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US Supreme Court overturns Pledge of Allegiance ruling on
technical grounds
By Don Knowland
1 July 2004
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On June 14, the US Supreme Court reversed an appellate court
decision that had ruled that permitting elementary school children
to recite the Pledge of Allegiances affirmation that the
US is a nation under God violated the principles of
separation of church and state embodied in the First Amendment
to the US Constitution.
The majority of justices declined to decide the issue of the
Pledges constitutionality. Instead, the justices decided
the case on a dubious technicality, ruling that the adult plaintiff
in the case had no right or standing to sue. The ruling
nevertheless deals a blow to those who seriously defend the democratic
principles enunciated in the Constitutions Bill of Rights.
The Pledge of Allegiance states: I pledge allegiance
to the flag of the United States of America, and to the Republic
for which it stands, one nation under God, indivisible,
with liberty and justice for all. The US Congress inserted
the language about God in 1954 during the Cold War to acknowledge
the dependence of our people and our Government upon the moral
directions of the Creator and to deny the atheistic
and materialist concepts of communism.
The state of California, like most states, requires that public
grade schools begin each school day with a recitation of the Pledge
(although students may decline to recite it). Michael Newdow,
an atheist, sued his elementary school daughters school
district to invalidate the Pledge as a violation of the Establishment
Clause of the First Amendment to the US Constitution. That clause
provides that Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment
of religion, a provision that was made fully applicable
to the states and their school districts by the Fourteenth Amendment
to the Constitution, enacted after the Civil War.
In 2002, the federal appeals court for the western United States
(the Ninth Circuit) agreed with Newdow that the Pledge clearly
endorses religion and belief in God. As the Ninth Circuit explained,
the Pledge plainly compels impressionable children to watch and
listen to state-employed teachers proclaim that there is a God,
and that the United States is a nation under the authority of
that God. In effect, it impels students to pledge allegiance to
that God.
To support its ruling, the Ninth Circuit applied prior US Supreme
Court cases that left no legal room for any other conclusion,
such as Lee v. Weissman, decided in 1992. There the Supreme
Court held that nonsectarian invocations and benedictions
at public secondary school graduations violated the Establishment
Clause, because high school students, even if they were not compelled
to attend the graduation ceremony, could feel compelled by peer
pressure to attend and stand as part of the group, and either
join in the prayer or maintain a respectful silence out of a sense
of compulsion.
As the Ninth Circuit pointed out, if anything, given the age
of elementary school students and the daily repetition of the
Pledge of Allegiance, its affirmation of religious belief is even
more constitutionally objectionable than the graduation prayer
invalidated in the Lee case.
The Ninth Circuit ruling emphasized that the states motivation
in 1954 was precisely to inculcate a belief in God. It cited the
House Report on the 1954 change to the Pledge, which stated that
our Nation was founded on a fundamental belief in God
and that the phrase under God was inserted to recognize
the guidance of God in our national affairs.
The Ninth Circuit also ruled that Newdow had a sufficient stake
in the education of his daughter concerning religious matters
to give him standing to pursue the lawsuit. That court said that
the Pledge presents a message by the state endorsing not just
religion generally, but a monotheistic religion organized under
God. It provides the message to Newdows young
daughter not only that non-believers, or believers in other than
Judeo-Christian religions, are outsiders, but more specifically
that her fathers beliefs are those of an outsider,
and necessarily inferior to what she is exposed to in the classroom.
The court concluded that Newdow had a right to be free
from the governments endorsing a particular view of religion
and unconstitutionally indoctrinating his impressionable young
daughter on a daily basis in that official view.
The Ninth Circuits decision caused an uproar among Republican
and Democratic politicians alike. Each tried to outdo the other
in expressing outrage that an activist court would
dare question a patriotic ceremony and uphold secularist principles
that are fundamental to constitutional protections and democratic
rights. Congress passed a resolution falsely
asserting that the US republic was founded on religious belief,
and affirming the text of the Pledge.
After the Ninth Circuit ruled, the mother of Newdows
child obtained sole legal custody over her in a California state
court and then attempted to intervene in Newdows Ninth Circuit
case. The mother asserted that her daughter was a Christian who
believes in God, and that she did not object to reciting the Pledge.
She further claimed that her custodial status deprived Newdow
of his standing to sue. The Ninth Circuit disagreed, stating that,
even as sole legal custodian, the mother had no power to insist
that her child be subjected to unconstitutional state action.
In reversing the Ninth Circuits decision, a five-justice
majority of the Supreme Court ruled that it would not be prudent
to find that Newdow had a sufficient interest to prosecute the
case, because of a general reluctance on the part of federal courts
to intervene in family law issues such as child custody, which
are left to the states to determine.
In the decision, the majority purports to worry about the federal
courts getting involved in a dispute between the two parents.
But this rationale is clearly a pretext to avoid dealing with
the constitutionality of the Pledge. No child custody issues were
implicated whatsoever under the Ninth Circuit ruling, only the
fathers rights to object to unconstitutional conduct.
The five justices in the majority include the four considered
to constitute the courts moderate-to-liberal wingPaul
Stevens, Stephen Breyer, Ruth Ginsburg and David Souter. The fifth
justice signing onto the majority decision is Anthony Kennedy,
who often blocs with the Courts right-wing faction.
This action by the four supposedly liberal justices is a craven
evasion of an important constitutional matter. It is undoubtedly
influenced both by the generally compromised and cowardly posture
of American liberalism in the face of growing attacks on democratic
rights, and specific political pressures connected to the upcoming
presidential election. Those justices inclined to support Democratic
candidate John Kerry over George W. Bush are eager to sidestep
the substantive issue in the case for fear of the right-wing backlash
that would inevitably have been orchestrated by the Republicans
in the event of a ruling upholding the lower court.
Despite the generally reactionary and cowardly character of
the majority ruling, it does not dispose of the underlying constitutional
issue. As a result, there is little doubt that other challenges
to the Pledge will be filed by parents opposed to government endorsement
of religion, which will eventually end up back in the Supreme
Court.
Avoidance of political controversy did not restrain three conservative
justicesSandra Day OConnor and two out-and-out reactionaries,
Chief Justice William Rehnquist and Associate Justice Clarence
Thomas. Mocking the majoritys standing arguments as strained
and novel, they dissented and addressed the merits of the constitutional
issues.
All three wrote that the Pledge does not violate the Establishment
Clause. Another reactionary justice, Antonin Scalia, undoubtedly
would have joined them in that view, but he disqualified himself
from the case because of public statements he made earlier criticizing
the Ninth Circuit ruling.
See Also:
US Pledge
ruling exposes political scoundrels
[28 June 2002]
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