• World News
  • Investing
  • Tech News
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick
ResearchOfMarkets.com
Editor's PickInvesting

SCOTUS Decision Against Religious Charter Is Right, But We Must Address Discrimination Against Religion

by May 22, 2025
by May 22, 2025

Neal McCluskey

In a decision that surprised me in its rapidity, but not its outcome, the Supreme Court deadlocked four to four, leaving in place an Oklahoma Supreme Court decision against the creation of a Roman Catholic cyber charter school. The tie vote was possible because Justice Amy Coney Barrett recused herself from the case, likely because she is close friends with Nicole Stelle Garnett, the University of Notre Dame law professor who was instrumental in moving the case forward. While the case should elicit conflicted emotions for anyone who desires freedom and equality in education, the charter school going down was probably the right outcome.

Why right? Petitioners were correct that a charter excluding religious options, but at least theoretically allowing all others, discriminates against religious Americans. But chartering is too government-entangling a way to fix the problem. A charter school is a public school typically approved to exist by a government entity such as a state board, and that is too much government control. Chief Justice John Roberts, who was the likely conservative swing vote, addressed that concern directly in oral arguments, saying, “This does strike me as a much more comprehensive involvement” than school choice programs that allow families to use public funds at private schools, the subjects of much of the precedent cited by petitioners.

It is inherently dangerous to put the government in the position to declare, “This proposed religious school is OK, and this one is not.”

Because the decision was a tie, it sets no legal precedent, but it does send a message: Charter schooling is likely not the right way, legally, to address very real discrimination against religion by our public education system. The solution, as I have argued and as precedent points to, is private school choice, at least constitutionally required for religious families.

0 comment
0
FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

previous post
Federal Versus State Policies
next post
Four Things the Senate Can Do to Improve the House Tax Bill

You may also like

Congress Should Repeal the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit,...

May 22, 2025

Debunking Protectionist Claims About Tariffs and Industrial Expansion

May 22, 2025

MACD + ADX: Spot the Pullbacks Worth Trading

May 22, 2025

Four Things the Senate Can Do to Improve...

May 22, 2025

Federal Versus State Policies

May 22, 2025

Become the Investor You Aspire to Be: Essential...

May 21, 2025

An Ominous Quiet on the Law Firm Revenge...

May 21, 2025

Generate Consistent Income with These Options Strategies

May 21, 2025

Quantum Stocks Explode: Why Traders Are Obsessed With...

May 21, 2025

S&P 500, Bitcoin & XLK: What the Charts...

May 20, 2025

    Get the daily email that makes reading the news actually enjoyable. Stay informed and entertained, for free.

    Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!

    Recent Posts

    • Congress Should Repeal the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit, Not Expand It

      May 22, 2025
    • Debunking Protectionist Claims About Tariffs and Industrial Expansion

      May 22, 2025
    • MACD + ADX: Spot the Pullbacks Worth Trading

      May 22, 2025
    • Regime Uncertainty and the Trump New Deal

      May 22, 2025
    • Four Things the Senate Can Do to Improve the House Tax Bill

      May 22, 2025
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact us
    • About us

    Copyright © 2025 ResearchOfMarkets.com All Rights Reserved.

    ResearchOfMarkets.com
    • World News
    • Investing
    • Tech News
    • Stock
    • Editor’s Pick