[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 179 (Thursday, December 10, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8586-S8588]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RELIGIOUS FREEDOM
Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, today I complete the series of floor
speeches on religious freedom that I began in September. My purpose in
this series is to present the full story of religious freedom in the
hope that we may better understand and appreciate it and draw guidance
for the future. Charting a path forward requires understanding where we
have been and taking stock of where we are right now.
The story of religious freedom, as I have laid it out, shows that we
must choose between two starkly different paths. The story begins with
religious freedom itself and why it is uniquely important and requires
special protection. I said in September:
No decision is more fundamental to human existence than the
decision we make regarding our relationship to the Divine. No
act of government can be more intrusive or more invasive of
individual autonomy and free will than the act of compelling
a person to violate his or her sincerely chosen religious
beliefs.
The story continues with the central place of religious freedom in
America's identity. At no time in world history has religious freedom
been such an integral part of a nation's origin and character. The
seeds were planted centuries before the actual founding of this country
with one religious community after another coming to these shores to
freely practice their faith.
When Congress enacted the International Religious Freedom Act less
than two decades ago, we declared that religious freedom ``undergirds
the very origin and existence of the United States.''
The story of religious freedom in America includes understanding both
its status and its substance. In October, I explained how the status of
religious freedom can be summarized as both inalienable and preeminent.
Religious freedom is inalienable because, as the Declaration of
Independence asserts, it comes from God, not from government. And
because it is endowed, that is part of our very humanity. Religious
freedom is preeminent or, as James Madison put it, ``precedent, both in
order of time and in degree of obligation to the claims of civil
society.''
I also explained that the substance of religious freedom can be
understood in terms of its depth, or what it includes, and its breadth,
or to whom it applies. Religious freedom, for example, includes much
more than religious belief or speech. In fact, protecting in law both
religious belief and the exercise of that belief preceded the First
Amendment by 150 years. Madison again gives us guidance to finding the
exercise of religion as the freely chosen manner of discharging the
duty an individual believes he or she owes to God. This includes both
belief and behavior in public and in private, individually and
collectively. The substance of religious freedom also includes its
breadth of application to all human beings.
The First Amendment protects not certain exercises of religion or the
exercise of religion by certain persons, but the free exercise of
religion itself.
As I mentioned, Congress unanimously enacted the International
Religious Freedom Act. The vote in this body was 98 to 0, and 21
Senators serving today--12 Republicans and 9 Democrats--voted for this
legislation, as did Vice President Biden and Secretary of State John
Kerry, who were serving here at that time. That law declares our
religious freedom to be a universal human right, a pillar of our
Nation, and a fundamental freedom. This is the path of religious
freedom on which we have traveled for three centuries, before a very
different path emerged.
In November, I outlined how the courts have begun to distort the
First Amendment's protection for religious freedom. America's Founders
included a narrow prohibition on government establishment of religion
as a support for the broad individual freedom to exercise religion.
Since the mid-20th century, however, courts have instead expanded the
establishment clause into a virtual ban on religion in public life and
narrowed the free exercise clause so that government may more easily
restrict the practice of religion itself.
I also examined how the courts, the Obama administration, and State
legislatures are contributing to attacks on religious freedom right
here in America. The common theme in these attacks is that far from
being special, religious freedom must yield to other values or
political objectives. Even worse, some are arguing that religious
freedom is actually something negative that should be limited or even
suppressed. These attacks not only target particular exercises of
religion but undermine religious freedom itself.
Rather than inalienable, these attacks would turn religious freedom
into something granted or restricted by the government at its whim.
Instead of preeminent, these attacks would reduce religious freedom to
something optional and subservient. Rather than something deep and
broad, these attacks would turn religious freedom into something
shallow and narrow.
State courts, for example, have imposed heavy fines on business
owners who decline, based on their religious beliefs, to provide
services such as photography, flowers or catering for same-sex
marriages. The decision by these business owners did not prevent anyone
from getting married or from having the wedding they chose. Other
photographers, florists, and bakers gladly stepped up to do business.
The only real effect of these fines was to punish these individuals for
exercising their religious beliefs. By punishing the exercise of
religion itself, these courts are saying that religious freedom must
necessarily yield to other political priorities.
ObamaCare made the same two-part attack on religious freedom but on a
much larger scale. First, far from trying to accommodate religious
freedom in developing ObamaCare or its implementing regulations,
neither Congress
[[Page S8587]]
nor the Obama administration gave religious freedom any consideration
whatsoever. This is appalling in several different ways. Not only does
it reflect a callous attitude toward this fundamental right, but it
ignores the Religious Freedom Restoration Act's command that Federal
law properly accommodate religious freedom. The only way to avoid that
requirement is for Congress explicitly to exempt a statute from RFRA's
standards. Congress did not do so.
But consider this. On January 15, 2010, President Obama issued his
first Religious Freedom Day proclamation. He reaffirmed ``our nation's
enduring commitment to the universal human right of religious
freedom.'' Just 2 months later, he signed into law the statute that so
blatantly ignored and would be used to undermine that very universal
human right.
The second way that ObamaCare undermines religious freedom is by
imposing significant burdens on the actual exercise of religion. The
Department of Health and Human Services, for example, tried to force
business owners to provide insurance coverage for methods of birth
control that violate their religious beliefs. Thankfully, last year the
Supreme Court said the Obama administration should have more properly
accommodated religious freedom.
Another case is now before the Supreme Court in which the Obama
administration is demanding that a religious organization be forced to
participate in providing insurance coverage for practices that violate
their religious beliefs. The Obama administration, with its army of
smart lawyers and deep well of taxpayer dollars, is fighting tooth and
nail to make sure its political objectives quash religious freedom.
Last week, I outlined the benefits that religion and religious
freedom provide. It is essential to forming and securing our basic
rights. Religion was the engine driving great social movements, such as
abolition and civil rights. It motivates significantly greater
contributions by individuals to charities of all kinds and inspires
many of the largest charitable organizations in the country. But
religion is not simply beneficial to society; it is an indispensable
feature of any free government. Without religion and the moral
instruction it provides, freedom falters and democracy all too easily
dissolves into tyranny.
In the 18th Century, the Massachusetts Constitution of 1780 declared
that ``the happiness of a people and the good order and preservation of
civil government essentially depend upon piety, religion, and
morality.''
In the 21st Century, Harvard professor Mary Ann Glendon argues
persuasively that religious freedom reduces societal violence and
correlates with democratic longevity.
The story of religious freedom that I have offered over the last few
months presents a choice that we must make as we consider the way
forward. On one path, religious freedom is an inalienable and
preeminent right of all people; on the other path, it is an uncertain
and optional possibility for some people. On one path the government
must accommodate religious freedom; on the other path religious freedom
must accommodate the government. One path is consistent with our
history, founding, character, commitments, and an example to the rest
of the world. The other path rejects that history, turns its back on
our commitments, and abandons human rights in favor of shifting
political agendas.
Here is how I put it in one of my speeches last month:
Subjugating religious freedom beliefs to government decrees
is not the price of citizenship. To the contrary, respecting
and honoring the fundamental rights of all Americans is the
price our government pays to enjoy the continued consent of
the American people.
We must decide whether we still believe what our Nation, our people,
and our leaders have said and done. James Madison wrote that religious
freedom is an inalienable right that takes precedence over the claims
of civil society.
Thomas Jefferson said that religious freedom is ``the most
inalienable and sacred of all human rights.''
Franklin Roosevelt said that religious freedom is a fundamental and
essential human freedom.
The United States voted for the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
in 1948, signed the Helsinki Accords in 1975, and ratified the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights in 1992.
Each of these identifies religious freedom as a fundamental human
right that includes both belief and behavior in public and in private,
individually and collectively.
Congress enacted the Religious Freedom Restoration Act almost
unanimously in 1994. I should know; I was the principal advocate for
it. It sets a tough standard for allowing government interference with
religious freedom and offers this protection for all exercises of
religion by all people. Democrats and Republicans, liberals and
conservatives, adherents of different faiths--everyone joined hands on
these basic principles. And I might add that Hatch and Kennedy joined
hands as well.
In the 2013 Religious Freedom Day proclamation, President Obama said
that religious freedom is an essential part of human dignity. This is
the path on which America began, the path America's Founders embraced,
the path that all three branches of government have recognized, and the
path we have reaffirmed countless times.
The burden is on those who believe that we should now leave this
path. Those who no longer believe that religious freedom is an
inalienable right and an essential human freedom should say so. Those
who no longer believe that, as our statutes and treaties assert,
religious freedom is a fundamental right and a pillar of our Nation
should be honest and up front about it. Those who believe that the
shifting political priorities of the day trump religious freedom should
candidly make their case.
In the last week, since the terrorist attack in San Bernardino, we
have glimpsed some of the ugliness that is down the path where politics
trumps religious freedom. Many of our leaders expressed support and
offered thoughts and prayers for the victims and their families. Those
expressions were met by some with disdain, ridicule, and scoffing.
Reporters, bloggers, activists, and even Members of Congress sent the
message that thoughts and prayers are really not much of anything and
in any event are legitimate only if they come from those who want more
gun control.
Finally, I want to highlight for my colleagues another source of
guidance in choosing the future path for religious freedom. In June
1988, the most diverse group of leaders in American history presented
the Williamsburg Charter to the Nation. Its purpose was to reaffirm
religious freedom for all citizens, to set out the place of religious
freedom in American public life, and to offer guiding principles for
the future. Former Presidents Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford and the
chairmen of the two political parties signed it. The president of the
AFL-CIO and the chairman of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce signed it.
Presidents of universities and bar associations signed it. Leaders of
faith communities, including the National Council of Churches and
National Association of Evangelicals, Seventh-day Adventists, the
Synagogue Council of America, and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-
day Saints signed it.
What could possibly unite such a disparate group? It would have to be
something too general to be useful--perhaps something like sunshine or
friendship--or something so profound that we simply must sit up and pay
attention. The first principles of religious freedom affirmed by the
Williamsburg Charter are these:
First, religious freedom is an inalienable right that is ``premised
upon the inviolable dignity of the human person. It is the foundation
of, and is integrally related to, all other rights and freedoms secured
by the Constitution.''
Second, the ``chief menace to religious liberty today is the
expanding power of government control over personal behavior and the
institutions of society, when the government acts not so much in
deliberate hostility to, but in reckless disregard of, communal belief
and personal conscience.''
Third, limiting religious liberty ``is allowable only where the State
has borne a heavy burden of proof that the limitation is justified--not
by any ordinary public interest, but by a supreme
[[Page S8588]]
public necessity--and that no less restrictive alternative to
limitation exists.''
These are the principles that should guide our way forward.
Religious freedom is inalienable. Religious freedom is threatened
when government either directly burdens or fails to accommodate it.
Government burdens on religious freedom must be the least restrictive
means of achieving a compelling government purpose or supreme public
necessity.
These principles inform proper resolution of the challenges that
religious freedom will certainly face ahead.
Some are calling for government to revoke or deny such things as tax-
exempt status, certifications, or licenses for religious organizations
with certain beliefs. I already mentioned how some courts are using
anti-discrimination statutes to trump religious freedom.
Applying the principles I have discussed would require the government
to make the case that such impositions are the least restrictive way to
further a supreme public necessity.
Another challenge will be in the development, rather than the
implementation, of anti-discrimination laws. Applying the appropriate
principles requires that such legislation properly accommodate
religious freedom.
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, for example, includes a
religious exemption. I supported the Employment Non-Discrimination Act
in the 113th Congress because, in addition to incorporating that
exemption, it also prohibited retaliation against those who qualify for
the exemption. My State of Utah this year enacted an anti-
discrimination statute that similarly included a robust exemption for
religious organizations.
Earlier this year, however, Senators introduced the Equality Act,
which would prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation
and gender identity across several areas such as employment, housing,
and education. It not only fails to incorporate the existing title VII
religious exemption, it contains no accommodation for religious freedom
at all.
This is an example of the path that rejects religious freedom as even
worthy of consideration. Such legislation should not become law unless
it properly accommodates religious freedom.
This is a time for choosing. The story of religious freedom is both
an inspiring narrative and a cautionary tale. It brings to mind the
inscription on a statue fronting the National Archives that ``eternal
vigilance is the price of liberty.''
The heritage of religious freedom that took centuries to build could
be dismantled in a fraction of that time. The right path means balance
of accommodation; the wrong path means exclusion and suppression. The
way forward requires us to choose the right path to make sure our
actions speak louder than our words.
Mr. President, I apologize for going over by 5 minutes.
I yield the floor.
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