal public education resonates with the cognoscenti who
oppose vouchers, poor urban families just want the best education
for their children, who will certainly need it to function in
our high-tech and advanced society. As Thomas Sowell noted 30
years ago: Most black people have faced too many grim, concrete
problems to be romantics.
Justice Stevens in his dissent makes the obvious point that
the answer to failing public schools is a serious program to improve
the public school system, not the promotion of religious schools.
He writes: [T]he solution to the disastrous conditions that
prevented over 90 percent of the student body from meeting basic
proficiency standards obviously required massive improvements
unrelated to the voucher program [which covered only 5 percent
of Cleveland students anyway], not unconstitutional aid to religious
schools.
No section of the American financial oligarchy or political
establishment is interested, however, in making the economic commitment
required to provide every child with a decent public education.
The democratic and egalitarian tradition of public education
continues to resonate with the majority of the public, which,
according to polls, opposes voucher programs by a lopsided margin.
With the constitutional decks cleared, the battle will return
to state legislatures, where the right wing will introduce new
voucher schemes, whose ultimate aim is the dismantling of public
education.
See Also:
US Pledge ruling
exposes political scoundrels
[28 June 2002]
Liebermans support
for government-backed religion: an attack on the letter and spirit
of the Constitution
[28 September 2000]
Michigan, California
school voucher initiatives threaten public education
[6 November 2000]
The assault on
public education in the US
Right-wing organizations push school vouchers in Michigan
[30 September 1999]
Education
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