Almost every member of Congress voted to approve the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (RFRA), 1 a bill endorsed by an unprecedented coalition of dozens of religious and civil rights organizations spanning the political and ideological spectrum. 2 President Clinton quipped at the signing ceremony that perhaps only divine intervention could explain such an unusual meeting of the minds: the establishment of “new trust” across otherwise irreconcilable “ideological and religious lines,” he remarked, “shows . . . that the power of God is such that, even in the legislative process, miracles can happen.” 3
The RFRA consensus was especially “miraculous” because the legislation addressed a deeply divisive question: whether and under what circumstances religious objectors should be exempt from generally applicable laws. RFRA’s supporters, both within and outside Congress, would surely have had sharp disagreements about many specific claims for religious exemptions to particular laws. Yet they coalesced around RFRA, which circumvented such disagreements at the retail level by codifying a “cross-cutting” statutory standard that judges would be required to apply to an undifferentiated and unknown array of future claims for exemptions to every generally applicable law in the land.
RFRA’s operative language provides that if application of a law or regulation to a person “ substantially burdens” her exercise of religion, the government must exempt that person from operation of the law, unless the government can demonstrate that denying such an exemption is the “least restrictive means” of furthering a “compelling governmental interest.” 4 Congress concluded that this “test,” “set forth in prior Federal court rulings” 5—including the Supreme Court’s Free Exercise Clause decisions in Sherbert v. Verner 6and Wisconsin v. Yoder , 7 both of which RFRA invokes by name 8—”is a workable test for striking sensible balances between religious liberty and competing prior governmental interests.” 9
In 1997, the Supreme Court held that Congress did not have constitutional authority to impose RFRA as a limit on state and local laws. 10 RFRA continues to apply to all federal law, however. And in 2000 the same wide-ranging coalition of religious and civil rights groups reunited with President Clinton to help secure enactment of the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA), 11 which applies the RFRA “test” to two discrete areas of state law: land use regulation, and the treatment of prisoners and other persons confined in state-operated institutions. More than twenty states have also enacted their own “mini-RFRAs” that require religious exemptions to state and local laws under certain circumstances—sometimes using language similar or identical to that found in the federal RFRA. 12 In yet other states, similar religious exemption tests apply by virtue of judicial construction of state constitutions. 13
The broad, bipartisan consensus in favor of such “general,” cross-cutting religious accommodation statutes has persisted throughout the past generation. 14 Yet the RFRA coalition is now fraying at the seams and is in danger of permanent disintegration. The immediate source of the schism is clear—namely, the recent RFRA challenges to the so-called “contraception mandate.” In those cases, dozens of employers and universities have claimed that RFRA entitles them to exemptions from the regulatory requirement, under the “preventive health services” provision of the Affordable Care Act, 15 that employee and student health insurance plans reimburse plan beneficiaries for the costs of most methods of contraception. 16
In Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc., 17 the Supreme Court held that several closely held for-profit corporations were entitled to a RFRA exemption from that regulation because the executive agencies had at least one “less restrictive” way to further the government’s compelling interest in ensuring that the companies’ female employees (and employee dependents) would have affordable access to effective contraception. The agencies had not demonstrated, the Court reasoned, why they could not make available to those for-profit employers the same “accommodation” that the agencies had offered to religious nonprofit organizations. Pursuant to that accommodation, the insurance company that administers the plan reimburses beneficiaries for the costs of contraception, without any payment, administration, or other involvement by the objecting employer. 18
In its current Term, the Supreme Court is considering consolidated cases brought by thirty-seven nonprofit organizations. 19 Those plaintiffs allege that RFRA entitles them to an exemption from even the regulatory accommodation, so that neither the organizations themselves, nor the insurance companies that administer the employee and student health insurance plans, would provide contraception coverage to female beneficiaries. If the Court accepts these organizations’ RFRA arguments, many thousands of their employees, dependents, and students—unlike nearly all other women in the United States—would not be reimbursed for the costs of contraception, which would, in turn, result in many more unintended pregnancies. 20
The current tensions within the old free-exercise coalition are not, however, solely a function of the RFRA claims involving the contraception regulation. As Douglas NeJaime and Reva Siegel elaborate in Conscience Wars, 21 there is widespread fear in some quarters—and presumably hope in others—that such claims might become a template for similar claims, pursuant to federal or state RFRAs or analogous state constitutional provisions, for religious exemptions from laws that prohibit discrimination in employment, or in the provision of public accommodations, on the basis of sexual orientation.
Such fears might not be warranted. Because there are not yet many such antidiscrimination laws in force, post-Hobby Lobby RFRA claims asserting a religious right to discriminate have been rare, and none has yet succeeded. 22 Nor is it likely that courts will adjudicate many such claims in the near future: once such antidiscrimination laws do attract enough public support to be enacted, very few businesses will be willing to publicly seek the legal right not to serve same-sex couples—a sure ticket to financial ruin. And in the unusual cases that do proceed to litigation, odds are that few (if any) courts will permit retail establishments to exclude same-sex couples, or allow employers to discriminate against them. 23
Nevertheless, the prospect of such claims for exemptions from antidiscrimination laws is undeniably the genesis of recent efforts by some state legislators to enact or strengthen their local RFRAs. Yet those efforts, too, have been unavailing, largely because politicians of both parties realize how devastating such enactments would be to the economic well-being of enterprises in their states. 24 Moreover, given the current, inexorable increase in public support for same-sex equality norms, it is almost certain that when legislatures enact new antidiscrimination statutes, they will notinclude robust, statute-specific religious exemptions within those laws, 25 nor enact separate laws designed to provide robust religious exemptions to the antidiscrimination rules. 26
If this legislative trend continues, then the existing federal and state RFRAs will become virtually the whole game—the only possible sources for religious exceptions to such new antidiscrimination norms.
Even so, the prospect of such future RFRA litigation hardly explains why many people and organizations who once supported—and who generally continue to support—RFRA, RLUIPA, and similar accommodation laws are becoming increasingly wary of such cross-cutting religious liberty protections. After all, as I explain below, for more than seventy years courts have virtually always rejected claims for religious exemptions in commercial settings, even when they have purported to apply a “compelling interest”/”least restrictive means” test of the sort found in RFRA. 27 If that decades-old trend were to continue, there would be no cause for alarm.
All of a sudden, however, there is a very real chance, in the forthcoming cases involving nonprofits’ RFRA challenges to the contraception regulation accommodation, that the Supreme Court might depart sharply from that historical norm, and transform RFRA into a much more robust engine of religious exemptions to commercial regulations. What brought us to this point? Who, if anyone, has betrayed the common ground on which the RFRA consensus was so carefully constructed—and how have they done so? Those important questions lurk just beneath the surface of Douglas NeJaime and Reva Siegel’s timely and provocative Conscience Wars.
NeJaime and Siegel richly detail two important aspects of the recent accommodation claims—characteristics they describe as novel, potentially destabilizing, and, perhaps, reasons to be wary of the requested exemptions.
First, they emphasize a formal feature of the recent claims: the way in which the plaintiffs characterize how the challenged laws “substantially burden” their exercise of religion. Virtually all of the plaintiffs in the contraception and discrimination cases assert that the state would require them to facilitate immoral conduct—to be complicit in others’ wrongdoing—in a way their religion allegedly prohibits. These sorts of claims, by their very nature, label other private parties “as sinners in ways that can stigmatize and demean.” 28 The employer plaintiffs in Hobby Lobby and Zubik, for instance, assert that the ACA regulation would compel their forbidden complicity in employees’ sinful use of contraception (or sinful engagement in nonprocreative sex). 29 Similarly, the bakery or bed-and-breakfast owner who wishes to turn away same-sex couples claims an exemption on the ground that she is religiously forbidden from abetting the sin of same-sex marriage or sexual activity.
NeJaime and Siegel are right that this is a distinctive feature of the recent controversial RFRA claims. Yet, contrary to their suggestion, such claims are not novel, nor are they discordant with Congress’s design in enacting RFRA. Several of the Supreme Court’s Free Exercise decisions between 1963 and 1990, which RFRA effectively incorporated, 30 involved complicity claims, or were otherwise predicated upon an asserted religious injunction to be dissociated from the sins of others. 31
Regardless of whether such claims are especially new, NeJaime and Siegel appear to be concerned that courts adjudicating RFRA claims might not recognize, or sufficiently account for, the distinct dignitaryharms that are inflicted when claimants in effect accuse others of acting immorally. They are appropriately careful, however, to clarify that what troubles them is not the mere fact of the religious objector’s disapprobation 32—something that would be apparent even if the court denied the religious exemption 33—but, rather, the prospect that the state itself would, by conferring the exemption, “express[] the message that contraception [or other third-party conduct] is sinful.” 34
Whether the state expresses such a message will depend, of course, “on the way the government structures the accommodation.” 35 It is difficult to imagine a RFRA case, however, in which this concern would determine the outcome.
Most importantly, in some cases a state agency might be able to craft a substitution “work-around” in order to both grant the requested religious accommodation and prevent any harm to third parties. The federal agencies’ accommodation to the contraception regulation, in which a non-objecting insurance company does what the objecting religious employer wishes to avoid, is an accommodation of this sort. So, too, is a recent North Carolina law that gives an individual magistrate the right to categorically recuse from performing marriages for a six-month period “based upon any sincerely held religious objection,” but that also requires the chief district court judge to “ensure that all individuals issued a marriage license seeking to be married before a magistrate may marry,” and requires the Administrative Office of the Courts to ensure that a substitute magistrate is available to perform marriages in a hypothetical jurisdiction where all the magistrates have recused. 36
Where the state fashions such an accommodation, its manifest judgment about the underlying legal norm (e.g., that women should have ready access to affordable contraception, or that same-sex couples should not be subject to discrimination) puts the state itself at odds with the religious objectors on the question of whether the third party’s conduct is moral or sinful. In such cases, the state has not embraced or ratified the objectors’ view about sinful conduct; it has, instead, navigated a way to respect the conscience of the objector while also ensuring that the law continues to work as designed, without compromising the rights of third parties. These are, in effect, “win/win” solutions of the sort the Court in Hobby Lobby hoped it had fashioned under RFRA. 37
In other situations, however, where such a work-around is not available, recognizing a complicity-based RFRA claim would deny third parties a public benefit, or equal access to “public establishments.” 38 In those cases, the material harms themselves, together with the “stigmatizing injury” that “‘surely accompanies’” an exclusion in the public accommodation setting, 39 will be more than sufficient to justify denying the RFRA exemption. 40 Accordingly, any additional harm associated with the implication of sinful conduct will virtually never affect how courts decide such cases. A court that has already denied the RFRA exemption based upon material harm to third parties, and/or the dignitary harm caused by the exclusion itself, will not need to fall back on the distinct harm associated with the taint of “immoral” conduct. And if, by contrast, a judge is determined (improperly) to grant a RFRA exemption despite the material or dignitary harm to third parties, it is hard to imagine that the implied accusation of sin would affect that judge’s disposition. In all events, the objectors’ allegation of immoral conduct is unlikely to be determinative of the RFRA claim.
The more significant component of NeJaime and Siegel’s critique is their demonstration that the new complicity claims receive much different, and more sophisticated, support than religious exemption claims have ever before enjoyed. Historically, claims for exemption from commercial regulations were idiosyncratic, brought intermittently by plaintiffs who rarely engendered sustained assistance or political support. By contrast, dozens of plaintiffs, including major corporations, reputable and well-established educational institutions (including the University of Notre Dame and Catholic University), and even some Roman Catholic archdioceses, have raised RFRA claims in the contraception cases.
As NeJaime and Siegel describe the phenomenon, mobilized groups, together with public officials and important figures in the broader movement opposing same-sex marriage and contraceptive rights, have collectively encouraged and organized the new complicity claims, and have retained a sophisticated cadre of attorneys to litigate them, all in the service of a broader political and moral agenda. On this view, a principal objective of the complicity claims is not to promote pluralism, or to “turn down the temperature” by carving out discrete enclaves where religious objectors can quietly preserve remnants of the old moral order, 41 but instead to foment continued opposition to the new moral norms, so as to “enable the conflict to persist in a new, revitalized form,” and possibly even to lay the groundwork for a restoration of the recently vanquished traditional norms as part of the formal state legal order. 42
NeJaime and Siegel’s descriptive account is compelling. It is not entirely clear, however, what (if anything) follows from it in terms of how administrators and judges ought to treat the exemption claims themselves.
Another commenter in this symposium, Douglas Laycock, reads NeJaime and Siegel to be arguing that the state has an independent “compelling governmental interest” in denying exemptions in order to preserve the newly emergent moral code against efforts to sustain the political conflict. 43 I am not sure NeJaime and Siegel mean to advance such a bold idea—certainly, they do not do so directly. 44
In any event, such a suggestion would fall on deaf ears: no state would ever argue, in an actual case, that it has a legitimate, let alone a compelling, interest in suppressing a political debate that might threaten to alter the existing legal regime. After all, presumably there was nothing problematic, from the state’s point of view, when the former political minority spent decades fighting to upend the then-majoritarian views limiting access to contraception and marriage equality. So why should the state’s posture toward the revanchist strategy by the old guard be any different? Indeed, when a period of intense moral contestation culminates in adoption of the newly emergent majority norms as part of the state's fundamental legal code, the suppression of alternative constitutional narratives can be a deeply unfortunate collateral cost of an evolution that is otherwise grounds for celebration. 45 It would therefore be troublesome, at the very least, for the state to assert that such suppression of the once-dominant perspective—or the cessation of a principled public debate that only recently shifted in valence—is itself a compelling government interest that might independently justify denial of what would otherwise be a valid RFRA claim. I do not read NeJaime and Siegel to be suggesting otherwise.
Nonetheless, NeJaime and Siegel’s descriptive account is important for another reason: The historical and institutional context they describe helps to explain a feature of the new RFRA claims that NeJaime and Siegel do not emphasize, but that is, I think, the principal source of the emerging tensions in the old RFRA coalition. Precisely because so much is at stake in the new complicity claims, beyond simply the ability of a handful of religious believers to carve out a private space in which they can freely practice their religion, the proponents of the new complicity claims have engaged in a concerted and sophisticated effort to have the courts untether the substance of RFRA analysis from its grounding in the Supreme Court’s historical jurisprudence of religious exemptions. As I explain in the remainder of this essay, this novel initiative, if successful, would have a dramatic and unprecedented impact on the law of religious accommodations.
The proponents of the new exemptions have consistently made two noteworthy arguments that could, in combination, induce the Supreme Court to fundamentally transform the jurisprudence of religious exemptions.
First, in order to establish that the contraceptive coverage rule substantially burdens their religious exercise, the RFRA claimants have exploited the Supreme Court’s traditional, and understandable, reluctance to evaluate believers’ assertions of what constitutes religiously prohibited complicity in another’s wrongful conduct. The Court credited the plaintiffs’ complicity arguments in Hobby Lobby, for instance. Invoking pre-RFRA Free Exercise doctrine, the majority explained that because “‘courts must not presume to determine . . . the plausibility of a religious claim,’” 46 the judiciary’s “‘narrow function . . . in this context’” is solely “‘to determine’ whether the line the plaintiff has drawn reflects ‘an honest conviction.’” 47
It is not as obvious as the Court made it sound that such complicity assessments—which generally do not depend upon biblical injunction or received truth, nor require “scriptural interpretation” 48 —are invariably the sorts of religious claims that civil authorities are incapable of assessing. But that is a topic for another day. For present purposes, the significant point is that the Justices appear to be deeply reluctant to interrogate such claims. The RFRA claimants’ very framingof their alleged religious obligations therefore might be sufficient to clear the RFRA hurdle of showing a “substantial burden” on their exercise of religion. 49
This in turn shifts virtually all of the doctrinal action to the “back end” of RFRA—to the government’s burden of showing that denial of the religious exemption is the “least restrictive means” of furthering compelling state interests. 50 It is with respect to that question that the recent claimants have urged the Supreme Court to fundamentally alter how it assesses RFRA claims, in a manner that would upend the compromise of 1993 and deviate from the consistent judicial practice of the past half-century.
In Hobby Lobby, the religious claimants argued that RFRA’s “compelling interest” / “least restrictive means” test “is ‘the most demanding test known to constitutional law.’” 51 Justice Alito, author of the majority opinion, appeared to agree: the government’s burden, he wrote, is “exceptionally demanding.” 52Most alarmingly, Justice Alito went so far as to suggest that if Congress might conceivably appropriate new funds to compensate for the harms that a religious exemption would visit upon third parties, the possibility of such a new appropriations statute—no matter how unlikely—could be “a viable alternative,” and thus a less restrictive means of advancing the government’s interests, thereby requiring conferral of the RFRA exemptions. 53
The Court did not hold either of these things. 54 But the petitioners in the current nonprofit cases are now urging the Court to do so 55 —a prospect that could have a dramatic impact on the ability of the government to deny RFRA exemptions that would harm third parties or otherwise frustrate compelling government interests. It is therefore important to explain why Justice Alito’s assumptions about what Congress did when it enacted RFRA are fundamentally mistaken.
RFRA was a legislative response to the Supreme Court’s 1990 decision in Employment Division v. Smith. 56 In Smith, the Court “virtually eliminated the [constitutional] requirement that the government justify burdens on religious exercise imposed by laws neutral toward religion” 57 —something the Court had insisted upon in a series of Free Exercise Clause cases over the previous thirty years. According to Congress, in those earlier Free Exercise cases the Court had applied “a workable test for striking sensible balances between religious liberty and competing prior governmental interests.” 58 Accordingly, it enacted RFRA to “restore,” as a statutory mandate, that “compelling interest test.” 59
In Hobby Lobby,however, Justice Alito tentatively endorsed an assumption the Court had made in a much earlier case—namely, that “RFRA’s ‘least restrictive means requirement was not used in the pre-Smith jurisprudence RFRA purported to codify.’” 60 ”On this understanding of our pre-Smith cases,” wrote Justice Alito, “RFRA did more than merely restore the balancing test used in the Sherbert line of [Free Exercise] cases; it provided even broader protection for religious liberty than was available under those decisions.” 61
Which is it? Did RFRA restore a test that the Court had applied before Smith, or did Congress impose a new obligation on the government that provides much more robust protection for religious exemptions than the Court did before 1990? In order to answer that question, it is necessary to examine how the RFRA consensus in Congress almost broke apart in the early 1990s, and how it was salvaged.
Virtually all members of Congress agreed that Congress should enact a law that would effectively “correct” what they saw as the Court’s mistake in Smith, by restoring the substance of the Court’s pre-Smith jurisprudence. There was one big problem, however. The actual language the sponsors settled upon to describe the government’s burden—to show that denial of a religious exemption “is the least restrictive means of furthering [a] compelling governmental interest” 62 —had the potential, if read literally, to be much more restrictive than anything the Court had insisted upon in its pre-Smith jurisprudence, including, especially, a series of cases in the 1980s in which the Court had repeatedly rejected religious exemptions to federal laws. The prospect that the courts might construe RFRA to require exemptions that would have been denied before Smith threatened to tear apart the delicate congressional consensus.
J ust as reproductive rights are at the heart of the current RFRA disputes, so, too, were they the sticking point during the negotiation of RFRA in the early 1990s. The concern at that earlier time, however, was not that religious objectors might use RFRA to interfere with reproductive rights, but precisely the opposite: many Catholic legislators and organizations, including most importantly the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, opposed RFRA because they feared that, as originally drafted, it might compel exemptions to abortion restrictions for women who claimed they were religiously motivated to choose abortion. 63 Although the idea might appear far-fetched in retrospect, the prospect that RFRA would become the engine of abortion rights dominated the legislative debates, and prevented enactment of the bill for almost two years. 64
Indeed, t he abortion-related concerns were so pronounced that leading House Republican sponsors Paul Henry and Henry Hyde withdrew their support for RFRA. 65As Representative Hyde would later recount, the test prescribed in the bill “was of particular concern to me in the area of abortion rights.” 66 Under settled pre-Smith law, Hyde explained, there was no prospect of successful RFRA claims for exemptions to abortion restrictions; yet “[a] major issue of contention in the 102d Congress was whether the bill was a true restoration of the law as it existed prior to Smith or whether it sought to impose a more stringent statutory standard.” 67
In order to bridge the abortion divide, RFRA proponents changed the bill, prior to its reintroduction in the 103d Congress, to “make clear that the statutory standard of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act is the same free exercise standard that was applied by the U.S. Supreme Court prior to Smith.” 68 As so amended, it became clear that “the Religious Freedom Act is not seeking to impose a new and strengthened compelling State interest standard, but is seeking to replicate, by statute, the same free exercise test that was applied prior to Smith.” 69 In particular, as Representative Hyde explained, “[t]he bill now clearly imposes a statutory standard that is to be interpreted as incorporating all Federal court cases prior to Smith.” 70
According to Douglas Laycock and Oliver Thomas—both of whom were deeply involved in the efforts of the Coalition for the Free Exercise of Religion to secure passage of the bill—what finally sealed the deal, and guaranteed Representative Hyde’s endorsement, was language the sponsors added to the committee reports. 71 That crucial addition expressly made it “absolutely clear” that RFRA “does not expand, contract or alter the ability of a claimant to obtain relief in a manner consistent with free exercise jurisprudence, including Supreme Court jurisprudence, under the compelling governmental interest test prior to Smith.” 72
This report language, “agreed to by all of the bill’s lead sponsors,” 73 finally broke the logjam. Representative Hyde, the Catholic Bishops, and other abortion opponents were mollified precisely because there was universal recognition that the pre-1990 “free exercise jurisprudence” that RFRA would incorporate had rarely afforded claimants the “ability . . . to obtain relief” 74 in any contexts that members of the legislative consensus would strongly oppose. And that was so because the results of the Court’s pre-Smith Free Exercise cases hardly reflected a searching judicial review of state justifications for denying religious exemptions: the government almost always prevailed, notwithstanding the Court’s use of the language of so-called “strict scrutiny.” 75
The eleventh-hour report language, which confirmed “the purpose of [RFRA] . . . to ‘turn the clock back’ to the day before Smith was decided,” 76 had the additional virtue of accurately reflecting the original impetus for the legislative initiative that led to RFRA. “[T]he purpose of this act,” according to the Senate Report, was “only to overturn the Supreme Court’s decision in Smith” 77 — not to challenge the manner in which the Court had applied the “compelling interest”/”least restrictive means” test in the cases preceding Smith. Those decisions, unlike Smith, did not prompt any congressional “restoration” movement. And so, for example, the lead House sponsor of the bill explained that RFRA would “simply restore the legal standard for protecting religious freedom that worked so well for more than a generation.” 78
If all of this is true, why did Justice Alito, in Hobby Lobby, describe RFRA’s test as “exceptionally demanding,” 79 and why did he assume that “RFRA did more than merely restore the balancing test used in the Sherbert line of [Free Exercise] cases” by “provid[ing] even broader protection for religious liberty than was available under those decisions”? 80
Justice Alito’s mistakes had their genesis in earlier dicta of the Court in City of Boerne v. Flores, 81 a RFRA case in which it appears the Justices were misled by the parties’ briefing. The petitioner, City of Boerne, represented to the Court that “the least restrictive means test has not been a staple of [the Court’s pre-Smith] free exercise doctrine,” 82 and “marks a sea change from prior free exercise law.” 83 Perhaps for tactical reasons, neither the respondent (the Archbishop of San Antonio) nor the United States took issue with this mischaracterization; indeed, they did not even discuss the least restrictive means test in their briefs or at oral argument. Not surprisingly, then, the City of Boerne Court came close to adopting the city’s (mis)reading: Justice Kennedy’s majority opinion assumed that the least restrictive means requirement “was not used in the pre-Smith jurisprudence RFRA purported to codify” 84 ; and it described that test as “stringent”—”the most demanding test known to constitutional law.” 85 Seventeen years later, Justice Alito, citing City of Boerne, reiterated these mistaken assumptions in the Court’s opinion in Hobby Lobby.
In fact, a “least restrictive means test” had been a staple of the Court’s pre-Smith Free Exercise doctrine. In Thomas v. Review Board, for instance, Chief Justice Burger wrote that “[t]he state may justify an inroad on religious liberty by showing that it is the least restrictive means of achieving some compelling state interest.” 86 The Court used the same or equivalent expressions of the constitutional test in cases both before and after Thomas. 87 Indeed, by time of Smith,that formulation had become so well-established that Justice O’Connor described the Court as having “consistently” applied a least restrictive means test, 88 and Justice Blackmun referred to it as “a consistent and exacting standard” that the Court had “over the years painstakingly . . . developed.” 89
This doctrinal feature was not a secret to Congress as it deliberated upon RFRA. The chief House sponsor, a leading academic expert on the law of religious liberty, and the Congressional Research Service all informed the legislators that the “less restrictive means” component of RFRA derived from the Court’s pre-Smith doctrine. 90 Thus, as the House Report explained, it was “the Committee’s expectation that the courts will look to free exercise of religion cases decided prior to Smith for guidance in determining whether or not . . . the least restrictive means have been employed in furthering a compelling governmental interest.” 91
But how can that be? If the Court rarely ruled in favor of religious exemptions before Smith, how could it possibly have been applying a “least restrictive means” test?
The key to understanding this apparent conundrum is to recognize that not all “compelling interest”/“least restrictive means” tests are created alike. 92 In particular, there is an important difference between the rigorous scrutiny the Court usually applies when evaluating a statute that is specifically aimed at restrictingconstitutionally protected conduct (or status), and the heightened, but less severe, scrutiny the Court sometimes uses to assess whether the state can justify incidental burdens on protected conduct.
The first, more familiar variant of “strict” scrutiny establishes a presumption that the statute itself is facially invalid, precisely because the legislature has targeted constitutionally protected activity or status. The Court deploys this approach, for example, when a statute regulates expression on the basis of its content, 93 discriminates on the basis of race, 94 or where the “object of a law is to infringe upon or restrict practices because of their religious motivation.” 95S uch a law will survive the Court’s “strict scrutiny” “only in rare cases.” 96 In such contexts, t he “narrow tailoring” or “least restrictive means” component of the doctrinal test asks, in effect, whether the state could have furthered its compelling interests without targeting, such as by using race-neutral, content-neutral, or religion-neutral criteria. If the answer is “yes,” then the legislature typically must start from scratch and consider such neutral alternative means of advancing its interests.
By contrast, when a statute does not single out a protected activity or status, it is presumptively (and facially) constitutional. Even so, in some such cases the Court has applied a form of heightened scrutiny, including a “narrow tailoring” or “less restrictive means” requirement, to evaluate the constitutionality of the law’s incidental impact on protected activity in particular applications. 97 For example, that is how the Court has sometimes analyzed antidiscrimination laws that incidentally limit the right of “expressive association,” 98 and laws regulating conduct (such as public nudity or burning draft cards) that incidentally burden expressive activity. 99
Most importantly for present purposes, it is also how the Court analyzed incidental burdens on religious exercise in the decades before Smith. In these cases, the terms of the Court’s heightened scrutiny test were similar to the language the Court uses when assessing facial challenges to targeting legislation, but the Court’s manner of applying the test was very different—and much more permissive. 100 And it was this more forgiving version of heightened scrutiny that Congress incorporated into RFRA.
As cases both before and after Smith demonstrate, RFRA’s “compelling interest”/“least restrictive means” test is by no means toothless. Most importantly, the governmentmust show that the state’s conferral of a religious exemption in the discrete setting of the particular claimants (and any others similarly situated) would actually undermine the interests underlying the generally applicable law. The government may not simply rely upon “broadly formulated interests justifying the general applicability of government mandates”; instead, it must demonstrate the “harm of granting specific exemptions to particular religious claimants.” 101
Moreover, even when a state can show that religious exemptions might have an impact on its compelling interests, if many other jurisdictions have avoided those harms by using other means even while conferring such exemptions, the challenged state “must, at a minimum, offer persuasive reasons why it believes that it must take a different course.” 102 And if the government administrators already have other, obvious alternative means of dealing with the asserted problems, they must grant the religious exemption and use those alternative means unless they can show that doing so would threaten additional harms or material costs. 103
Nevertheless, in the context of assessing incidental burdens on religious exercise, the Court has never applied the “compelling interest”/”least restrictive means” test with remotely the same degree of scrutiny or skepticism as when the Court confronts a law that targets constitutionally protected rights. Rather, as the Court stated in Yoder, the de factoinquiry under the pre-Smith Free Exercise cases—now incorporated into RFRA—is a more context-sensitive, pragmatic assessment of whether the neutral regulation “in its application . . . undulyburdens the free exercise of religion.” 104
Two aspects of this version of the “least restrictive means” test are especially germane to the current RFRA disputes. First, b oth before and after Smith, the Court has denied religious exemptions where they would impose harms on third parties. Second, the Court has never required the government to adopt a proposed alternative means of furthering its compelling interests if it would require enactment of a new statute—especially an additional appropriation—in order to ameliorate the impact of religious exemptions on compelling government interests.
These limitations explain why, for many decades before Smith, the Court never recognized religious exemptions to generally applicable laws regulating the commercial sphere, even where the Court purported to apply a demanding “substantial burden”/“compelling interest” test. The Court rejected such claims at least ten times between 1944 and 1990, in cases involving many different sorts of commercial regulation, including child protection laws 105; wage and hour legislation 106; Sunday closing laws 107; and tax obligations. 108
In commercial settings, recognizing a religious exemption would typically require third parties (customers, employees, and/or competitors) to bear burdens in the service of another’s religion, which would violate one of the central tenets of the First Amendment, namely, that nonbelievers should not be compelled to subsidize, or suffer in the service of, the religious commitments of others: “It is beyond dispute that, at a minimum, the Constitution guarantees that government may not coerce anyone to support . . . religion or its exercise.” 109 Indeed, where religious exemptions impose significant costs upon third parties, they can raise serious Establishment Clause concerns. 110 For these reasons, the state has a compelling interest in denying exemptions that pose a risk of third-party harms.
The Court’s rejection of claims for religious exemptions to antidiscrimination laws nicely illustrates that when a religious accommodation would harm the civil rights of third parties—even a relatively small group of third parties—the government is not required to grant the exemption. In Bob Jones University v. United States, for example, the Court held that the Internal Revenue Service’s refusal to grant tax-exempt status to private schools that practiced racial discrimination was necessary to further the government’s compelling interest in eradicating race discrimination, even though the effect of the requested exemption would only have been felt by the relatively small number of African American students who would choose to attend the small handful of the nation’s schools of higher education that had retained discriminatory practices. 111
In Hobby Lobby , Justice Alito suggested that applying a law to religious objectors cannot be the “least restrictive” means of advancing compelling government interest if the legislature might in theoryappropriate additional funds to further those interests. 112 Likewise, the petitioners in the current Zubik litigation, invoking cases challenging the facial validity of content-discriminatory speech restrictions, argue that the Court “routinely identifies options that would require congressional action as feasible less restrictive means.” 113 They thus insist that RFRA entitles them to an exemption from the agencies’ accommodation because Congress could, for example, enact a new law allowing their employees to purchase a subsidized, second insurance plan on an insurance exchange. 114
It is true that RFRA and RLUIPA “may in some circumstances require the Government to expend additional funds to accommodate citizens’ religious beliefs.” 115 For example, if the executive branch already has access to appropriated funds that it could lawfully use to ameliorate third-party harms, it mighthave to use those funds to do so, all else being equal. 116 It is another thing entirely, however, to suggest that the theoretical prospect of a new appropriations statute is a “less restrictive means” for purposes of the RFRA inquiry.
Inquiring about the prospect of alternative legislative action makes perfect sense when the Court applies its more familiar form of “strict scrutiny,” such as in assessing the constitutionality of a content-based federal speech restriction. In such cases, the operative question is whether Congress could have addressed its interests by enacting a different, content-neutral law. If the Court concludes that such a neutral law would have sufficed as a “less restrictive” means of dealing with the problem, the Court typically declares that the challenged law is facially invalid—in which case the legislature, if it wishes to address the problem, must go back to the drawing board.
By contrast, when it comes to a facially valid law of general applicability, such as the contraceptive regulation, religious objectors of many kinds might, over the years, seek exemptions. At those later times (and there could be many of them), Congress and/or the President might be hostile or indifferent to the compelling interests underlying the original law—interests that the courts applying RFRA arerequired to account for. But even if the later-in-time executive and legislature do care about those state interests, they will invariably have more pressing legislative agendas, and will lack the incentives and/or political capital to pass legislation to pay for the costs of all and sundry requested RFRA exemptions down through the years. It therefore would make little sense to view the mere fact that future legislatures have the authority to enact such piecemeal “RFRA fixes” as establishing a “less restrictive” alternative that requires religious exemptions that will, in fact, undermine the state’s compelling interests.
This is hardly a “radically revisionist account of RFRA.” 117 It is, instead, consistent with the outcomes of the Court’s pre-Smith Free Exercise cases and with its decisions under RFRA and RLUIPA. In every case in which the Court has recognized a religious exemption (such as Sherbert, Yoder, O Centro, and Holt), no further legislation was necessary to empower the state executive to implement that exemption. By contrast, the Court has never granted an exemption on the grounds that theoretical supplemental legislation might ameliorate the harm to state interests.
United States v. Lee is illustrative. Lee, an employer and member of the Old Order Amish, believed it was sinful for his employees, all of whom were also his co-religionists, to accept government aid. He therefore sought an exemption from the requirement to remit Social Security taxes for his employees because it was religiously impermissible for him to contribute to such a redistribution scheme. The Court unanimously denied the exemption, nominally on the ground that universal participation was “essential” to advancing the government’s interest in the fiscal vitality of the Social Security system. 118 As Justice Stevens pointed out, however, that was patently not the case. Congress had already exempted other religious employers, and “it would be a relatively simple matter,” Stevens explained, for Congress to extend its exemption, without any harm to the system, to a discrete religious community with its own welfare system, if the employees in question forfeited their right to collect benefits. 119 Indeed, several years later, Congress enacted that very religious exemption. 120 The Court in Lee, however, did not consider the hypothetical possibilityof such a tailored congressional accommodation to be a relevant “less restrictive means,” even though such an alternative certainly could have been—and was—imagined.
That disposition in Lee made a great deal of sense. When conferral of a religious exemption would undermine a compelling government interest, such as avoiding harm to third parties, a subsequent legislature will often, in theory, be able to cure the problem with a statutory “fix,” especially a new appropriation. As Justice Ginsburg asked in her Hobby Lobby dissent, however, “where is the stopping point to the ‘let the government pay’ alternative?” 121 If a new appropriations law were deemed a “less restrictive” alternative, then the government would virtually always have to afford exemptions, no matter how severe the harm to government interests, simply because Congress could in theory ameliorate the harm through additional taxing and spending.
That does not describe the Court’s pre-Smith jurisprudence of “less restrictive means,” and it cannot be what Congress intended when it enacted RFRA. 122 Indeed, the very prospect, or possibility, of such a regime undoubtedly would have doomed any prospect of RFRA’s enactment.
Nothing in the Court’s actual disposition of Hobby Lobby is inconsistent with this understanding of RFRA and the pre-Smith jurisprudence that it incorporates. Indeed, the majority opinion expressly recognized that “cost may be an important factor in the least-restrictive-means analysis,” and that “in applying RFRA ‘courts must take adequate account of the burdens a requested accommodation may impose on nonbeneficiaries.’” 123
It therefore remains an open question w hether the Court will transform RFRA into “a bold initiative departing from, rather than restoring, pre-Smith jurisprudence” 124 —a “Religious Freedom Revolution Act,” as it were. 125 If the Court takes that step, as some components of the old RFRA coalition are urging it to do, that would be a sharp and alarming break with the past —an outcome difficult to reconcile with the notion that the Court “must . . . respect the role of the Legislature, and take care not to undo what it has done.” 126 “A fair reading of legislation demands a fair understanding of the legislative plan.” 127 In the case of RFRA, that legislative plan was to restore, rather than to radically transform, the law of religious accommodations.
Martin S. Lederman is an Associate Professor of Law at Georgetown University Law Center. He thanks Chip Lupu and the editors of the Yale Law Journal for their careful and incisive suggestions on earlier drafts of this essay, and thanks Chip Lupu, Tejinder Singh, and Bob Tuttle for especially illuminating conversations.