Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Xavier Becerra would destroy the First Amendment
Xavier Becerra would destroy the First Amendment
Jan 12, 2026 2:12 AM

If Xavier Becerra wins confirmation as secretary of Health and Human Services, he will make history, because Becerra would likely e the first Cabinet secretary to believe the First Amendment does not grant churches the freedom of religion. Such an extreme view, endowed with the full power of the federal government, would vitiate the religious liberty of all Americans.

For those tempted to dismiss this as a caricature of Becerra’s position, allow him to dispel that notion – under oath. When California Assemblyman James Gallagher raised Becerra’s views of religious liberty during his confirmation hearing to succeed Kamala Harris as attorney general of California, Becerra hastened to clarify: “The protection for religion is for the individual, and so I think it’s important to distinguish between protections that you are affording to the individual to exercise his or her religion freely, versus protections you are giving to some institution or entity who’s essentially bootstrapping the First Amendment protections on behalf of somebody else.” You can watch the exchange below, courtesy of the California Family Council:

“Bootstrapping,” of course, means to substitute an entity that does not belong in place of one that does. Becerra accuses churches of pulling off a sort of constitutional Three-card Monte trick, slipping themselves into the constitutional liberties promised only to individual Americans. In Becerra’s blinkered view, you and I have each have an individual right to the free exercise of religion, but if we join forces to exercise that right more effectively, it suddenly evaporates. The whole is far less than the sum of its parts. His view betrays an ignorance of both the Church and the Constitution.

First and foremost, a church is people. The Greek word translated as “church” in the New Testament, ἐκκλησία (ekklesia), in classical Greek meant any “gathering of citizens called out from their homes into some public place,” or “an assembly.” In a specifically Christian context, it came to mean those who had been called out of the world by the Gospel of Jesus Christ. The same word is substituted in the Greek translation of the Old Testament, known as the Septuagint, for the Hebrew word describing a gathering of Jewish people (קָהָל or qahal).

Although the Bible reveals the Church to be a theanthropic institution, no congregation can be separated from the people who make it up. A modern-day church or synagogue could define itself as a collection of individuals who exercise their First Amendment rights in collective acts of worship, consecration, and service. Those people do not shed their rights at the door of the church, the nonprofit, or the corporation.

Furthermore, the Supreme Court has already settled whether the First Amendment applies to churches – thanks in large part to the fractious history of my own Eastern Orthodox Church. In the 1952 case Kedroff v. St. Nicholas Cathedral, the justices affirmed any law which “prohibits the free exercise of an ecclesiastical right” is “contrary to the principles of the First Amendment.” Constitutional jurisprudence established “a spirit of freedom for religious organizations, an independence from secular control or manipulation – in short, power to decide for themselves, free from state interference, matters of church government as well as those of faith and doctrine.” (Emphasis added.)

The High Court subsequently quoted this in another case involving Orthodox Christians, in 1976, in a decision written by Justice William J. Brennan and ratified by every member of the court who had also affirmed Roe v. Wade. Since evangelical, Catholic, and other pro-life nominees are continually badgered about whether their private views hinder their ability to do their job, shouldn’t Becerra be asked whether his very public stance as chief law officer of the nation’s most populous state might infringe on the rights of religious Americans?

They need not ask: They can simply observe his record. As California’s attorney general, Becerra led court challenges against churches seeking an exemption from Gov. Gavin Newsom’s harsh and restrictive COVID-19 orders banning singing, chanting, and all indoor worship services. The Supreme Court struck down these restrictions, which one Orthodox pared to the Soviet Union’s suppression of religion, in a 6-3 decision on February 5.

“Xavier Becerra has a long track record of hostility to religious freedom,” said Mike Berry, general counsel to the First Liberty Institute. “As California Attorney General, Becerra repeatedly attacked religious freedom protections for healthcare professionals and declared those protections ‘offensive’ and ‘dangerous.’”

Becerra’s entire career testifies to his disregard for the rights of individuals who join together to pursue their rights corporately – especially if they are people of faith. He unsuccessfully sued the Little Sisters of the Poor for resisting a government mandate to participate in the provision of potentially abortifacient contraceptives to fellow nuns. He insisted the next logical step after respecting conscience rights would be to “allow businesses to deny you cancer treatment.”

His hostility extends beyond overtly religious organizations. Becerra tried to force pro-life women’s resource centers to refer women to the state’s “free or low-cost access to … abortion.” The Supreme Court ruled that such an ordinance violated the organization’s First Amendment rights by constituting a form pelled speech in 2018’s NIFLA v. Becerra. He has similarly threatened pel other nonprofit organizations to steer their philanthropic giving to causes of which he approves, such as building the “equity” of minority groups, or face legislative backlash.

Becerra’s disdain for unalienable rights most clearly manifests itself on the issue of abortion. Becerra voted against a partial birth abortion ban, against making it illegal to transport a minor across state lines to procure an abortion without parental consent, and against penalizing those who kill an unborn child in mission of another crime. When undercover journalists David Daleiden and Sandra Merritt exposed Planned Parenthood selling the body parts of aborted children in apparent violation of the law, Becerra prosecuted Daleiden and Merritt.

Becerra would represent a return to the Obama-era policy of minimizing the First Amendment right to religious liberty. The 44th president reduced freedom of religion to “freedom of worship” both rhetorically and as a matter of policy. The secular state sought to constrain the church within the most circumscribed sphere possible, thus expanding the room available for state regulation. Becerra would accelerate the state’s attempted displacement of the church by striking at the heart of religious liberty, the First Amendment.

Becerra breezed through his first day of confirmation hearings on Tuesday so smoothly that one of the Republican senators absent-mindedly referred to HHS employees as Becerra’s “staff.” Today and in the days ahead, members of the Senate Finance Committee, the full U.S. Senate, and all Americans can – and must – ask probe Becerra about his hostility to the free exercise of religion.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Rev. Sirico on ‘Spe Salvi’ in the Detroit News
Rev. Sirico wrote about Pope Benedict XVI’s recent encyclical, Spe Salvi, in an op-ed in the Detroit News yesterday. In the encyclical, writes Sirico, “Pope Benedict XVI has delivered a wonderful — and oh-so-needed — reminder of what socialism was (and is), and why it went wrong.” Sirico summarizes the practical and moral problems with socialism that are explained in Spe Salvi, and the gaping holes that Marx left in his theories. Marx believed that all the problems associated with...
Acton Media Roundup: Jay Richards on Studio B with Shepard Smith
Dr. Jay Richards made an appearance on Studio B with Shepard Smith on the Fox News Channel this afternoon. If you didn’t catch it live, we have the clip right here, courtesy of Fox News: ...
Huck and the Evangelicals: A match made in Heaven?
It’s fun to watch as layers are gradually peeled away from the conventional wisdom to reveal that the CW is, well, wrong. Old CW: Evangelicals are marching in lockstep behind Mike Huckabee; Emerging CW: Evangelicals are just as fragmented in their opinions at this point in the nominating process as anyone else. Mr. Huckabee did well with churchgoers [in Michigan], but the bigger story is so did other Republicans. According to exit polls, of the 39% of Michigan voters in...
The ‘power’ of new media
Why listen to the new Radio Free Acton podcast? Because you’ll have the opportunity to hear news analysis before old media gets around to reporting it. Here’s a case in point. In the inaugural January 11 edition of Radio Free Acton, I say the following: I think what’s resonating with people in Michigan is Mike Huckabee as an example of what’s being called the “new evangelicals.” The mainstream media has really missed this, I think, because they’re associating “new” evangelicals,...
More on the ‘new’ Evangelical politics
RELEVANT magazine has conducted a reader survey and has a special section on young religious voter attitudes towards politics. A summary bite from RELEVANT founder and publisher Cameron Strang: Young Christians simply don’t seem to feel a connection to the traditional religious right. Many differ strongly on domestic policy issues, namely issues that affect the poor, and are dissatisfied with America’s foreign policy and war. In general, we’re seeing that twentysomething Christians hold strongly to conservative moral values, but at...
Wake up black democrats: Hillary camp disrespects and patronizes blacks
Every Black democrat in America should read today’s column by Nathan McCall in the Atlanta-Journal Constitution titled “Clinton gets proxy to play race card.” Hilary and her supporter’s antics are now playing the race card against Obama. Why? Perhaps the Clinton’s didn’t expect a non-white person to be in contention against established power brokers. Democrats with black leadership is meant for rhetoric only many would say. McCall reminds us that Hillary Clinton seems ultimately self-interested and will use blacks as...
It must be an election year
Congressional logic: As the increasingly troubled economy emerges as the trump issue of the 2008 political season, senior congressional Republicans said Wednesday they would put aside demands to make President Bush’s tax cuts permanent if that was what it took to get quick action on a stimulus package… …The White House has not addressed the issue in detail, but Bush, who has been traveling in the Middle East, is scheduled to hold a conference call today with congressional leaders. To...
Do Iowa and New Hampshire choose the short list?
Iowa and New Hampshire represent less than 1.5% of the U.S. population, but the way many pundits talk, these two small states apparently possess some obscure Constitutional right to choose the short list of presidential candidates for the rest of us. After the Hillary Clinton’s second place finish in the Iowa caucuses, several journalists—apparently stricken with Obama Fever—were writing her campaign obituary, never mind that she led national polls of likely Democratic voters and has enough campaign cash to buy...
Fear and hope
Zenit News Service’s Father John Flynn, LC, offers an extremely perceptive analysis of a seemingly expanding culture of fear. He manages to tie together climate change hysteria, current electoral politics, and the pope’s recent encyclical. Its conclusion: A world without God is a world without hope …. Perhaps, then, we should not be surprised at the fear-ridden state of modern society. Along with science, humanity needs to rediscover its faith in God if it is to heal the deeper sources...
It must be an election year, part II
The Wall Street Journal jumps on my bandwagon: We’re all for putting more money in the hands of the poor and moderate earners, especially via stronger economic growth that will give them better paying jobs. But the $250 or $500 one-time rebate check they may now receive has e from somewhere. The feds will pay for it either by taxing or borrowing from someone else, and those people will have that much less to spend or invest themselves. We are...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved