Should religious organizations be permitted to engage in discriminatory hiring? Historically, the federal government’s default answer to this question has been a pretty firm “no.” Now, in the wake of Hobby Lobby, certain religious leaders are requesting that the default answer be changed to “yes.” And as with Hobby Lobby, the argument for making this change violates conservative principles.
The 1964 Civil Rights Act, enacted 50 years ago last week (with stronger Republican support in Congress than Democratic), banned discrimination in hiring. Henceforth, no hiring entity could discriminate based on race, color, sex , or national origin. In most instances it also became illegal to discriminate in hiring based on religion, but a very narrow exception was carved out for religious organizations.
Religious groups and affiliated organizations could hire and fire based on religion. But they couldn’t hire or fire anyone in a non-ministerial position based on race, color, sex, or national origin. And they weren’t allowed to use religion as a cover for these other types of discrimination. That is, they couldn’t claim that their religion forbade them to hire, for a non-ministerial position, blacks, or women, or legal immigrants from Mexico.
The rules were even stricter for a federal contractors. Anyone doing business with the federal government was forbidden to engage in employment discrimination, under a series of executive orders starting with President Franklin Roosevelt in 1941. Roosevelt, though generally loath to promote civil rights for fear of alienating powerful (and segregationist) southern Democrats in Congress, was responsive in this instance to ward off a planned civil rights march on Washington led by A. Phillip Randolph, president of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters.
%22Simple%3A%20If%20you%20take%20the%20government%E2%80%99s%20money%2C%20then%20you%20have%20to%20play%20by%20the%20government%E2%80%99s%20rules.%20You%20don%E2%80%99t%20like%20those%20rules%3F%20Then%20take%20somebody%20else%E2%80%99s%20money%20instead.%22′
Roosevelt’s executive order originally applied only to racial discrimination in the defense industry, but within two years he extended it to all government contractors. Eventually the protected categories were expanded to include sex, national origin, and religion. No exception—none—was carved out for religious organizations. That meant organizations like Catholic Charities USA, which took federal money, couldn’t give preference to hiring Catholics. Somehow Catholic Charities managed nonetheless to become one of the largest and most successful charities in the country.
Why were stricter prohibitions imposed on federal contractors than on other employers? Simple: If you take the government’s money, then you have to play by the government’s rules. You don’t like those rules? Then take somebody else’s money instead.
Christendom College, a Catholic institution in Front Royal, Virginia, refuses to accept any federal subsidies because, its website says, “federal funding opens the door to massive government intrusion.” One might quibble with the adjective “massive,” but otherwise that is an honest conservative argument. “When you take government money,” Wheaton College political scientist Amy Black told PBS in 2003, “there are regulations and expectations.”
When President George W. Bush established a White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives in 2001, both liberals and conservatives worried that expanding grants to religious organizations might threaten the church-state separation. Liberals worried about the Constitution; conservatives worried about those “regulations and expectations.” But most conservatives stopped fretting as it became clearer that any conflicts would typically be resolved in religion’s favor.









