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<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> We'll hear argument this morning in Case 18-1195, Espinoza versus the Montana Department of Revenue. Mr. Komer.</u>
<p id="ORAL ARGUMENT OF RICHARD D. KOMER ON BEHALF OF THE PETITIONERS">
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court: This case asks whether the Federal Constitution allows the wholesale exclusion of religious schools from scholarship programs. It does not. Yet, Montana's Blaine Amendment requires that exclusion. As a result, the Blaine Amendment discriminates against religious conduct, beliefs, and status in violation of the free-exercise clause under Trinity Lutheran. The Montana Supreme Court disagreed. That court held that barring religious schools from the program did not violate the Federal Constitution. This Court should reverse that judgment. Even Respondents now concede that excluding religious schools from the program is unconstitutional, but they argue that the court avoided this discrimination by invalidating the entire program. This is wrong. The only reason the court invalidated the program was because it included religious schools. And the court's remedy did not cure its discriminatory judgment, nor should the remedy shield the judgment from review. Petitioners brought this lawsuit because they were denied scholarships based on religion, and they are still being denied scholarships based on religion. If the court had shut down the program because it included Muslim schools or African-American schools, <w>there</w><w>'s</w> no question that would be unconstitutional. We ask you to reverse. Respondents argue in the alternative that Locke allows them to exclude the religious schools and that this case falls within the play in the joints. But that would allow the exception to swallow the rule. As Trinity Lutheran made clear, the rule is religious neutrality and Locke only a narrow exception. We argue that Locke is the exception that proves the rule. 2 In Trinity Lutheran...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> May... may I ask you some threshold questions about Article III standing? Under the Montana judgment, these parents are treated no differently than parents of children who are going to secular private schools, so where is the harm? When a differential is challenged, the court inspecting the state law can level up or level down. And here it leveled down. So these would be parents of children going to secular private schools. How are you harmed?</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Your Honor, the Montana Supreme Court lacked the necessary predicate for leveling up or for leveling down because they got the federal Supreme Court question wrong. But for getting that question wrong, we would never have moved on to the issue of remedying that problem because it <w>is</w><w>n't</w> a constitutional problem.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> But <w>there</w><w>'s</w> another serious problem, and <w>that</w><w>'s</w> the parents are not taxpayers. Taxpayers are the people who contribute to these student scholarship organizations. And this Court has held that there is no standing to challenge somebody else's tax status. It seems to me that the Court's decision in Eastern Kentucky is very close to this one, and the Court said you say <w>you</w><w>'re</w> injured because these hospitals are not providing... providing services to you, but you are not the taxpayer and you <w>can</w><w>'t</w> complain about the tax treatment of someone else. So how do you distinguish Eastern Kentucky?</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Well, Your Honor, here what's involved is a scholarship program, and the scholarship program's intended beneficiaries are the parents, like our clients, who are enabled to exercise their constitutional right to choose...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> They're challenging the tax status of someone else, not themselves.</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> No... no, Your Honor, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> because the Montana Supreme Court has extended their Blaine Amendment to include scholarships that are generated by the giving of tax credits...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> I'm sorry. Is there any case we've ever had where we've recognized a tax... a... a party who <w>was</w><w>n't</w> either the taxpayer or the direct recipient of the taxes, benefits of the taxes? So here the parents not just <w>are</w><w>n't</w> the taxpayer; <w>they</w><w>'re</w> not the schools that receive the money. Neither are they guaranteed receipt of the money. We're told that <w>there</w><w>'s</w> less money than applicants. So <w>they</w><w>'re</w> like three levels removed. In what other case can you cite for me have we permitted such a removed party to have standing?</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> I... Your Honor, I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think that we've had a state constitutional provision ever be applied in such a...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> It <w>does</w><w>n't</w> matter that...</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> ... extended fashion.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> ... we've had... we've had a case involving schools that discriminate, and we've said that those schools... that taxpayers... not taxpayers... that individuals who feel affected by that discrimination <w>do</w><w>n't</w> have standing because <w>they</w><w>'re</w> not the people... <w>they</w><w>'re</w> not the taxpayer and <w>they</w><w>'re</w> not the recipient of the discrimination directly, so... and I'm... I'm having a problem understanding how you have standing either for the taxpayer or for the school who receives the money.</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Well...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> And why... you have a lot of contingencies. Other... that taxpayers <w>won</w><w>'t</w> give the $150 without the tax credit, that the school will actually pick them, and that even if picked in the past, that they'll be picked in the future. It seems a high level of contingencies. So mention one case that comes close to that.</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Any case that involves Article III standing where the intended beneficiaries of the program are...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> The school's the intended beneficiary.</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> I... I... respectfully, Your Honor, I disagree. The financial benefit from a scholarship program is to the families. The families receive the benefit of the scholarship. The scholarship is used by the families to buy the education...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Counsel...</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> ... at the school.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> ... the financial benefit is to the taxpayer who gets a tax credit.</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Actually...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> That's the intent. It's an incentive for the taxpayer to give money, but there are many incentives that incentivize people to give money.</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Yes, Your Honor, it does incentivize donations. That's its purpose. And it actually succeeded, while the program was going, in awarding scholarships to two of our three client families. And...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> How do you know that they <w>would</w><w>n't</w> have been in the same situation? After all this is a small credit. It's $150. And if they <w>do</w><w>n't</w> get the credit, if the donors to the organizations <w>do</w><w>n't</w> get the credit, they still get a tax deduction. And that tax deduction is uncapped. So how can we even assume that <w>there</w><w>'s</w> going to be less money in the kitty if the credit is removed but the tax deduction remains untouched? And I'm looking at Wright against Allen in Eastern Kentucky and I just <w>do</w><w>n't</w> understand how this case passes the standing bar when those <w>did</w><w>n't</w>.</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Well, Your Honor, the simple fact of the matter is that our clients received scholarships under this program, which was a financial benefit to them. The... the... the tax deductions are not a financial benefit to the taxpayer because they are out $150, whether they pay their tax to the state or they donate $150 to the scholarship organization. There's no financial benefit to them. It's kind of a psychic benefit. But it creates scholarships. It really created scholarships. And...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> Mr. Komer, can I go back to Justice Ginsburg's first question? And I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> know whether to call it standing or mootness or anything else, but I guess I am having trouble seeing where the harm in this case is at this point. It's a strange kind of posture wherein, but if you would describe to me what is the harm that the parents are suffering right now currently?</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Well, right now, their students... two of the families' students are on scholarships and next year they <w>won</w><w>'t</w> be...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> Right. But I guess...</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> ... generated by the program.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> I'm sorry to interrupt. I guess what I'm... I'm saying is that because of the supreme court's ruling, whether you go to a religious school or you go to a secular private school, <w>you</w><w>'re</w> in the same boat at this point. So I've always understood in these kinds of cases that the harm is the perceived or alleged or actual... whatever you want to call it... discrimination. But there is no discrimination at this point going on, is there?</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Yes, there is. Because the discrimination occurred in the judgment of the Montana Supreme Court which considered a federal question, which led to the invalidation of the program. And they...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> But it led to the invalidation of the entire program as it related both to private secular schools and private religious schools. So a... a... a... a... the parents of both are affected in the exact same way.</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> That's because the remedy... you <w>can</w><w>'t</w> let the remedy shield the discriminatory judgment. The discriminatory judgment is in mistakenly believing that this Blaine Amendment and the application of it did not violate the Federal Constitution. If they got that question right, we <w>would</w><w>n't</w> be here. Because the program would still be going on and our parents would be...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> I'm sorry, how could that be? Meaning, do you... are you taking the position that as a matter of constitutional law, the Montana Supreme Court constitutional provision is unconstitutional? That... that states are forced to give money, tax credits, to religious institutions and secular institutions? Are they required always to give money out, scholarships?</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> No. No, Your Honor.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> All right. So <w>let</w><w>'s</w> start there. Are you saying that the constitutional... the constitution is unconstitutional? Meaning that the constitutional... Montana's constitutional provision is unconstitutional.</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Montana's constitutional provision violates the free-exercise clause on its face.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> On its face.</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> And as applied to this program.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> So you are saying that states are forced to give money both to secular and religious schools?</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> It... not to the schools. This is a case about giving the money to the families. It's not a case about...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> I <w>do</w><w>n't</w>...</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> ... giving money to the schools.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Secular and religious families?</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Yes, if they give to one, they must give to the other.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> But can the state choose not to give at all?</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Yes.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> All right. So <w>let</w><w>'s</w>... if you start from that proposition, the Montana court said we <w>do</w><w>n't</w> have a law now, <w>do</w><w>n't</w> give to any. So <w>let</w><w>'s</w> assume that the Montana court did what you wanted it to do and said: This is unconstitutional under the Federal Constitution, and <w>it</w><w>'s</w> unconstitutional under the Montana Constitution, which is what I think it did, by the way. It said <w>it</w><w>'s</w> unconstitutional under both, even if it <w>did</w><w>n't</w> say it, but <w>let</w><w>'s</w> assume it. Let's assume it says <w>it</w><w>'s</w> unconstitutional under the federal constitution. You're saying they <w>can</w><w>'t</w> say separately <w>it</w><w>'s</w> unconstitutional under the Montana Constitution? They have to keep the program alive?</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> In the circumstances we're dealing with, Your Honor, they terminated the program.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> I'm not talking about the circumstances. Let's assume their opinion was written exactly the way you want it to be, and they had said, this violates the Federal Constitution, but it also violates the Montana Constitution. So instead of leveling up the way Justice Ginsburg said, we're going to level down. That way it <w>does</w><w>n't</w> violate either of them. It... we stopped the federal violation because we're not discriminating against the school... any school. And we've now... not violating the Colorado Constitution. Can they do that?</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Are we talking about the court doing this or...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> To the court doing this.</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Can the court do it, no?</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Why?</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Because when you have a constitutional conflict between the two constitutions, the Federal Constitution trumps...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> But you just told me the Federal Constitution <w>does</w><w>n't</w> stop the state from choosing not to give aid.</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> That's right. But here the state chose to give aid and it has been stopped from giving aid to our clients.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> Well, it chose to give aid consistent with the constitutional amendment. And... and... and the constitutional amendment sets restrictions on funds. And, as a result of the restrictions on funds that the constitutional amendment set, in this case, which I have always understood to be a challenge to the way that the constitutional amendment operated on a particular program, as a result of this challenge, what has happened is that neither the parents who want to send their children to religious schools nor the parents who want to send their children to secular schools get what they would like to get. So <w>they</w><w>'re</w> both being treated the same way.</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Only as a result of a mistaken understanding of the free-exercise clause, Your Honor.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> Under...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> But we <w>do</w><w>n't</w> usually...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> ... under... go ahead.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> I mean, we <w>do</w><w>n't</w> usually sort of grade every line of an opinion. Usually we look to an opinion, and... and... and... and <w>there</w><w>'s</w> a decision below, and <w>it</w><w>'s</w> had a consequence in the world. And the consequence of this decision is that there is no discrimination, that neither... that neither set of parents is getting what it... they want. Now, you might say, well, both should get what they want, and maybe that would be a better world. Maybe. But the constitutional harm that it seems that you have to allege here is the discrimination. And there is no discrimination.</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Your Honor, there is no discrimination because the Montana constitutional provision requires discrimination on its face and as applied to our clients. And, if I can point out, this <w>is</w><w>n't</w> a decision about harmonizing the two constitutions because the Montana Supreme Court did not recognize there was any conflict between them that had to be harmonized at all.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Justice Alito?</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> Yeah, I just wanted to ask this simple question: Under our decision in Village of Arlington Heights, is it constitutional for a unit of state government to do something that it could do, but if it does it for an unconstitutional discriminatory reason, is it then unconstitutional?</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Yes, it is, Your Honor. I see the light is on.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Thank you, counsel. Mr. Wall.</u>
</p>
<p id="ORAL ARGUMENT OF JEFFREY B. WALL FOR THE UNITED STATES, AS AMICUS CURIAE, SUPPORTING THE PETITIONERS">
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Mr. Chief Justice and may it please the Court: The Montana Supreme Court held that the Montana constitution requires religious discrimination that the federal constitution forbids. Parents may not direct scholarships to schools solely because those schools are religiously affiliated. Now, the state <w>does</w><w>n't</w> defend that error of federal law, but says it was washed away when the court invalidated the entire program and left everyone empty-handed. The Montana Supreme Court had no power under federal law to invalidate anything. It relied on a state constitutional provision that is inconsistent with and preempted by the federal free-exercise clause, and, crucially, Petitioners continue to suffer from that federal free exercise violation regardless of whether any parents received scholarships or also suffer as collateral damage. If the Montana Supreme Court had invalidated this program because it included historically African-American schools or all-girl schools, that would be a straightforward equal-protection violation. Nothing about it would be cured by the fact that other parents had been denied funding as well.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> So your... your... I'm sorry. Oh, <w>you</w><w>'re</w> good. The injury flows through the schools, right? I mean, the money would go to the schools, not to the parents. And we <w>do</w><w>n't</w> have a school in this case.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Well, but I think <w>that</w><w>'s</w> really getting at the standing issue, Mr. Chief Justice. And <w>they</w><w>'re</w> losing their scholarships at the end of the school year, as I understand it. They've had them for years, and under the court's decision, they lose them at the end of this school year. So even I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> take the state to be challenging Article III injury. And so then <w>it</w><w>'s</w> just a question of whether <w>they</w><w>'re</w> raising their own rights and they are because the reason <w>they</w><w>'re</w> being excluded from the program, everybody would say, the answer to the question, why <w>do</w><w>n't</w> these parents get their scholarships, because they want to direct the scholarships to religious schools. Their free exercise is being penalized. They're not raising a right on behalf of the state. Everybody concedes that if all the parents in this program had wanted to choose secular schools, there'd be no basis for the state's court ruling. The scholarship program would still exist. It's only because some parents said I want to send my kids to schools like Stillwater, and at that point, at page 30 of the Petition Appendix, the state supreme court says we have a state constitutional guarantee, no state funds to religious schools. That's what it says. And <w>that</w><w>'s</w> a straightforward violation 7 of...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Mr. Wall...</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> ... federal law.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> ... are you claiming that... what <w>you</w><w>'re</w> calling Blaine amendments, but that the Montana provision and all the other states that have one, that as a matter of federal constitutional law, all of those constitutional... state constitutional provisions must be struck?</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Well, not the entire category because I actually think <w>it</w><w>'s</w> a little more nuanced than that, but I am saying what the Court said in Trinity Lutheran. Seven members of the Court said the free-exercise clause there compelled what two members of the Court said in your dissent, Justice Sotomayor, the Establishment Clause forbade. Yes, we think the same is true here. There are...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> That's a radical decision.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> I...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> We have... we have a founding father, Madison, lobbying heavily for the free-exercise clause and equally to stop states from both establishing religions or using public funds to support them. There's been over... since the founding fathers, a long history of people who for non-discriminatory reasons, but for reasons related to their belief in the separation of church and state, that have taken the position that the state should not give money to religious institutions. You are suggesting now that Montana in went through an empty exercise, they looked at the history of this amendment or one like it, said it was odious, admitted... some of its people who voted for this bill in '72 said it was a despicable history, but they then looked at the founding fathers' writings, they looked at the State of Montana's religious tolerance, which had changed dramatically from the Blaine Amendment era, and decided that they were going to side with James Madison, one of the fathers of our Constitution, and continue to say we <w>do</w><w>n't</w> want aid to churches.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> So... so...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Now...</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Perhaps you could comment, counsel.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> So, Justice Sotomayor, that was one of two points I was hoping to make on the merits before I sat down. Every time that the state points to that in its brief, and I think most notably at pages 30 and 31, and what Madison was talking about in the Remonstrance were compelled support laws, preferential aid to the church. Even the state admits at page 30 of their brief, and these are the state's words: There is zero founding era evidence that there... that you could have a generally available benefit and deny it to an institution based on its religious character...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> What about... what about... MR. WALL... and Justice Thomas, I think, walks through the history of the opposite in his Rosenberger concurrence, that at the time of the founding, when they gave out land in the Northwest Territory and other statutes for... to schools, they included religiously affiliated schools. I think actually the tradition that dates to the founding is... is sort of the opposite, that you <w>can</w><w>'t</w> disqualify them just based on their religious character, but you can have no compelled support, no preferential aid to the church. And <w>that</w><w>'s</w> very different from what... what's going on here.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> But what... what did you think of this? I... I'm having trouble, and I want you to tell me what you really think about this problem which has probably an answer that you will have thought about. Okay. Say in San Francisco or Boston or take any city or state, and they give many, many, many millions of dollars to the public school system. And a lot of them give a lot of money to charter schools. Now, they <w>do</w><w>n't</w> give money to Catholic schools. All right? Now, if... if we decide <w>you</w><w>'re</w> right, does that all change?</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Well, no, in certain respects it <w>does</w><w>n't</w> change, Justice Breyer. They <w>do</w><w>n't</w>... if they want to open up the funding, they can put limits, secular limits, on the program. We're going to give math scholarships or engineering scholarships...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> There's... I'm not talking about scholarships.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> But if...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> I'm talking about the X billion dollars that the State of New York spends on the public school system, and I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> know how much, but I suspect they might spend money on charter schools.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Yes.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> Let's call it another million. They do not... I'm just repeating myself...</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Yes.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> ... spend money on the Catholic school system. Now, <w>there</w><w>'s</w> nothing immoral about that. That's just the... the... what they do. And... and <w>that</w><w>'s</w>... comes from the Constitution. All right. If I decide... <w>it</w><w>'s</w> the same question. If I decide for you, am I saying that they have to give money to the... same amounts proportionate to... to the parochial school?</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> I think if they structure the benefit program the way they did here or the way they did in Trinity Lutheran...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> No, no. I'm saying the way...</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> If...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> ... they do do it, not the way that they did it here and so forth.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> If they are giving out generally available public benefits for people to go to private schools...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> Oh, oh, what's the private? Why is it that they have to be equal with private but they <w>do</w><w>n't</w> have to be equal with public?</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> No, when you said charter schools, I took those to be private schools.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> Forget the charter schools. Same... same question.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> If... if a city or state gives out funds for private education, which <w>it</w><w>'s</w> not required to do, it can limit its funding to public schools, but if it gives it out and it gives it out just for scholarships for private schools...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> My hypothetical was they give it out in... <w>it</w><w>'s</w> called the Public School System of the United States. I'm saying <w>that</w><w>'s</w> what I'm talking about. Now, what's your response? What's the difference between this case, you win, and the same with the public schools, they have to give it to parochial schools too. What's the difference?</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Justice Breyer, what I'm saying in the last paragraph of Trinity Lutheran, when the Court said you <w>can</w><w>'t</w> deny a generally available public benefit to an entity <w>that</w><w>'s</w> otherwise qualified based solely on its religious character or nature...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> So Mr. Wall, <w>do</w><w>n't</w> you...</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> ... that rule applies equally to schools as to playgrounds.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> Mr. Wall, I mean, there seems... I was one of the seven in Trinity Lutheran, but there seems to me a real difference in this case. In Trinity Lutheran, the... a state was using the religious status of various people or entities to limit access to a unrelated public benefit, to a completely secular public benefit. Now, here, it seems to me, that what the state is doing with respect to these educational programs is to say: We <w>do</w><w>n't</w> want to subsidize religious activity. We <w>do</w><w>n't</w> want to subsidize religious education. And, further, because of the way that the supreme court issued its decision, that will mean that we <w>do</w><w>n't</w> want to subsidize any private education. So you have both the non-discrimination as to that, but even put that aside, what this is is essentially a state saying, for many reasons that have been viewed as legitimate, even though not shared by everybody, but have been viewed as legitimate for many years, we <w>do</w><w>n't</w> want to subsidize religious activity, in particular religious education. That's a far cry from Trinity Lutheran.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> So your question gets at the two things I was hoping to say before I sat down. 2 The... the first is all we're asking and the Petitioners are asking is that you do what you normally do when you review a state supreme court decision. At page 32 of the Pet. App., it said no problem with federal law. It got federal law wrong. If it had come out correctly on the federal law question, nothing else in the decision would have flowed. The trial court would have been affirmed and everybody would have gotten the scholarships. That... with the application of the state constitutional provision, which was preempted under Trinity Lutheran, was the only basis to impugn the state law. So you should reverse the federal error and send it back. On the merits of your question, look, I get that you can say <w>it</w><w>'s</w> a harder case because <w>it</w><w>'s</w>... <w>it</w><w>'s</w> education and <w>it</w><w>'s</w> not a playground. And in that sense, it may be a harder question, but the Montana Supreme Court <w>did</w><w>n't</w> take it as a case about use, <w>did</w><w>n't</w> try to say this was covered by Davey or any of the rest. It said religiously-affiliated schools. That's a status-based distinction. And I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think we can distinguish that from Trinity Lutheran.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Thank you, counsel. Mr. Unikowsky.</u>
</p>
<p id="ORAL ARGUMENT OF ADAM G. UNIKOWSKY ON BEHALF OF THE RESPONDENTS">
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court: The Constitution does not bar the State of Montana from enacting and applying a state constitutional provision that keeps its own state legislature out of the business of funding of religious schools. The no-aid clause does not prohibit anyone's free exercise of religion. To the contrary, it protects religious freedom by protecting religious schools from government influence and ensuring that government cannot use aid as leverage to influence the content of religious education. Petitioners attempt to analogize this case to Trinity Lutheran but the analogy is inapt for two reasons: The first reason is that the coercion aspect of Trinity Lutheran, which was crucial to the Court's decision, was absent here. In Trinity Lutheran, the church put to a stark choice: Either abandon your religious faith and become a nice secular stone building with a daycare facility and <w>you</w><w>'re</w> going to get the money or stick to your religious faith and you <w>won</w><w>'t</w> get... you <w>won</w><w>'t</w> get the money. And that coercion was the premise of the Court's decision that there is a penalty on free exercise. That's not happening in this case where the state court held that Montana <w>was</w><w>n't</w> even capable of knowing whether a particular parent would use money for a religious and non-religious school, and it therefore held that regardless of how the money was spent, there <w>would</w><w>n't</w> be a tax credit. The second distinction from Trinity Lutheran is that Trinity Lutheran involved the refusal to give money to a church for a completely non-religious purpose, merely because it was a church. This case is different in that the state is simply declining to fund religious education. The state court did not hold that under the no-aid clause, religious schools would be denied funding for non-religious purposes. So let me start with the standing point which came up during the first half hour. So we <w>did</w><w>n't</w>, as the Court knows, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> in an amicus brief, but we <w>did</w><w>n't</w> make the argument in our brief because we concluded that the arguments really went more to the merits rather than standing. We... I... I mean, we believe <w>there</w><w>'s</w> an attenuated connection between the state action here and Petitioners' free exercise of religion but Petitioners are alleging in their brief that they personally are the victims of status discrimination because they are Christians. We think <w>that</w><w>'s</w> wrong based on what the state court actually did, but historically the courthouse doors have been open to make that kind of argument. But we think on the merits, there simply <w>is</w><w>n't</w> a prohibition on the free exercise.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> I... I'd like to get back to Justice Breyer's question and get your view you on it which I understand it to be that why <w>does</w><w>n't</w>... do you think the other side's theory leads to a situation where the funding that goes to public schools, a... a... if... if they prevail, <w>would</w><w>n't</w> have to go to religious schools?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Well, I mean, I'm not sure of the breadth of their theory. I mean, <w>there</w><w>'s</w> a number of amicus briefs that... that make that exact point. I mean...</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Well, <w>let</w><w>'s</w> take it to be just that, I mean, this is a case about money and the question whether or not it must go to religious schools. And I am wondering if the public... the funding of public schools is the same as the situation involved here in your... in your view?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> I guess I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> understand Petitioners to be making that argument in this particular case.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> They're not, but <w>that</w><w>'s</w> what's... but it still can bother me. I'd like to know if in deciding it for them, if I do, that I have made a major change in the public school system. I understand one's private and the other's public. And what I'm asking for, you or them, why would that matter?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Well...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> That is, why... why would it make a difference, if you have to give... I mean, now <w>do</w><w>n't</w> jump on to my argument and say, great, it supports you. I'm not making an argument to support you.</u>
<u loc="[LAUGHTER]">[LAUGHTER]</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> I'm asking a question to find out the answer.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Well, I... I... I'm not sure exactly how far Petitioners' argument would lead, but I... I do think that one important point of this... in this case is that states generally have had power over education, and to decide that <w>they</w><w>'re</w> only going to fund the public school system, and that is the ultimate effect of the state court's judgment in this case.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> But, I wonder if... if <w>there</w><w>'s</w> a difference in the sense that... that... between general funding of the public schools and the decision to provide aid to private schools, except not religious schools.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Well, so I think that, you know, the question in this case ultimately boils down to, whether the striking down of the program because of the no-aid clause just in and of itself is a violation of the free exercise right of Petitioners. And, you know, the first half of the argument involved a number of questions about how Petitioners are really harmed if the program as a whole is struck down. And I think I heard two sets of arguments from the other side, from Petitioners, both of which I would like to address. One argument is the sort of broader argument that just, the no-aid clause is just constitutionally defective, like, by its very nature, because it is discriminatory, is not capable of being applied, and, therefore, the court should just remand and tell the court you just <w>can</w><w>'t</w> apply this illegal rule. And the second argument I heard is this somewhat narrower argument that as applied, the problem here is that the court excluded religious schools from a general program as in Trinity Lutheran. So if I could just address those... those two theories of the case by Petitioners. So I think the first argument really is tantamount to an argument that the no-aid clause is facially unconstitutional, because like every single time you applied the no-aid clause, the rule it recites is that religious schools <w>do</w><w>n't</w> get money because...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> Well, I thought they were quite clear, that they were not arguing... they were not making a facial challenge.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Right.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> It was a challenge as applied to the particular situation here.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Right. So if... if <w>that</w><w>'s</w> the case, and I... I agree that <w>that</w><w>'s</w> the tenor of Petitioners' argument. I think the government was making a broader argument but I think Petitioners' argument is more limited. So if... if it is the case that in general the Court... the state court can apply the no-aid clause, in other words, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> not just facially discriminatory to say because something is religious...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> Well, <w>they</w><w>'re</w> not...</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> ... we're not...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> ... conceding that. They're just saying you have to consider it as applied here. Look, I... I... I like your reaction to this way of looking at the case. Maybe <w>it</w><w>'s</w> right; maybe <w>it</w><w>'s</w> wrong. A... it is a violation of the Federal Constitution if a state Supreme Court bases a decision on a ground that discriminates in violation of the constitution. Do you agree with that?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> I would agree with that, but obviously the question is whether it discriminates in violation of the Constitution...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> Okay.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> ... the last part of that. Look...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> All right.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> ... I'm not... I'm not objecting...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> The argument is if they... they <w>do</w><w>n't</w> have to fund private education at all, but if they choose to provide scholarships that are available to students who attend private schools, they <w>can</w><w>'t</w> discriminate against parents who want to send their children to schools that are affiliated in some way with a church.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> So I...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> That's the simple argument. And <w>it</w><w>'s</w> hard to see that <w>that</w><w>'s</w> much different from Trinity Lutheran.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> No, I think it is completely different from Trinity Lutheran. So look, I'm not going to object to the general premise that Your Honor offered, that if <w>there</w><w>'s</w> like a... a... a legal rule, just the very application of the rule is constitutionally defective, then you can reverse the state court decision. I'm... I'm not going to fight that proposition as a general matter. But <w>that</w><w>'s</w> not the question here. I think the question here is whether the state may apply a no-aid clause. And I think that the answer is yes. Because if you accept the premise that the...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> Counsel, <w>would</w><w>n't</w> you...</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Yes.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> In terms of what <w>you</w><w>'re</w> agreeing with Justice Alito, I just want to press you a little bit further. Let's say a state court decision could be consistent with the constitution or not consistent with the constitution, right? The outcome may or may not be. If the... if... if the decision rests on an erroneous interpretation of federal law and remedying that error could provide relief, we have a case, <w>do</w><w>n't</w> we?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> I mean, in principle, if we assume <w>there</w><w>'s</w> an error of federal law in...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> Yes.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> ... the court's decision...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> Assuming <w>there</w><w>'s</w> an error of federal... in federal law and that remedying it here might provide relief to plaintiffs, we have a case.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> I... I... so, I think that, yes, as a general matter, at a high level of generality, if Petitioners identify an error of federal law in a lower court decision, I think the Court can adjudicate the error federally.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> Okay. So the question really becomes do we have an error of federal law here?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Right. But the question is what becomes an error of federal law.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> Suppose... suppose the state said we're going to allow the scholarship funds to be used for secular schools or Protestant schools but not for Jewish schools or Catholic schools. Unconstitutional?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Yes, so I think that...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> Is that a yes?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Yes.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> Okay. So what's different when you say the scholarship funds can be used for secular schools but not for Protestant, Jewish, Catholic or other religious schools because of the religious status?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> So, I think the right lens to look at that hypothetical is the Establishment Clause, which prohibits the state... regardless of whether <w>there</w><w>'s</w> an infringement on any individual liberty, I think the Establishment Clause prohibits the state from distinguishing between one religion versus a different religion. And I think <w>that</w><w>'s</w> an example...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> But a lot of the free-exercise equal-treatment cases, going back to Everson, McDaniel, say you <w>can</w><w>'t</w> exclude religious people, religious institutions, religious speech because <w>it</w><w>'s</w> religious from a generally applicable program...</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Right. So...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> ... the fact that <w>it</w><w>'s</w> odious to the Constitution to quote the words of Trinity Lutheran. So why <w>is</w><w>n't</w> this excluding religious people, telling them that <w>they</w><w>'re</w> not entitled to equal treatment under the Constitution, why <w>is</w><w>n't</w> that a violation of... a straight violation of the Trinity Lutheran principle which goes back to Everson...</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Because I think...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> And why is it different from other hypothetical?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> I think the state has a choice, right? It's not allowed to tell people we are going to penalize you for exercising your religion. That's a prohibition. I think that the core insight of a case like Trinity Lutheran is that <w>there</w><w>'s</w> no difference between the denial of a benefit and a fine. That's a prohibition because <w>you</w><w>'re</w> actually penalizing the decision to exercise religion. That <w>does</w><w>n't</w> mean that the state has to fund religious schools and it also <w>does</w><w>n't</w> mean the state <w>can</w><w>'t</w> just apply a principled view that it <w>does</w><w>n't</w> want...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> But if <w>you</w><w>'re</w> a...</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> ... to get involved in religious education.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> If <w>you</w><w>'re</w> running a scholarship fund and <w>there</w><w>'s</w> a group of people lining up for the scholarships, are you secular? Okay, you can get it? Are you Catholic? No, <w>you</w><w>'re</w> out because <w>you</w><w>'re</w> Catholic.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Yeah, <w>that</w><w>'s</w> exactly what the state...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> How is that...</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> ... court is not doing in this case.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> How is that... how is that consistent with the principle set forth in Trinity Lutheran or McDaniel, Justice Brennan's concurrence in McDaniel?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> I think <w>that</w><w>'s</w> exactly what the state court ensured <w>would</w><w>n't</w> happen. It's not just a matter of like...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> The predicate... the predicate was that that kind of discrimination is... does not violate the Federal Constitution.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> No, I... I... I think that the state court can say, look, as a state, we have a no-aid clause clause. We have a principled objection to funding of religious institutions, but we understand that this sort of classification of coercing people on to being secular is a penalty on religion. So to balance those two interests, we're going to simply level down. And I just want to be clear, we're not defending religious bigotry here, okay? I think no-aid clauses have a principal justification, especially in Montana.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> Well, <w>they</w><w>'re</w>... <w>they</w><w>'re</w> certainly rooted in... in grotesque religious bigotry against Catholics. You agree with that?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> I mean, I think that in the 1880s, there was undoubtedly grotesque religious bigotry against... against Catholics. I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think <w>that</w><w>'s</w>...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> That was the...</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> ... comes out in the...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> ... clear motivation for this.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> No, not... <w>that</w><w>'s</w> not true. In the 1972 Constitution, which is where this provision was enacted, I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think <w>there</w><w>'s</w> any evidence whatsoever of any anti-religious bigotry. I think the... yes, Your Honor? I'm sorry.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> No, I... I want to... to see if <w>there</w><w>'s</w> any real difference between this and Trinity Lutheran. So what the... excuse me... what Article X, Section 6 of the Montana Constitution says that there <w>can</w><w>'t</w> be any aid, indirect or direct, to any institution, school, or other institution controlled in whole or in part by any church, sect, or denomination. So if you have a school that has a board of trustees and one or more of the board... members of the board of trustees ex officio are members of a religious body, that would seem to provide control, in part. Would that be sufficient under the Montana Constitution, without looking at all at the nature of the education provided by the school?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> No, I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think so. That's not how the state court has construed the Constitution...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> Where has it said... where has it said that <w>that</w><w>'s</w> not how <w>it</w><w>'s</w> construed? That's control in... in part.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> So if you read the lower court opinion, <w>there</w><w>'s</w> all this language about how the real problem here is that the money is going to the school, which is going to spend it on religious education. The language...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> Well, <w>they</w><w>'re</w> talking about schools in general. How do they know what schools <w>they</w><w>'re</w> talking about?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> No, <w>they</w><w>'re</w>... <w>they</w><w>'re</w> saying... <w>they</w><w>'re</w> not talking about schools in general. There's all this language saying that money is going to go to a school and, therefore, the money... the school is going to spend that money on explicitly religious education. If I could just step back, look, I'm agreeing... I agree that the... the lower court opinion is not completely clear on this. I mean, part of the problem is I think that this... this challenge has really changed in this Court. In the lower court, it <w>was</w><w>n't</w> the no-aid clause that was really being challenged; it was the rule. And so I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think... I mean, I think the state courts in general should be entitled to adopt limiting constructions of their own state constitutions. I just <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think the state court had the chance to do that here because the argument <w>was</w><w>n't</w> really raised. And I think it would be a little unfair in this Court to sort of assume the broadest possible interpretation of the state constitution just for purposes of... of like invalidating it. At minimum...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> May I ask you a question? Let's go back to the basic, okay? Let's take the proposition here that the law as written giving aid discriminated. I know <w>you</w><w>'re</w> challenge that, okay? But that it violates the U.S. Constitution...</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Yes.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> ... because... Rule does because it permits secular schools but not religious schools from receiving the scholarship. I know you take as a defense position that they can do that. Putting that aside, <w>you</w><w>'re</w> wrong. Assume that. Okay?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> I accept I'm wrong, yes.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> All right. Now, there was a suggestion in an earlier question that if you were wrong, and the Montana Supreme Court in turn uses the Montana Constitution to level down, that it is unconstitutionally acting, that it is using religion to level down. How do you answer that argument?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Because...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Because <w>that</w><w>'s</w> exactly what we were told in a question, which is they are basing the leveling down on the basis of discriminating against religion.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> So I think that the answering of that question requires a kind of focused analysis of exactly what the Constitution allows and <w>does</w><w>n't</w> allow, all right? So if you accept the premise that Rule is unconstitutional because it discriminates, it says secular schools in and religious schools out, that <w>does</w><w>n't</w> answer the question of whether the mere application of a no-aid clause that does not lead to a judgment with that effect is also unconstitutional. So I think the crucial point in this case is to look at what the state court did when it applied the no-aid clause.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> No, <w>is</w><w>n't</w> the crucial question why the state court did what it did? If it did what it did for an unconstitutionally discriminatory reason, then <w>there</w><w>'s</w> a problem under Village of Arlington Heights. So I'll give you an example. The state legislature sets up a scholarship fund, and after a while, people look at the... the recipients of the scholarships, and some people say: Wow, these are mostly going to blacks and we <w>do</w><w>n't</w> like that and <w>that</w><w>'s</w> contrary to state law. So the state supreme court says: Okay, that discrimination is... we're going to strike down the whole thing. Is that constitutional?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> No, so we <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think the race analogy is apt. I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think <w>that</w><w>'s</w> constitutional, and we just <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think that race and religion are identical for all constitutional...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> What <w>they</w><w>'re</w>... what he's saying is that, look, the Court took the case in the Prince... Prince Edward County thing...</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Yes.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> ... or the equivalent and said they <w>could</w><w>n't</w> do that. They <w>can</w><w>'t</w> shut down all the schools, even though the Constitution they <w>did</w><w>n't</w> say had a right and so <w>that</w><w>'s</w> the similarity.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> So I... I assume the...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> I think, Justice...</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> I have an answer...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> But I have... I'd like you to think about that...</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Look...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> ... but I have a more direct question on the merits. Sorry. Look, the state says Catholic schools get some money; Jewish schools <w>do</w><w>n't</w>.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Yeah.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> All right? No problem, unconstitutional, free exercise, right?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> And establishment, yes.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> Okay. The... the state says: We'll give police protection to all schools, all people, but no religious institution. That's...</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> That... that...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> ... unconstitutional.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> That's Trinity Lutheran.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> Clearly. Okay. Yeah. Correct.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Yeah.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> Now, why is it different? And I'm not saying it <w>is</w><w>n't</w>. I want to know your reason why is it different? Oh, try it the opposite extreme. The state says: We will pay for the salaries of priests if <w>they</w><w>'re</w> Mohammedan but not if <w>they</w><w>'re</w> Buddhist. Unconstitutional, right?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Yeah.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> Okay. So why <w>does</w><w>n't</w> it also violate the Constitution were the state to say we <w>won</w><w>'t</w> pay the salaries of any priests but we will pay the head of every other organization?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Well, I think that...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> I mean, you see where I'm... you see...</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Yes.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> ... how I'm doing that? You see the point?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> So let me... let me answer that question and then go back to the race question I would like to address.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> Okay. You <w>do</w><w>n't</w> have to answer if you <w>do</w><w>n't</w> want to.</u>
<u loc="[LAUGHTER]">[LAUGHTER]</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Well, I'll... I'll give a...</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> I recommend it, though.</u>
<u loc="[LAUGHTER]">[LAUGHTER]</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> I'll give a brief answer.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> Yeah.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> So I think that <w>there</w><w>'s</w> a constitutional difference between distinguishing among religions and saying the Court is... the government is just going to stay out of religion altogether.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> That's correct.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> There's many Establishment Clause cases saying that regardless of whether <w>there</w><w>'s</w> a civil liberties violation, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> just contrary to... to disestablishment principles to say that we're going to treat one religion...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> Okay, I got that.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> ... totally different from another one.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> So what about the other part, where we said, look, you <w>can</w><w>'t</w> discriminate against all religions by not giving them playgrounds or you <w>can</w><w>'t</w> discriminate against all religions by refusing to give them police protection or fire protection? What about that part?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> All right. So there... <w>there</w><w>'s</w> two differences between that case and this one. One is the striking down of the whole program, which we've talked about throughout the argument today, and then <w>there</w><w>'s</w> a second point which <w>has</w><w>n't</w> really come up, which is sort of the Locke v. Davey distinction between a declination to fund religious education and refusing funding merely because someone happens to be religious for a completely non-religious purpose.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> Does...</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> And I think that...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> Does...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> Can I take you back, Mr. Unikowsky, to the striking down the whole program?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Yes.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> Because a number of people have suggested that that must be motivated by animus towards religion.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Right.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> And I can think of many reasons why you would strike down the whole program that have nothing to do with animus toward religion. You might actually think that funding religion imposes costs and burdens on religious institutions themselves. You might think that taxpayers have conscientious objections to funding religion. You might think that funding religion creates divisiveness and conflict within a society, and that for all those reasons, funding religious activity is not a good idea and that you would rather level down and fund no comparable activity, whether religious or otherwise, than fund both. Now, none of those things have anything to do with animus towards religion, and 21 I... I... I...</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> So I think <w>that</w><w>'s</w> right, and I think <w>that</w><w>'s</w> why we <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think the race analogy is apt. And I think <w>it</w><w>'s</w> useful to talk about why the no-aid clause was enacted based on the convention's discussions in 1972 and why it makes sense that those justifications would result in...</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Why... why does that explain why the race analogy is inapt? I mean, the legislature may say they built parks and pools, and they say funding those, but if a higher percentage of African Americans come and use the pools, then we're going to shut down the whole program. And you <w>would</w><w>n't</w> defend that on saying they could have a judgment that it decreases tensions among the different races to keep them... no, you would just look at the facial discrimination, right, and conclude the fact that... that <w>would</w><w>n't</w> be good under your view, would it?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Of course not...</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Because <w>they</w><w>'re</w> shutting down the whole...</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> No.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> ... program?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> No. Of course not.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> How is that different than religion, which is also protected under... under the First Amendment?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Because I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think that race and religion are identical for all constitutional purposes, right? Look... look, if a state constitution had a provision saying that like historically black colleges <w>are</w><w>n't</w> entitled to any aid at all, that would obviously be facially unconstitutional. You <w>would</w><w>n't</w> even need to get to these as-applied challenges at all because I think the equal-protection clause embodies a judgment that race is never, ever a permissible criterion in any government decision making at all, regardless... unless strict scrutiny is satisfied, which is very, very difficult. And... and I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think the rule is the same in religion. But later this term, this Court's about to hear a case involving exemptions of religious schools from anti- discrimination laws. That distinguishes between... that... that creates a sort of religious classification but that does... <w>that</w><w>'s</w> not intrinsically unconstitutional.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Was that... was that your answer to Justice Kagan's question?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> No, so... well...</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Well, I... go ahead. I'd like to give you the chance to do that.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> The answer is, I think if you accept that no-aid clauses are not facially unconstitutional, and I think <w>it</w><w>'s</w> a hard argument to make for all the historical reasons, they've existed for such a long time, then you have to accept that <w>it</w><w>'s</w> at least permissible for a state to say, for principled reasons deeply rooted in national tradition dating back to Madison, we have a preference to not fund religious activities, not prohibit it but not fund it.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> But <w>there</w><w>'s</w> a difference between saying we're not going to fund religious activities and saying we're going to discriminate based on religion. That's the point. They... the state... nobody's claiming the state has an obligation to make particular grants to religious institutions or to provide any funding for private education at all. The question is, can they... if... if... if there is a program that is... <w>that</w><w>'s</w>... is designed to serve certain purposes, can they discriminate in the application of the... in the... in the... deciding <w>who</w><w>'s</w> going to get the benefit of it on the basis of religious affiliation?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> I think what... so that sounds more like the Trinity Lutheran hypothetical. I think what state... there are certain things a state <w>can</w><w>'t</w> do and certain things a state can do. What I think a state can do is say, look, we have a no-aid clause which has existed for a very long time and that says on its face that we prefer not to fund religious activities for good reasons I'd like to explain in just a second, okay? Now, we're constrained by anti-discrimination principles from coercing people into abandoning their religion. So if we have these two principles, these principled non-bigoted and historically rooted views that we <w>do</w><w>n't</w> want to fund religious activity on the one hand, and the First Amendment, which clearly guards against coercion and penalizing religious faith on the other, the way we're going to balance it is to do what the state court did. And I just want to say one thing about that.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> To do what the state court did, meaning?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Yes, invalidate the program. And I just... I mean, if you look at the reasons the no-aid clause was enacted which I think are similar to the reasons James Madison gave, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> just hard to say that James Madison disabled future states from enacting no-aid clauses based on essentially similar arguments to the ones he made. And in 1972, what the delegates basically said was that they conceived of the no-aid clause as a mechanism of protecting religious schools from political influence. So, to prevent government from using its leverage to... to influence the content of religious education. There's like a lot of leaders of religious denominations who came forward and testified in favor of the no-aid clause for that exact reason. And I think <w>it</w><w>'s</w> very clear why that justification applies with complete force with respect to this program, right? Because <w>it</w><w>'s</w>...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> Basically what <w>you</w><w>'re</w> saying is, the difference between this and race is, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> permissible to discriminate on the basis of religion. It's not permissible, ever, to discriminate on the basis of... of race. That's what <w>you</w><w>'re</w> saying.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> I mean, look, it... it seems to me that when you talk about discrimination, we can mean two different things, all right? One way of looking at discrimination is to say that just... you <w>can</w><w>'t</w> have a rule that treats religion differently from other subjects, which is I think is the core of Petitioners' argument. And they say, look at the no-aid clause. It says religious schools are ineligible and it imposes no comparable restriction on anyone else, and therefore <w>that</w><w>'s</w> just discrimination and it should be wiped out of the state constitution. So if... if... if you buy that argument, then <w>you</w><w>'re</w> basically saying that like every no-aid clause since 1835 is unconstitutional, even at the founding. Look, all the state constitutions said things like, a tax <w>won</w><w>'t</w> be levied to build a church. That is a form of discrimination, right? Like you can levy a tax to build a bridge but not a church.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> Well, I... I mean, I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> know about every... every no-aid clause in the country. They'd all have to be examined separately if in... if, in fact, they are challenged. A lot of them... look, you... I'm not going to get into an argument with you about what happened in 1972, but do you really want to argue that the reason why a lot of this popped up beginning, coincidentally, in the 1840s, at the time of the Irish potato famine, that had nothing to do with discrimination based on religion?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> I'm not saying that they... no, I'm not saying that at all. I think that the history in the 19th century is very complex, like <w>there</w><w>'s</w> a Professor Green, who is a leading scholar on this, wrote a book that both parties cite which basically says <w>it</w><w>'s</w> a complex history and <w>there</w><w>'s</w> good reasons and <w>there</w><w>'s</w> bad reasons and it depends on the state. And, look, I... I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> see how Montana could...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> But <w>are</w><w>n't</w> you saying... are you... I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> know, can we... can you or could I say this: Yes, race is different from religion. Why? There is no Establishment Clause in regard to race. What is the Establishment Clause? Well, it has something to do with not supporting religion. And there is nothing more religious except perhaps for the service in the church itself than religious education. That's how we create a future for our religion. Now, <w>there</w><w>'s</w> some line there, and that line may be what I have just suggested, impermissible under case law of this Court or it may be permissible but unwise. You'd like to draw the line. Explain it.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Okay. So I think that, you know, we <w>have</w><w>n't</w> talked about the analogies to Locke at all. I'd just like to say a few words about that, with I... which I think are consistent to your question. So <w>it</w><w>'s</w> true that there are factual distinctions between this case and Locke, right? Locke involved training for the ministry and this case involves secondary education. So I'm... I'm not denying... I'm not saying <w>they</w><w>'re</w> on all fours with each other, but the question is whether that distinction can be located in the free-exercise clause. Because, really, you know, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> true that Locke involved funding of the ministry but I think this case does too, right, the ministry of teachers towards their students. And I think Petitioners have a somewhat revealing statement...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> But this is a... this is a school, in education, there satisfies the compulsory education laws of the state, correct?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> That's true.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> And so <w>that</w><w>'s</w> different from Locke, as Professor Laycock's amicus brief points out in a very narrow decision about training of the clergy. And it seems to me there are two different things going on here, it seems to me. One is to Justice Breyer's question, just funding religion, funding religious schools generally or training of clergy is... is an establishment clause concern, but this... <w>it</w><w>'s</w> a separate issue when you set up a neutral benefit program... police, fire, or scholarships... and allow people to use those things, allow religious institutions to obtain the benefits of those things on a non-discriminatory basis. And the question in this case, it seems to me, is which side of that line this comes on. Is that the... a proper way to look at it? And if so, why does it come on the funding side?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> I... I guess I'm not really sure <w>that</w><w>'s</w> the right way to look at it. I think that <w>it</w><w>'s</w> important to just look at the interest the no-aid clause protects, understand whether those are just unconstitutional and whether they apply to this case. So as I said, the no-aid clause was concerned about using government leverage to influence religious education. And <w>it</w><w>'s</w> very easy how... to see how that can happen in the context of even a neutral program like this one. The state can just have a condition...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> You think that was the design of the no-aid clause, to... to help religious institutions?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Yeah. If you look at the transcripts of 1972, <w>that</w><w>'s</w>... is... what <w>it</w><w>'s</w> all about. There... there is numerous religious leaders who came forward and testified that <w>that</w><w>'s</w> the reason they wanted it. On the floor of the convention in 1972, the strongest proponent was Delegate Harper who was not an anti-religious bigot. He was the pastor of a church in Helena and he told his colleagues, drawing on his own religious faith, that the no-aid clause was necessary to ensure that religious schools were independent from government. So I just <w>do</w><w>n't</w>... and <w>there</w><w>'s</w> a committee report...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> Well, no one's compelling the religious schools to participate in a program in order to accept funds from the program, correct?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> That is certainly true. But...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> So a religious school that <w>does</w><w>n't</w> want to be part of a neutral program <w>does</w><w>n't</w> have to be.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> Yeah, <w>that</w><w>'s</w> true. But I mean, <w>there</w><w>'s</w> still a concern that ultimately the inevitable effect of these programs is that the government would exercise its leverage over schools. And, look, this is what people were saying at the hearing, and I think that may be a little paternalistic, but I think the state is allowed to have a structural provision being arguably paternalistic in its own state constitution. There's no bigotry whatsoever in evidence from the actual convention at which this is enacted. I just <w>do</w><w>n't</w> understand how Montana could have done any better than it did, to wipe out its entire state constitution, start all over again, have committee hearings...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> I think the other side's argument is the way you can do better is to say: If we're going to give benefits to private schools, which you <w>do</w><w>n't</w> have to do... to Justice Breyer's question, you do not have to give benefits to private schools or funds or tax credits, but if you do, <w>do</w><w>n't</w> tell someone they <w>can</w><w>'t</w> participate because <w>they</w><w>'re</w> Jewish or Protestant or Catholic.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> I guess the... the concern of the delegates was that if you have money going to religious schools, <w>that</w><w>'s</w> going to lead to entanglement problems. And the way to solve that problem is to have a structural provision saying, we're not going to do it. And <w>that</w><w>'s</w> not prohibiting anyone from exercising their religion. It's simply separating the church from the state without, again, preventing anyone from going to any of these schools if they <w>do</w><w>n't</w> want to. And <w>it</w><w>'s</w> true that <w>there</w><w>'s</w> a constraint in the Federal Constitution that says that you <w>can</w><w>'t</w> coerce people, you <w>can</w><w>'t</w> tell people we're going to penalize you for being religious. But if a state has two principles it wants to stick to at the same time then we think that it should be able to balance those principles by invalidating the program.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> Mr. Unikowsky, if we can just go back to the standing question. You are not at liberty to waive Article III, so why do you think this case <w>does</w><w>n't</w> fit under Eastern Kentucky?</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> So I'll... I'll just answer briefly, Your Honor.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Sure.</u>
<u loc="MR. UNIKOWSKY"><w>[MR. UNIKOWSKY]</w> So Petitioners are claiming they personally are the victims of status discrimination, which is the argument that <w>was</w><w>n't</w> made in that case. So we think that <w>they</w><w>'re</w> allowed to make that argument, it is just incorrect on its merits. But, of course, this argument is made in amicus brief. And, as you say, we're not able to waive it.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Thank you, counsel. Mr. Komer, two minutes remaining.</u>
</p>
<p id="REBUTTAL ARGUMENT RICHARD D. KOMER ON BEHALF OF THE PETITIONERS">
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> Thank you. What we're saying here is that... what Trinity Lutheran says, the state <w>can</w><w>'t</w> discriminate on the basis of religion. The decision is crystal clear when you read it that that is what they are doing in this case. They focus on the religious affiliation or religious nature of the schools. They are not talking about what the schools do. They are talking about what the schools are. Second, Zelman has already answered the question about who this program is aiding. It's not aiding the schools. It is aiding the parents. You have a choice to make about the parents here. You can either view them as mere inconsequential conduits through which public funds flow to the religious schools they choose or you can regard them, as you did in Zelman, as free and independent decision-makers who are being given the power to choose a religious education or a secular education in private schools. We are not arguing that the state <w>could</w><w>n't</w> just fund public schools. We are saying that when the legislature, when the state makes the decision to empower parents to exercise their right to choose and direct their children's education, that the state cannot distinguish between parents who want a religious education for their children and parents who want a secular private education for their parents. We are only in that area because the state legislature has made, like Montana did, the decision to open it up beyond the public schools. We <w>do</w><w>n't</w> question that the public schools must be secular. This Court recognized that in Schempp. And, as a result, the public schools now must be secular. But at the time these provisions were passed, the public schools were not secular.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> It's almost...</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> That is why...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> It's almost sort of a illusory state, <w>is</w><w>n't</w> it? The legislatures can choose to give money or not. If they choose, they have to do it this way. But the court system is out of it because it <w>can</w><w>'t</w> force the legislatures to act constitutionally under their own constitution.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> You may...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> That's basically what <w>you</w><w>'re</w> saying, <w>is</w><w>n't</w> it?</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> You may answer briefly.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> And not fund.</u>
<u loc="MR. KOMER"><w>[MR. KOMER]</w> We're saying the legislature ab initio might be able to do more than what the court should have done here. They should have answered the federal question. They should have recognized that Trinity Lutheran is applicable. They should have recognized they were applying Locke exactly the way Missouri tried to.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Thank you, counsel. The case is submitted.</u>
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