WASHINGTON, DC — Pablo DeJesús, Executive Director of Unitarian Universalists for Social Justice, and Nicole Pressley, Director of Organizing Strategy Team, Unitarian Universalist Association, led the following organizations – JUUstice Washington; South Carolina Unitarian Universalist Justice Alliance; Texas Unitarian Universalist Justice Ministry; Unitarian Universalist Advocacy Network of Illlinois; Unitarian Universalist Justice Ministry of North Carolina; and Virginia Unitarian Universalist State Action Network – in a joint statement, upon the conclusion of the 2025 U.S. Supreme Court Session last week.
This season, the U.S. Supreme Court has greatly expanded the power of the presidency. They have sharpened the points on the Faux King’s crown in ways inconceivable a mere session or two ago. In case after case, the Court chose the interests of billionaires, big corporations, and authoritarian power over the rights and well-being of the people.
We believe in a democracy where every person is treated with dignity, protected by just laws, and empowered to thrive in community.
In United States vs. Skrmetti, the court enabled states to block the rights of transgender youth to receive gender affirming care. In a press release, Rev. Dr. Sofía Betancourt, the UUA’s president said, “As a part of our faith tradition, Unitarian Universalists embrace transgender, nonbinary, intersex, and gender diverse people. This is a central expression of our faith. We also believe that denying healthcare to the trans community is a moral violation. We send our love and care to all the trans youth and their families who are directly affected by this ruling, we will keep fighting for you. We will continue to work with and on behalf of the trans and nonbinary community to ensure that their dignity as human beings and rights are protected across this country.”
In Trump v. Casa Inc., the Court ruled that federal judges cannot issue nationwide injunctions to block Trump’s unconstitutional executive order attempting to end birthright citizenship for children born in the U.S. to undocumented immigrants or travelers. By stripping judges of this critical tool, the Court enables the selective, racialized enforcement of citizenship itself. This decision furthers a long and violent legacy of exclusion and criminalization—from the Chinese Exclusion Act to Japanese internment to the historic denial of full rights to women, Black people, and Indigenous communities. Once again, the law is being weaponized to restrict belonging and legitimize state violence.
In Kennedy v. Braidwood, the Court opened the door for political and ideological interference in preventive health care, threatening access to cancer screenings, contraception, and medications like PrEP. While claiming to preserve the Affordable Care Act, this ruling grants anti-science, eugenicist ideologues the power to deny lifesaving care—especially for LGBTQIA+ people, poor people, and Black and brown communities.
This comes just days after the third anniversary of Dobbs v. Jackson, when the Court struck down our constitutional right to abortion. Now, anti-abortion extremists in Congress are escalating their assault by targeting Planned Parenthood—advancing a de facto national ban that strips millions of access to reproductive care, cancer screenings, and contraception.
As Unitarian Universalists in our covenantal tradition, we believe in equal protection and dignity for all, no matter your roots or where your loved ones hold you close. It is part of our theological grounding to demand for others the same dignity we demand for ourselves. We hold ourselves to the expression of our theology by committing to an inclusive democratic process and placing love at the center of our faith. We work to manifest justice in the world. This season’s rulings reflect little of those higher laws of humanity and faithful teachings.
The ability of federal courts to block unjust laws has long protected immigrants, asylum seekers, LGBTQ people, trade unionists, patients, and children. Undermining this power is an attack on our shared humanity. It weakens the judiciary’s role in defending not just the law, but justice itself.
We must not back away from what is right, ethical, moral, and consistent with our faith teachings. As stated in a recent Action of Immediate Witness, “Now is the time to rise—to be the moral voice, the loving hands, and the brave hearts our world needs.
Let us not be bystanders to injustice.
Let us not offer thoughts and prayers where action is required.
Let us not forget that history is watching—and so are the generations to come.
Let us remember that the arc of history bends toward justice—but only when we bend it.
We are Unitarian Universalists. We side with love. We act in faith. We choose justice. And we will not be moved.”
Signed
Unitarian Universalists for Social Justice
Unitarian Universalist Association
JUUstice Washington
South Carolina Unitarian Universalist Justice Alliance
Texas Unitarian Universalist Justice Ministry
Unitarian Universalist Advocacy Network of Illlinois
Unitarian Universalist Justice Ministry of North Carolina
Virginia Unitarian Universalist State Action Network
Relevant and Recent AIWs and Business Resolutions
We Declare and Affirm: Immigrants Are People Who Have Inherent Worth and Inalienable Rights
2025 Proposed AIW: Faithful Defiance of Authoritarianism: Reaffirming Our Covenants for Democracy and Freedom
Statement on 2025 Supreme Court Rulings