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chuam
03-01-2007, 10:58 PM
High Court mulls faith-based initatives
By FREDERIC J. FROMMER, Associated Press Writer
Wed Feb 28, 10:08 PM ET

WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court wrestled Wednesday with the question of whether taxpayers have the right to challenge the White House's aggressive promotion of federal financial aid for religious charities.

At issue is whether a Wisconsin-based group of atheists and agnostics have legal standing, by virtue of being taxpayers, to bring their complaint in the federal court system.

Taking one extreme, Justice Stephen Breyer asked a lawyer for the White House whether a taxpayer would be able to challenge a law in which Congress sets up a church at Plymouth Rock.

"I would say no," responded Solicitor General Paul D. Clement, but he added that such a church could be challenged in other ways — just not on the basis that a taxpayer has been injured. Clement is representing the Bush administration, which is trying to prevent the taxpayer suit over its aggressive promotion, through the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, of federal financial aid for religious charities.

Taking the opposite extreme, Justice Antonin Scalia asked a lawyer for the Wisconsin group, Andrew Pincus, whether taxpayers would be able to sue over the use of security money for a presidential trip where religion is discussed.

Pincus said that taxpayers would not have standing to do so, arguing that in such a case the money spent would be "incidental," and not central to the issue.

The case may turn on a 1968 Supreme Court decision that created an exception to the general prohibition on taxpayer challenges to the government spending of tax revenue. In an 8-1 decision by Chief Justice Earl Warren, the court allowed taxpayers to challenge congressional spending for private religious schools.

But the Bush administration says spending for speeches and meetings of executive branch officials does not involve spending federal money outside the government and therefore taxpayers are not entitled to challenge it.

In the current case, the Bush administration organizes conferences where faith-based organizations are allegedly singled out as being particularly worthy of receiving federal money.

The group challenging the Bush administration, called the Freedom From Religion Foundation Inc., characterizes the White House's initiative as a singling out of faith-based organizations to the exclusion of other organizations.

Last year, a federal appeals court allowed the group to pursue its lawsuit. Instead of going through Congress, President Bush issued executive orders to create the White House office and similar centers in 10 federal agencies during his first term.

One of the goals Bush set for these offices was to help religious and community groups compete for federal funding to fight poverty, substance abuse and other social problems.

The 7th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in Chicago sided with the anti-religion group, and the Justice Department wants the Supreme Court to overturn the lower court.

The case is Hein v. Freedom From Religion Foundation Inc., 06-157.

Steel Shootin'
03-02-2007, 07:32 AM
My estimate:

Voting with Bush & DOJ: Roberts, Thomas, Scalia, Alito

Voting for Citizens Rights: Breyer, Ginsburg, Kennedy, Stevens, Souter

So, I think they narrowly affirm the lower court.

The issue of "standing" is really very narrow. They are not ruling at all on the merits of the case, but simply whether a lawsuit can be brought in the first place. If the group looking to sue "wins", all that means is now they can bring their lawsuit and have the merits of the case heard. I would lay money that Thomas and Roberts will want to deny them access to the courts. Thomas is the most pathetic excuse of a justice that has ever existed. Personally, I wish that he was still in the private sector making bad sexual jokes about "pubic hairs on coke cans." To think that he replaced the great Marshall is a disgrace. Roberts ruling so far are disturbing, as well, but not at all surprising.

BTW, goodbye Roe v. Wade when the Court eventually considers it. Now, that may be fine and please you if you are pro-life. But, when it happens, none of the usual suspects will be screaming ACTIVIST COURT WRITING NEW LAW. Oh no....the praise will be flowing from the neocons. Since Activist Judge/Court continues to be thrown around, I wikipedia should include it. I should submit the following:

ACTIVIST COURT: A court that enters one or more rulings opposed to the agenda and believes of neocons, most likely in the context of state or federal Constitutional rulings.

Not to be confused when the neocons bring lawsuits seeking to expand the constitution (e.g., federalizing gay marriage, banning medical marijuana after state's voters have approved it, banning state assisted suicide after the state's voters have approved it, expanding presidential war time powers by allowing torture of prisoners, threatening states with less road funding unless they adopt a federal position, etc.). A ruling that supports the neocon agenda which is at odds with the U.S. Constition is not ACTIVIST, rather, it is "American and Patriotic." Those who do not support such an agenda are to be shunned and considered un-American.