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Football coach quits job after winning Supreme Court battle over midfield prayers.

A Marine Veteran Turned High School Football Coach Resigns After Legal⁤ Battle Over First Amendment Rights

A Marine veteran turned high school football coach who fought and won a legal challenge over his First Amendment right to pray on the ⁤field that went to the Supreme Court has resigned⁤ after briefly returning to the game.

Joe Kennedy, who had been serving as an assistant coach ⁢for the Bremerton High School in Washington since 2008, announced on ⁢his personal website Wednesday that he would no longer‍ be with the team. He ‍cited several reasons for his resignation, including ⁤having to care for an ailing family member⁣ out of state.

“I believe I can best continue to advocate for constitutional freedom and religious liberty by ⁢working from outside the⁤ school system, so⁢ that is what I will do,” the former‍ coach wrote. “I will continue to work to help people understand and embrace the historic ruling at the heart of our case.”

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“I encourage all Americans ⁣to make their own stand for ⁣freedom and our right to express our ‍faith as we see fit. I appreciate the⁣ people of Bremerton, ​the coaches, staff, and especially the students, and wish ⁢them all well. Bremerton will always be home.”

In a statement, Bremerton School District⁤ confirmed that they have received Mr. Kennedy’s resignation, which is pending board ‍approval at ⁤a regular meeting scheduled ‍for Thursday.

The district, which kicked off a nearly eight-year legal battle that was fought all the way to the nation’s highest court, added⁣ it won’t be making any more statements about the case or commenting on Mr. Kennedy’s departure, as it’s‌ his personal matter.

In‍ 2015, ⁤Mr. Kennedy was suspended for his custom of taking a ​knee and praying​ at the 50-yard line after games—something ‌he had been doing since his first⁣ game with the Bremerton Knights football​ team.

According to First Liberty Institute (FLI), a conservative Christian legal group that⁤ represented Mr. Kennedy, the⁤ school placed increasingly strict rules on his prayers before eventually placing him on ⁤paid leave and⁤ barring him from the games, despite ⁣his compliance with their demands.

At ‌first, Bremerton asked‍ Mr. Kennedy to keep his ceremony separate ⁣from student athletes, ‍prompting the coach to wait until the players had left his vicinity to​ perform his brief, silent prayer. Weeks later, however, the district ⁤introduced a new policy, banning ‌all employee while on duty ⁤from engaging in ⁢”demonstrative religious activity” within view of​ any student or the public,⁤ either silently or audibly.

“The only accommodation the district offered to Coach ⁣Kennedy was to permit him to pray​ in secret in a private location within the school building, athletic facility, or press box,'”⁤ FLI said.

“Those directives⁤ went against ‌my faith ⁣and my constitutional right as an American, and ​I wasn’t about to give that up,” Mr. ‌Kennedy told The Epoch ​Times earlier this month.

“As a‌ Marine ⁣veteran who fought in the first Gulf ‍War, it really rubbed‌ me the wrong way because I served 20 years to support and defend the ⁣Constitution,” Mr. Kennedy said. “Now, I’m being told it doesn’t apply to me. There’s something⁤ fundamentally wrong with ​that. If‍ I ⁤can’t express my First Amendment rights as ⁢an American, imagine what they are doing to everybody ‌else.”

In⁢ 2016, Mr. Kennedy ​sued ​Bremerton, alleging it had violated his⁢ constitutional right to free speech and ‍free exercise of ‍religion.

The school district, on the other hand, argued that Mr. Kennedy’s⁣ behavior created a constitutional problem, as​ those prayers could be interpreted as a government endorsement of religion in ⁣violation of the establishment clause.

⁤ In a 6-3 decision (pdf), the ⁤U.S.‍ Supreme Court’s conservative majority sided with the⁤ football coach, ruling that the school district violated the Constitution by restricting him ‍from engaging in private, personal‌ religious expression.

Those⁤ prayers, the court said,​ were “private” and “personal” because they were‌ conducted quietly ‍and not in Mr. Kennedy’s capacity as a coach. The decision also highlighted the fact that no student was required ‌to⁢ participate, and⁣ that Mr. Kennedy was willing⁣ to pray alone, even though students were welcome to join him.



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