[ql06] PUBLIC;CONSTITUTIONAL: Supreme Court to Consider Case on 'Under God'in Pledge to Flag

  • From: Sheldon Erentzen <sheldon.erentzen@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: QL'06 newslist <ql06@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 15 Oct 2003 10:46:41 -0400




          October 15, 2003


    Supreme Court to Consider Case on 'Under God' in Pledge to Flag

By LINDA GREENHOUSE

ASHINGTON, Oct. 14 -- The Supreme Court added the Pledge of Allegiance 
to the docket for its new term on Tuesday, agreeing to consider whether 
public schools violate the Constitution by requiring teachers to lead 
their classes in pledging allegiance to the flag of "one nation under God."

The justices, who begin their daily sessions with heads bowed as the 
marshal intones "God save the United States and this honorable court," 
accepted a case that, like the affirmative action and gay rights cases 
of the last term, places the court at the center of a public 
controversy. Justice Antonin Scalia, who has made clear his view that 
the pledge is constitutional, will not participate, raising the 
possibility of a 4-to-4 tie.

In another case, the court let stand an appeals court ruling that allows 
doctors to recommend marijuana as a treatment.

The Pledge of Allegiance case is an appeal by a California school 
district of a decision that has been the subject of an intense national 
debate since the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, 
in San Francisco, issued it 16 months ago.

Of the country's current church-state controversies, including public 
subsidies for religious education in college, which the court will 
address in an argument scheduled for December, only the debate over the 
public display of the Ten Commandments has generated equivalent passion. 
The justices have so far sidestepped the current round of Ten 
Commandments cases. The Pledge of Allegiance case will be argued in 
February or March and decided by early next summer.

The Federal District Court in Sacramento initially dismissed a lawsuit 
brought by Michael A. Newdow, an atheist who said he did not want his 
daughter exposed daily in her elementary school classroom to "a ritual 
proclaiming that there is a God." The Ninth Circuit overturned that 
decision, ruling in June 2002 that the words "under God," added by 
federal statute in 1954, made the pledge itself unconstitutional.

In an amended opinion issued this year, the court narrowed its ruling by 
confining it to the public school context, invalidating school policies 
that required teachers to lead willing students in the pledge.

Ever since a Supreme Court decision on behalf of Jehovah's Witnesses in 
1943, public schools may not compel students to recite the pledge. The 
Supreme Court indicated on Tuesday that it would address only the public 
school question, not the constitutionality of the pledge as a general 
matter.

The Supreme Court's action on Tuesday had several unusual elements that 
could affect the outcome. One was the decision by Justice Scalia not to 
participate in the case, an evident if unacknowledged response to a 
"suggestion for recusal of Justice Scalia" that Mr. Newdow sent to the 
court last month.

Mr. Newdow cited news reports of remarks the justice made at an event in 
Fredericksburg, Va., last January that was cosponsored by the Knights of 
Columbus, the Catholic organization that a half century ago played a 
leading role in persuading Congress to add "under God" to the pledge. 
According to the reports, Justice Scalia's speech at an event for 
Religious Freedom Day pointed to the Ninth Circuit's decision in this 
case as an example of how courts were misinterpreting the Constitution 
to "exclude God from the public forums and from political life."

Mr. Newdow, a lawyer and medical doctor who has represented himself in 
the litigation, told the court that the remarks indicated that Justice 
Scalia was not just expressing general views on the Constitution but had 
formed a conclusion about the case itself, providing grounds for 
disqualification. The code of judicial conduct and a federal law that 
incorporates it provide that judges "shall disqualify" themselves in 
cases where their "impartiality might reasonably be questioned."

These provisions do not technically apply to Supreme Court justices, but 
the justices adhere to them and recuse themselves from cases with which 
they have connections through stock holdings or personal associations. 
It is extremely unusual, however, for a recusal to be sought or granted 
on the basis of a public statement of opinion on the legal issue before 
the court. Justice Scalia's remarks were consistent with his 
often-stated views and were surprising only in their specific reference 
to the case, which had not yet been appealed to the Supreme Court. If a 
4-to-4 tie results from his absence, the appeals court's ruling would 
automatically be affirmed.

Another unusual aspect of the court's order on Tuesday was the 
suggestion that, in the end, this case might not be suitable for 
decision. The court instructed the parties to discuss whether Mr. Newdow 
has standing to challenge the policy of his daughter's public school 
district, Elk Grove Unified, near Sacramento. The 9-year-old's mother, 
who has custody and to whom Mr. Newdow was never married, told the 
appeals court that she not only did not object to the pledge, but also 
wanted her daughter to recite it "as it stands as part of her education."

The Elk Grove district and the Bush administration, which separately 
appealed the Ninth Circuit's ruling, challenged Mr. Newdow's standing, 
as a noncustodial parent, to have anything to do with his daughter's 
education and told the justices they could vacate the Ninth Circuit's 
decision on that basis. While the case was waiting for the justices to 
act, Mr. Newdow informed the court that he had obtained a modified 
custody order that clarified his rights. Rather than act on the basis of 
incomplete information, the justices ordered briefing and argument on 
the issue.

The court turned down a separate petition that Mr. Newdow had filed to 
seek a broader ruling on the constitutionality of the pledge in general. 
The court also turned down the Bush administration's appeal, instead 
inviting the administration to express its views by filing a brief in 
the school district's case, Elk Grove Unified School District v. Newdow, 
No. 02-1624.

Analytically, the case is likely to turn on what, in the court's view, 
the act of reciting the Pledge of Allegiance signifies. The Ninth 
Circuit majority agreed with Mr. Newdow that the phrase "under God" made 
the pledge "a profession of a religious belief, namely, a belief in 
monotheism." In the dissenters' view, reciting the pledge is a patriotic 
rather than a religious act, analogous to singing the national anthem. 
All 50 states urged the court to hear the appeal. Nearly all the states 
either authorize or require recitation of the pledge in their public 
schools.





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