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April 3, 2020


The Religious Freedom Restoration Act: A Primer


The Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (RFRA)
establishes rights beyond those protections afforded by the
Constitution's free exercise clause by creating a heightened
standard of review for government actions that substantially
burden a person's exercise of religion. This In Focus
provides an overview of the statute, including its origins,
how it operates, and how the Supreme Court has interpreted
the law since its passage.


The First Amendment provides that the government shall
make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or
prohibiting the free exercise thereof. According to the
Supreme Court, the clause protects individuals' right to
exercise their religion of choice and prohibits government
regulations that target religious beliefs. The free exercise
clause protects not only religious beliefs but acts involved
with religious practice. Under the clause, the government
may not compel religious belief, punish religious
expression, or impose regulations that favor one religion
over another.

The Supreme Court's interpretation of whether the clause
requires religious accommodation to neutral, generally
applicable laws (as opposed to laws that specifically target
a religious practice) has changed over time. In Sherbert v.
Verner, 374 U.S. 398 (1963), the government denied a
claimant unemployment compensation benefits for failure
to accept available work because she had declined to work
on Saturdays for religious reasons. The Court reasoned,
based on the facts of the case, that if a generally applicable
law imposes a religious burden on an individual, that person
could seek an exemption from the law unless the
government could show that the burden was justified by a
compelling government interest a high standard to meet.

The Court, however, departed from this framework in
Employment Division v. Smith, 494 U.S. 872 (1990), when
it held that the free exercise clause does not exempt
individuals from compliance with generally applicable laws
and does not require the government to show a compelling
interest in applying such laws to a particular individual. In
Smith, two members of the Native American Church were
denied unemployment benefits after they were fired for
ingesting peyote as part of a religious ceremony. The Court
held that religious exemptions from generally applicable
laws should come from the legislative process. Nonetheless,
even after Smith, Supreme Court precedent still requires the
application of the compelling interest test in free exercise
cases involving government action that intentionally (rather
than incidentally) burdens religious exercise and in cases
involving religious exemptions in programs that allow for
individualized assessments.


In 1993, Congress enacted RFRA in direct response to
Smith. In its statutory findings, Congress expressed its
disagreement with the Smith decision by concluding that
Sherbert's compelling interest test is more workable for
striking sensible balances between religious liberty and
competing prior governmental interests. In its original
form, RFRA applied to all government action at the federal,
state, and local levels. Congress justified applying the law
to the states by relying on Section 5 of the Fourteenth
Amendment, which grants Congress the power to enforce,
by appropriate legislation, the provisions of' the Fourteenth
Amendment, which, among other things, has been
interpreted to require state compliance with the First
Amendment. Congress has since amended RFRA so that it
applies only to federal entities.


RFRA imposes a heightened standard of review for
government actions including rules of general
applicability that substantially burden a person's
religious exercise. The statute does not define the term
substantial burden, but the phrase appears to have
originated from free exercise case law, which holds that
such burdens exist when an individual is required to choose
between following his or her religious beliefs and receiving
a governmental benefit or when an individual must act
contrary to his or her religious beliefs to avoid facing legal
penalties. Importantly, this case law suggests that when
evaluating an individual's free exercise claim, courts should
defer to parties' assertions about their sincerely held
religious beliefs. Once a party has established a substantial
burden, the action is valid only if the government shows
that the burden is (1) in furtherance of a compelling
governmental interest and (2) the least restrictive means of
furthering that interest. This standard is high, but not
impossible, for the government to meet.

To enforce its provisions, RFRA creates a private cause of
action for persons whose religious exercise has been
substantially burdened, allowing them to assert that
violation as a claim or defense in a judicial proceeding and
obtain appropriate relief against a government.


The scope of RFRA changed as a result of City ofBoerne v.
Flores, 521 U.S. 507 (1997), where the Court held that
RFRA's application to states and local governments was
beyond Congress's power under Section 5 of the Fourteenth
Amendment. The Section 5 power, according to the Court,
is remedial, allowing Congress to act only in instances
where there is evidence of a pattern of conduct that violates
the Fourteenth Amendment. The Court determined that
because Congress had not established a widespread pattern
of religious discrimination, RFRA could not be justified as


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