Religious liberty and public health orders

“History buffs may recall that the first Free Exercise Clause case in Supreme Court history, in 1845, involved the prohibition of open-coffin funeral services in a New Orleans church during a yellow fever outbreak.” Any piece from Prof. Mike McConnell on religious liberty is likely to be worth reading and this is no exception (with Max Raskin) [New York Times, though I’m not fond of the clickbait-y headline]

Several courts have already heard challenges to governors’ and mayors’ closing and assembly orders; churches have won rulings in Louisville, Kentucky (strongly worded federal court opinion; case then settled; mayor says police will take down license plates of Easter churchgoers) and Kansas (analysis by Stuart Levine), while states have won rulings in New Hampshire (no evidence that ban on gatherings of 50 or more people “intended to target any religion or specific religious practice”) and New Mexico. More: Bonnie Kristian, Christianity Today; and here is a website on religion, law, and the COVID-19 emergency.

Occupational licensure roundup

Missouri to sue China and its ruling Communist Party over pandemic

“Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt, a Republican, blames China for letting the coronavirus spread. So he’s suing China, three government ministries, two local governments, two laboratories and the Chinese Communist Party in U.S. District Court.” A suit of this sort by a state against a foreign sovereign would ordinarily be stopped in its tracks by the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976, but never fear: “Last week, Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley introduced legislation to strip China of its sovereign immunity.” [Frank Morris, NPR]

As my colleague Ted Galen Carpenter observed on Monday, there are many and substantial reasons to blame Beijing for bad conduct during the pandemic, and American public opinion has taken note of that. Still, sovereign immunity aside, under the constitutional design laid down by the Framers states aren’t supposed to pursue their own foreign policies. As the Supreme Court put it in Hines v. Davidowitz (1941), “Our system of government … requires that federal power in the field affecting foreign relations be left entirely free from local interference.” In Crosby v. National Foreign Trade Council (2000) the Court unanimously struck down a Massachusetts law barring state entities from buying goods or services from companies doing business with Burma (Myanmar) on the grounds that it interfered with the power of Congress and the Executive Branch to make the most of the sanctions power by exerting unified control over it.

It’s not clear that the different circumstances here would trip the Crosby wire, but Missouri is treading a path here not unlike that of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, long deservedly criticized for sticking its nose into foreign policy causes whether good or bad. It is noteworthy that Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who takes a somewhat broader view of states’ permissible involvement in this field than do her majority colleagues, has written nonetheless that the case for pre-emption is strongest “when a state action ‘reflects a state policy critical of foreign governments and involve[s] sitting in judgment on them.'” Explicitly hostile measures toward a foreign power are especially likely to undermine U.S. foreign policy by raising the chance of a breach in relations or retaliation. David R. Schmahmann and James S. Finch have more in this 1998 Cato briefing paper.

COVID-19 pandemic roundup

  • Gov. Andrew Cuomo has shown himself quite the deregulator during New York’s coronavirus emergency. If only so many of his steps were not accompanied by that word “temporary” [Alex Tabarrok]
  • Where government has failed, Silicon Valley biotech to the rescue [Andrew Leonard, Wired]
  • Lawn care, small motorboats, the paint aisle: What sets Michigan apart is how far its governor has gone in imposing arbitrary restrictions that have little if any plausible link to curbing virus transmission. [Shikha Dalmia]
  • Euro consumer data privacy follies: “Supermarkets in the EU wanted to deliver groceries to 1.5 million people self-isolating from coronavirus. But they couldn’t get the list of names & addresses necessary to do so because it would violate GDPR.” [Telegraph (U.K.) via Alec Stapp]
  • Constitution doesn’t permit racial preferences in the distribution of pandemic relief funding, especially as it isn’t a remediation of earlier discrimination [Hans Bader on Arlington, Va. small business grant program]
  • Would courts strike down quarantine measures in recognition of a right of family unity? [Josh Blackman]

State constitutions can go farther than federal in protecting liberty

State constitutions, and the state courts that interpret them, have wide latitude to go farther than their federal counterparts do in protecting liberty. That opens up legal and political strategies for advocates of individual rights. Rich Esenberg of the Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty joins Caleb Brown in a Cato Daily Podcast to discuss. Earlier: links on related writings of Judge Jeffrey Sutton and Clint Bolick; “damaging” clauses. Also related: Federalist Society video panel last summer on “Early State Constitutions and Their Influence on the Legislative Branch” with Lynn Uzzell, John Dinan, Mark Graber, moderated by Julie Silverbrook; ConSource.org resource on constitutional history.

“Third-hand smoke” and the need for focus in public health

Following years and even decades in which much of the visible role of the public health profession has consisted of interventions against voluntary choices that had nothing to do with inflicting contagious disease, we have come to re-learn painfully about its older and more fundamental role in situations where the survival of strangers really may depend on our personal choices each day. If there’s any justice, it means none of us will ever have to pay attention again to concocted scares over things like “third-hand smoke,” said to be transmitted by persons who didn’t smoke around us, but came into our presence bearing residues of tobacco smoke on their hair or clothing from having smoked elsewhere. [Jacob Grier, Exponents magazine; our 2009 coverage]

Free speech roundup

  • “New Puerto Rico law threatens jail time for spreading ‘false information’ about COVID-19” [Committee to Protect Journalists, earlier] Freedom for publishers and platforms to associate with whomever they want permits them to exclude quackery and health misinformation, and that’s a feature not a bug [Matthew Feeney]
  • It takes the FCC all of one day to reject petition from absurdly named pressure group Free Press demanding broadcast limits on statements by Trump and his allies about the novel coronavirus [Robby Soave, Eugene Volokh] Obscure West Coast group sues Fox over its coronavirus coverage [Volokh] Meanwhile, Trump camp is at it again: “Trump Campaign Sues TV Station for Running ‘Defamatory’ Coronavirus Attack Ad” [C.J. Ciaramella, earlier]
  • “A Teenager Posted About Her COVID-19 Infection on Instagram. A Deputy Threatened To Arrest Her If She Didn’t Delete It.” [Scott Shackford; Oxford, Wis.]
  • Technical countermeasures, as opposed to calling in the cops, most practical way to fend off that new form of anti-social activity, “Zoom-bombing” [Eugene Volokh]
  • “How the Telephone Consumer Protection Act Unconstitutionally Privileges Government Speech” [Trevor Burrus on Cato amicus brief in Supreme Court case of Barr v. American Association of Political Consultants]
  • From before the crisis, hate speech mini-roundup: Connecticut state agency sees it as part of its mission to defend an unconstitutional “racial ridicule” law enacted in 1917 [Volokh] “Hundreds of Scots who tell ‘offensive jokes’ on social media are being secretly logged on police database” [Ruth Warrander, Scottish Sun] Bad proposal in U.K. to give communications regulator authority to address material that “is not illegal but has the potential to cause harm.” [Matt Kilcoyne] Social media regulation: “No one is saying freedom of speech must be limited,“ says New York lawmaker filing bill to limit the freedom of speech [Sen. David Carlucci]

Sincere apologies for destroying your house

As police battle a Colorado criminal on the loose, the home of innocent bystanders is destroyed. City of Greenwood Village to owners: rough luck, we know, but we don’t owe you anything for that loss. Or might the Supreme Court want to view that as a taking for which fair compensation is owed under the Fifth Amendment? Ilya Shapiro, Trevor Burrus, and Michael Collins on the Cato Institute’s certiorari amicus brief in Lech v. Jackson; Ilya Somin (yes, the oft-confused Ilyas were both involved).