Wednesday round-up

At The Daily Caller, Kevin Daley reports that “Christian baker Jack Phillips and the Colorado Civil Rights Commission … have resolved a legal dispute that set Phillips’ religious beliefs against the state’s public accommodations law”; the settlement “provides that the Commission will close an ongoing anti-discrimination probe of Phillips’s Masterpiece Cakeshop,” the subject of a high-profile Supreme Court case last term, “if Phillips withdraws a federal lawsuit alleging state officials were subjecting him to a concerted campaign of harassment.” Additional coverage comes from Jacob Rodriguez at 9News.com.

Jeremy Dys weighs in at The Daily Wire on Monday’s cert denial in Morris County Board of Chosen Freeholders v. Freedom from Religion Foundation, which left in place a lower-court ruling that prohibits a New Jersey county from spending public funds to preserve historic churches, arguing that “[n]o state official should discriminate against people of faith, or the religious organizations they operate, based merely on their religious status.” At The Economist’s Democracy in America blog, Steven Mazie remarks on the “curious” reasons Justice Brett Kavanaugh gave for “hesita[ting] to use Morris County as the vehicle to move the First Amendment toward a principle commanding the government to fund religious entities equally under grant programmes.” At Slate, Mark Joseph Stern argues that “Kavanaugh may have shied away from the case [because] Morris County’s program flagrantly favored churches, rendering most businesses and nonprofits ineligible for historic preservation funds.”

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