The religious right didn't get the Supreme Court victory it hoped for. Yet.
By Paul Waldman
June 4 at 12:56 PM
In one of the most anticipated Supreme Court rulings of the year, involving the question of whether an anti-gay baker has to bake a cake for a gay wedding, the court today decided to punt. While youll probably see a lot of headlines proclaiming Christian Baker Wins At Supreme Court!, in fact the justices decided not to decide the underlying question of whether someone like that baker can discriminate against certain customers.
That question is a vital one, and its part of an incredibly ambitious campaign waged by the religious right and the Republican Party to essentially turn conservative Christians into a class with special rights. They havent won yet, but they could be on their way.
This case, called Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission, involved a Colorado law that bars discrimination against gay people (among others), and a Christian baker who refused to bake a wedding cake for a gay couple. The bakers claim was essentially that the law had to yield to his interpretation of his religion; while the New Testament is notoriously silent on the production of wedding cakes, he felt it would compromise his beliefs to have to perform the service for which he was in business, if it meant performing that service for a same-sex wedding. The couple was not asking that the cake be decorated with any pro-gay messages; it was the fact that it was for a same-sex wedding that the baker objected to.
The outcome that the plaintiff, religious right organizations, the Trump administration, and virtually the entire Republican Party wanted was one in which the Supreme Court would declare that religious people particularly Christians, since theyre the ones who usually make these kinds of claims can pretty much pick and choose which laws they want to obey, so long as they can cite a religious basis for their objection. That was not what the court gave them.
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/plum-line/wp/2018/06/04/the-religious-right-didnt-get-the-supreme-court-victory-it-hoped-for-yet