Commentary
This revelation appeared at the same time that three of their daughter’s friends at her local middle school had also suddenly declared a transgender identity, and while their daughter was struggling with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder that made online learning challenging.
When reviewing legislative action, a court is supposed to apply the traditional levels of judicial scrutiny from lowest (rational basis review, wherein a challenged policy is presumptively constitutional) to highest (strict scrutiny, wherein a challenged policy is presumptively unconstitutional), depending on the type of right asserted. When a plaintiff asserts a right that is considered “fundamental,” strict scrutiny review applies. And in Troxel v. Granville, the Supreme Court in 2000 noted clearly that the parental right to direct a child’s upbringing is the oldest of the “fundamental” liberty interests ever recognized by that court.
So, because a fundamental right was at issue, the court should have applied strict scrutiny. Specifically, the school board and its officials should have had to prove that the policy and their actions were necessary to achieve a “compelling” government interest and were the most narrowly tailored means to achieve that interest. Strict scrutiny is a high bar for any government defendant to overcome.
But the court instead determined that the school board’s policy and the actions of school officials based on that policy were not legislative in nature but rather were “executive” in nature. And executive actions are presumptively constitutional. To prevail, a plaintiff must meet the high burden of proving that the actions of the official were so egregious as to be “conscience-shocking.” In other words, the conduct of a government official was so deplorable, unjust, and malicious that it violated fundamental principles of fairness and due process.
The 11th Circuit majority wrote that it had repeatedly rejected claims of “conscience-shocking” conduct in educational settings. It asserted that the conduct of the school officials in creating a gender support plan for the Littlejohns’ minor daughter, including facilitating the use of her preferred pronouns and preferred restrooms, was not done “willfully or maliciously” with an intent to injury the child, but rather, in an effort to help her.
The 11th Circuit majority also ignored a mountain of case law to the contrary on the primacy of parental rights. In 1970, for example, the Supreme Court in Parham v. J.R. wrote: “Simply because the decision of a parent is not agreeable to a child or because it involves risks does not automatically transfer the power to make that decision from the parents to some agency or officer of the state.”
In his dissent from the majority’s conclusion, Circuit Court Judge Gerald Tjoflat cited an extensive line of cases indicating that the primacy of the parental right to direct the upbringing of one’s minor children has been long recognized as constitutionally protected.
He argued that:
“If today’s opinion states the law, then enforcement in the Eleventh Circuit of the fundamental liberty interests the Littlejohns seek to vindicate … has come to an end …. The Supreme Court clarified that the liberty guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment ‘denotes not merely freedom from bodily restraint’ but also protects liberties including ‘the right … to … bring up children.’ … Instead of fundamental rights being protected from an executive actor’s intrusion, they are protected only if the act ‘shocks the conscience.’ The Majority is wrong.”
While the Littlejohns consider an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, it should be noted that this term, the court has already dismissed petitions for review in two cases dealing with precisely the same type of school gender secrecy policies.
Tjloflat noted those cases in his strenuous dissent, writing, “As Justices Alito and Thomas recently warned in a factually similar case, ‘[t]his case presents a question of great and growing importance.’”
“Does the Constitution still protect parents’ fundamental right to direct the upbringing of their children when government actors intrude without their knowledge or consent?,” Tjoflat asked. “Today’s decision ignores bedrock separation of powers principles, waters down fundamental rights, and flies in the face of our prior panel precedent rule. It is as wrong as it is ominous for the future of fundamental rights in the Eleventh Circuit,” he concluded.
Ominous, indeed.
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
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