Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr joins 17 states in support of Washington First Amendment case

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From staff reports

ATLANTA — Attorney General Chris Carr has joined 17 states in filing a brief before the U.S. Supreme Court to support the First Amendment rights of Seattle’s Union Gospel Mission. The Mission is seeking Supreme Court review of a recent ruling by the Washington State Supreme Court that denied the faith-based charity’s right to hire employees who share its faith.

“The free exercise of religion is a critical right protected by our Constitution, and religious freedom is central to who we are as Americans,” Carr said in a news release. “We joined this coalition to protect the rights of religious groups to practice their beliefs without undue interference by the government.”

Carr and his colleagues argue that the Washington Supreme Court erred in limiting First Amendment protections to hiring decisions related solely to ministers. Rather, the First Amendment more broadly protects a religious nonprofit’s exercise of religion, including the right to hire regular employees of a common faith. As the Supreme Court has repeatedly recognized, that right is vital to church autonomy and the free exercise of religion.

Carr was joined by the attorneys general of Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah and West Virginia.

File Photo: Carlton Fletcher

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