The Supreme Court has considered a handful of religious-liberty cases of late, but as Vox’s Ian Millhiser noted last week, they’ve generally involved religious conservatives seeking exemptions from laws and policies. The justices have heard cases in recent years, for example, about faith-based organizations arguing that Covid-19 restrictions and contraception policies shouldn’t apply to them.
Carson v. Makin, which the high court considered yesterday, is a very different kind of case. At issue in the case is a seemingly dry subject — education subsidies in Maine — which gets a lot more interesting upon further inspection.
There are areas in rural Maine in which there are no public schools. Families in those areas are given taxpayer subsidies from the state — money that would ordinarily go to schools themselves — which they can use at public or private schools of their choice.
But under Maine’s program, the money can’t go toward religious education. The principle is obvious: In the United States, we have a First Amendment that separates church and state. People can give money to religious institutions for faith-based education if they want to, but the government shouldn’t force taxpayers to subsidize religious lessons.
Some families in Maine didn’t quite see it that way, challenging the state’s policy in court, claiming discrimination. As NBC News’ report on yesterday’s oral arguments made clear, Republican-appointed justices seemed to agree.
The Supreme Court on Wednesday appeared likely to rule that state programs providing money to parents for their children’s high school tuition cannot exclude schools offering religious education. Such a ruling would loosen longstanding restrictions on using taxpayer money to pay for religious instruction, further lowering the wall of separation between church and state.
At one point yesterday, Justice Stephen Breyer, one of the outnumbered progressive minority, said, “We don’t want to get into a situation where a state will pay for the teaching of religion.”
But by some measures, that’s precisely the “situation” some on the right, including Breyer’s colleagues, are looking for. “The parents are seeking equal treatment. They’re saying, ‘Don’t discriminate against me because I’m religious,’” Justice Brett Kavanaugh said.
If that means that taxpayers have to subsidize religious education against their will, so be it.








