Supreme Court Rules Boston Was Wrong To Bar Christian Flag From City Hall
The justices unanimously agree that the city was not endorsing the flags, and that therefore it couldn’t exclude religious organizations.

The Supreme Court ruled 9-0 today that Boston violated the First Amendment when it allowed some private groups to fly flags outside City Hall while denying the same right to a religious organization.
For more than a decade, the city of Boston has allowed ceremonies for flags unconnected to the government to be flown in City Hall Plaza. Around 50 different flags have been raised there in close to 300 ceremonies. Some of them were associated with groups or causes.
In 2017, Harold Shurtleff, director of the Christian group Camp Constitution, asked to hold a flag ceremony there. He was rejected. Officials reportedly feared that allowing his organization to fly a flag would constitute endorsement of religion and violate the Establishment Clause. Shurtleff sued. Lower courts held that Boston was essentially engaged in "government speech" by allowing and hosting these flags. Therefore, the courts said, the government could reject Shurtleff without violating the First Amendment with the justification that they didn't want to get entangled with religion.
But in Shurtleff v. Boston today, the Supreme Court ruled that Boston's flag-raising program does not express government speech. Before Shurtleff's request, the city didn't vet anybody who requested to fly a flag or hold a ceremony at City Hall Plaza. The city simply approved them and had no written policies explaining what is or is not allowed. Because the city was not actually paying attention to what the flags represented before Shurtleff came along, the justices determined the flying of these third-party flags didn't amount to government-endorsed messages. Therefore, refusing Shurtleff's flag for religious reasons violated his First Amendment rights.
Justice Stephen Breyer (who heard arguments in the case before he retired last week) delivered the opinion: "When a government does not speak for itself, it may not exclude speech based on 'religious viewpoint'; doing so 'constitutes impermissible viewpoint discrimination.'" The Supreme Court ordered the previous ruling by the First Circuit reversed and kicked the case back down for reconsideration to incorporate the opinion.
Several of the more conservative justices wrote concurrences agreeing with the decision but also bringing up concerns about the way courts and government approach various religious speech tests. Justice Brett Kavanaugh noted that while the city may have believed it would violate the Establishment Clause by flying a religious flag, the Supreme Court has made it clear that the government doesn't violate the Establishment Clause by treating religious and secular speech with equal guidelines in the public sector.
Justice Samuel Alito wrote another concurrence (joined by Justices Neil Gorsuch and Clarence Thomas) arguing that the court needs to more firmly establish when a speaker is purely private or government-endorsed, to avoid government censorship of private speech. He worries that cities' takeaway from the main opinion could be that they should establish rules for what sorts of flags would be allowed, which could put governments in the position of actually introducing viewpoint discrimination down the line:
Under the Court's factorized approach, government speech occurs when the government exercises a "sufficient" degree of control over speech that occurs in a setting connected with government speech in the eyes of history and the contemporary public, regardless of whether the government is actually merely facilitating private speech. This approach allows governments to exploit public expectations to mask censorship.
And Gorsuch (joined by Thomas) also wrote separately that the reason Boston (and other governments) consistently misunderstand the Establishment Clause is because of Lemon v. Kurtzman, a Supreme Court decision from 1971 determining that states violated the Establishment Clause by funding religious private schools. That decision established a three-prong test to determine whether a government policy entangled the church with the state.
Rather than resolving conflict, Gorsuch notes, the Lemon test has "produced only chaos" because the "seemingly simple test produced more questions than answers." What does it mean to "advance" or "inhibit" religious practice? When does the government get "excessively entangled" in religion? In this case, all the justices agreed that simply flying a flag did not entangle church and state—but lacking clarity, it's also easy to see why Boston officials may have thought they would violate the Constitution if they didn't reject Shurtleff's flag.
Gorsuch writes:
Faced with such a malleable test, risk-averse local officials found themselves in an ironic bind. To avoid Establishment Clause liability, they sometimes felt they had to discriminate against religious speech and suppress religious exercises. But those actions, in turn, only invited liability under other provisions of the First Amendment.
That's exactly what happened here. Gorsuch calls Lemon and the test it created "an anomaly and a mistake" that the Supreme Court has essentially stopped using in its decision-making. If so, local governments clearly haven't gotten the message.
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The decision was undoubtedly correct - and highly entertaining in places, as befits the last few weeks of Breyer's time on the Court.
The concurrences are questionable, and yet again we see the evangelical wing of the Court in co-ordination. The ongoing agenda is to undermine all precedent against government promotion of (Christian) religion.
The idea is clearly to keep repeating that the Lemon test is either ineffective or no longer in use - though this isn't true - so when the right case comes up, the Court will say that Lemon is no longer in effect and cite their own prior obiter as "proof".
"and yet again we see the evangelical wing of the Court in co-ordination. The ongoing agenda is to undermine all precedent against government promotion of (Christian) religion."
Out of the six Catholics, two Jews and one Episcopalian which one is the Evangelical wing of the Court?
Seems like Evangelicals are the only major American religious group not represented in the court.
I am puzzled about the picture accompanying this article - why is there an American flag flying outside a Bulgarian tractor factory? And what does a Bulgarian tractor factory have to do with a Supreme Court decision?
LOL - Breyer specifically refers to the appearance of the building in his decision.
Awesome. Seems like Breyer.
"Built in the late 1960s, Boston City Hall is a raw concrete structure, an example of the brutalist style. Critics of the day heralded it as a public building that 'articulates its functions' with 'strength, dignity, grace, and even glamor.' J. Conti, A New City Hall: Boston’s Boost for Urban Renewal, Wall Street Journal, Feb. 12, 1969, p. 14. (The design has since proved somewhat more controversial. See, e.g., E. Mason, Boston City Hall Named World’s Ugliest Building, Boston Herald (Nov. 15, 2008), https://www.bostonherald.com/2008/11/15/
boston-city-hall-named-worlds-ugliest-building.)"
Oh, I assumed that was the Ministry of Truth building.
Much too friendly.
The experts designed it, approved it, and declared it beautiful. Who are we deplorables to question the judgment of experts?
"This controversial building was designed by Kallmann McKinnell & Knowles, a firm of three Columbia University professors, who won an international, two-stage competition in 1962. Their design, selected from 256 entries by a jury of prominent architects and departed from the more conventional designs of most of the other entries . . ."
This is an example of the appropriately named Brutalist School of architecture. This school has the virtues of being ugly and impractical as the heavy use of concrete makes renovations (like installing new wiring) very difficult.
A fine example of elite self--hatred.
Make the Hoover Bldg. almost look good.
This is an example of the appropriately named Brutalist School of architecture.
With just enough Post-Modern touches to take it to next-level ugly.
This is the first time I've heard of the term "Brutalist."
It is next level ugly. On top of that, all of the crevices and corners in the building are great places for the homeless and drunks from Fanueil hall to take a piss.
This case was pretty weak, having read the briefs. I recommend folks read it if you want a better understanding of the limits of things. Boston seemed super in the wrong there.
As far as enclaves of affluent, college-educated but not very intelligent, progressive or left-leaning types go, Boston may be worse than NYC or CT. So, being entirely in the wrong, no surprise, it's their m.o.
That is one ugly-ass building.
Well, it's supposed to represent Boston.
FLAG, n. A colored rag borne above troops and hoisted on forts and ships. It appears to serve the same purpose as certain signs that one sees on vacant lots in London—"Rubbish may be shot here."
-- From The Devil's Dictionary by Ambrose Bierce
9-0 decision, also. A lot of important and big decisions are unanimous, we just hear about a lot of the 5-4s that the media and certain motivated actors promote in order to foster division around wedge issues.
9-0 yes, but the court was divided on the reasons - and I don't think that the concurrences will feel obliged to follow the reasoning of the majority in the next few 1A religion cases.
I agree. Though, what about this decision do you think is important? This felt like a really straight forward case and other than it being part of the overturning of Lemon, it seemed fairly simple.
Note: I have not read the opinions on it and am not a lawyer anyway, so if there's good stuff buried in there I'd love to hear about it.
I think it's important in the context of COVID-though after the fact-in establishing that we can't just make special rules for religion, or decide to arbitrarily police speech when we otherwise haven't been paying attention to it.
I am not trying to be a pain-in-the-ass. What about this is post-COVID. This seems like a larger trend to rollback separation of Church and State that at some point started to apply to how one thinks. What about this is COVID specific?
Correct me if I'm wrong, this is the case where Boston had a flag pole where one could sign-up to fly flags on different occasions. A Christian group attempted to fly the vague Christian Flag and was rejected. This is that case?
Several Covid lockdown measures specifically placed more restrictions on churches than Builders Square for example. Courts found that while church activities could be restricted they could not be singled out for restrictions that secular enterprises were not subject to. In this case a religious organization was denied the opportunity to hoist a flag while secular organizations were allowed. I think that's his point.
I'm guessing Roberts brokered unanimity with the guarantee he sides with the left on some future case.
a trade for 'future considerations'
Had that been the case, we'd have seen either no or very brief concurrences.
maybe...
maybe the optics of 9-0 are enough for Roberts.
he doesnt seem like the best negotiator
Maybe, but I doubt it. Roberts is a guardian of the institution rather than a sober jurist.
I'm guessing Roberts brokered unanimity with the guarantee he sides with the left on some future case.
Given that this was a pretty simple and straightforward case where the state had little to justify its position I see no reason (at least no sane, evidence-based one) to conclude that any brokering was required for unanimity on the part of the court members. 9-0 rulings in such cases are the rule rather than the exception.
On the plaza, near City Hall’s entrance, stand three 83foot flagpoles. Boston flies the American flag from the first pole (along with a banner honoring prisoners of war and soldiers missing in action). From the second, it flies the flagof the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. And from the third, it usually (but not always) flies Boston’s flag—asketch of the “City on a Hill” encircled by a ring against a blue backdrop.
Boston's flag sounds like forbidden state-sponsored religious speech, since it refers to a sermon by John Winthrop describing how the Puritan commonwealth set up in the Massachusetts Bay Colony would be an example to the world: "We shall find that the God of Israel is among us, when ten of us shall be able to resist a thousand of our enemies; when He shall make us a praise and glory that men shall say of succeeding plantations, 'may the Lord make it like that of New England.'"
History is so problematic.
What, no rainbow flag or injun banners?
They need more and bigger flags, enough that you don't see that building anymore.
Cue the article in the Washington Post about the religious conservatives in the Supreme Court supporting fundamentalists, and the 4,000 comments excoriating anyone Christian.
And cue the preemptive Christian self-victimization.
Agnostic, not Christian, and the Post story has garnered 1,200 comments in the two hours it's been up, so there are apparently a lot of religion haters like you out there. Why not go and post your hatred there?
"Stop making us victimize you!!!!"
Seriously?
If you haven't noticed, the progs have been using the wife beater excuse for a while now. "Why do you make me do this to you!?"
My Boy Scout Handbook--friendly, cheerful, courteous, helpful, brave, kind, clean and reverent--included brief thumbnails of the ethical virtues. Under "reverent" it recommended church or synagogue, but not peyote teepee, Mormon temple, acid rave or Mohammedan mosque, and certainly not any faithless physics lab.
"faithless physics lab"
You mean like these guys? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Christians_in_science_and_technology#Physics_and_astronomy
I hate to break it to you Hank, but science is a method of inquiry. Not a set of concrete beliefs. The result of science is the data. As soon as you give that data an interpretation you have philosophy. Not science.
Ah, but what they do in Vespers or Yeshiva is different from what they do in their labs.
Moreover, The Holy Bible says nothing about the nature of matter or the atom, therefore nothing about sub-atomic particles, Nuclear Physics, Quantum Physics, Electricity, Electronics, The Electromagnetic Spectrum, Radio, Television, Computer Science and Engineering, and endless other Physical Sciences and applications. Televangelism is technically unbiblical, but here we are.
*Tips Welder's Mask with insulated gloves and grounded wristband.*
Oh, Christian flag. I thought it said "Christian Fag".
Boston would have no problem flying a fag flag.
Those are girl-bullying MAGA trumpista catamites.
You'd be mistaken, that's the thing. Boston would also embrace such folks.
What's the consensus on letting me fly my freak flag in Boston?
Fly it higher and higher:
https://youtu.be/72LanJTWVHY
I feel like you owe it to someone.
http://users.bestweb.net/~robgood/politic/religious.html
Does this mean we all get to 'fly' your Nativity scene on government property next Winter i.e. set it up next to some Satanic nativity scene that looks like something out of Rosemary's Baby?
Yes
Fine with me, a stone cold atheist. Let freedom of expression within the law ring in public places, including ideas the religious may not like. Good manners and all on all sides would help, but surely adults can get along.
For once I agree with you.
The facts of the case seem to suggest it was only a religious group that was refused. Viewpoints that religious people might object to were embraced.
"including ideas the religious may not like."
Like the ubiquitous rainbow flags you guys feel compelled to fly from every city hall?
I suspect that you will not follow such principles Joe, and instead embrace anti-religious policies not unlike what the Soviet Union pushed.
Who hacked Joe?
Someone has hacked Joe's login, it seems.
Oh gawd, is that the Boston City Hall? Must be the ugliest building I have seen outside of D.C.
What a shame. So much good architecture and history in the city, and the cap it off with that giant turd of a building. I've seen better looking quonset huts.
It's called "Brutalism".
I'm not kidding, that's really the architectural style's name.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brutalist_architecture
Government buildings should be as minimal and ugly as possible. to discourage people from wanting anything to do with it.
Also, I see Brutalism as "The King must kneel to let his Kingdom rise" applied to Architecture and Construction. Government should give up frills so that private taxpayers can be free to be Baroque 'til they go Ba-roke. 🙂
You have to be fairly dishonest and partisan to think there was almost no difference between government funding of religious schools and putting up a flag for one day at the explicit request of a resident. In the former case I can see the colossal expense of funding schools for every religion and sect being used to only support some religions. The flag costs nothing to fly and there was nothing beyond perhaps a wait period and a few stopping any other religion from doing the same.
"Justice Stephen Breyer (who heard arguments in the case before he retired last week) delivered the opinion:"
I nknow they can't wait to kick him out the door and install a justice who isn't sure she is a woman, but I don't recall seeing that he is gone from the court.
Yes, I wondered how Pres Biden could appoint a Justice for a vacancy on the court when there is, in fact, not a vacancy on the court.
So the Nazis of Copley Square can't decorate City Hall with swastika bunting anymore?
My preference would be for government to be functionally ignorant and blind when it comes to religion. No special treatment, no exemptions or exclusions, no special legal standing. A person or group who claims religious belief or privilege gets the same consideration of a person who claims affiliation with a garden club.
And this applies to Indigenous People Native Indian Americans, too. I really get peeved when liberals rage about Christian Jesus freaks but get a political hard on for some Injun ceremonial BS in the same public space.
A person or group who claims religious belief or privilege gets the same consideration of a person who claims affiliation with a garden club.
Something tells me that lately when the Queer Transvestite Garden Club of Boston wants to raise the rainbow flag over city hall, they'd get more consideration than if Everly First Baptist asked to raise a Christian one.
The newer religions are way better than the old ones.
What kind of "Injun ceremonial BS" would you like to suppress?
I'm with you here and I have Cherokee and Blackfoot in me too. Keep Government neutral on Religion and Art and let private Citizens express themselves however they want with their own time and Dime.
I wouldn't be surprised if Boston lets anyone fly anything on the City Flag Pole, but still zones private flags out of private neighborhoods.
9-0? Time to reevaluate. Particularly re-evaluate lower court participation. Obviously they struggle with basic law.
Who knows, but it is hypocritical that leftists criticize, mock and suppress Christianity in the public square but venerate and support the idea of the Noble Savage and all it’s tropes.