Justice Amy Coney Barrett is sworn in before US President Donald Trump on October 27 2020. ©AFP/File Nicholas Kamm

 

Washington (AFP) – Can a Catholic adoption agency exclude gay and lesbian couples from fostering children in the name of its religious beliefs? The US Supreme Court will hear the case Wednesday, just one day after the country’s presidential election.

It is first major hearing to come before Justice Amy Coney Barrett, a devout Catholic appointed by President Donald Trump and sworn in last week over the objection of Democrats.

Her appointment eight days before the presidential vote solidified the court’s conservative majority, which now stands at six out of nine justices.

The case, LGBT rights advocates say, has implications not just for same-sex couples, but an array of minorities including those practicing other faiths.

In March 2018, the city of Philadelphia learned that one of its child welfare providers, Catholic Social Services (CSS), had refused to match foster children with same-sex couples.

In the resulting case, CSS alleged that the move violated its First Amendment rights guaranteeing freedom of religion and expression under the US Constitution.

“Philadelphia demands that a religious agency, an arm of a church, speak and act according to Philadelphia’s beliefs,” the group said in a court brief.

Its case has received support from dozens of churches and lawmakers from Bible Belt states as well as the Trump administration, which says that the northeast US city is acting out of “hostility” towards religion.

Philadelphia requires all foster partners to sign a nondiscrimination clause and argued in its own brief that “the Constitution does not grant CSS the right to dictate the terms on which it carries out the government’s work.”

The city has received the backing of the liberal American Civil Liberties Union, which warned that the case “could allow private agencies that receive taxpayer-funding to provide government services… to deny services to people who are LGBTQ, Jewish, Muslim or Mormon.”

The court will decide on the case in 2021.

Disclaimer: Validity of the above story is for 7 Days from original date of publishing. Source: AFP.