November 29, 2018
Issue: Religious Freedom
22 Religious Groups Call for Whitaker Resignation for His Stance on Blocking Non-Christian Judges
22 organizations representing Muslims, Jews, Christians, Unitarian Universalists, atheists, and people concerned with religious freedom, released the following statement responding to Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker’s recently-unearthed commitments that are clearly hostile to religious freedom, the Constitution, and the rule of law. In 2014, Whitaker, claimed that he would work to block federal judges who did not hold a “biblical view of justice” in line with the “New Testament,” a statement that disqualifies judges with any other religious belief other than Christianity, or no religious belief, and suggests that Christian biblical law should have primacy over the United States Constitution.
The rule of law flows from only one source, the United States Constitution. Judges are charged with ensuring that our constitutional rights are protected, and must rule based on the facts of a case, not their personal religious beliefs. Whitaker’s past comments show a shocking lack of understanding or regard for these fundamental principles of our justice system.
Article Six of the Constitution states that ‘no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States.’ We hold the deepest respect for the constitutional guarantee of freedom of religion and reject any implication that any person must be subjected to a litmus test of faith to enter public service. Yet Whitaker openly and freely committed to blocking judges whose philosophies are not based on the Christian New Testament and a “biblical view of justice.”
By this standard, no atheist, Jew, Sikh, Muslim or member of any faith group other than Whitaker’s own is qualified to rule in American courts. That statement sounds absurd–and it is.
Despite having had multiple opportunities to correct this statement since 2014, Whitaker has failed to do so as far as we can ascertain.
Had Whitaker gone through a proper Senate confirmation process, including a hearing and a vote, as is required under the law, he would have been required to describe, under oath, how this view and others mold his approach to enforcing our nation’s laws, including the separation of church and state.
Instead, he now leads the Justice Department despite demonstrating a shocking misunderstanding at best – and disregard at worst – of the most fundamental tenets of the Constitution.
This is not a job Whitaker is fit to execute. He should step down immediately and allow someone who has demonstrated, under the scrutiny of a thorough Senate confirmation process, a commitment to the fair and impartial administration of justice for all.
Signed,
Muslim Advocates
National Council of Jewish Women
African American Ministers In Action
American Atheists
Americans United for Separation of Church and State
Bend the Arc Jewish Action
Cedar Lane Unitarian Universalist Church
Emgage Action
Faith in Public Life
Franciscan Action Network
Jewish Alliance for Law and Social Action
Muslim Public Affairs Council
National Coalition of American Nuns
NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice
New Ways Ministry
Reconstructionist Rabbinical Association
Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice
Secular Coalition for America
T’ruah: The Rabbinic Call for Human Rights
Unitarian Universalist Association
UU Womens Federation
Women’s Alliance for Theology, Ethics, and Ritual (WATER)