Donald Trump’s potential to pummel the U.S. Constitution — and its protection for religious freedoms — has been debated by constitutional law litigators, scholars and political pundits nationwide and across the political spectrum.
For instance, The New York Times on June 3 headlined a story “Donald Trump Could Threaten U.S. Rule of Law, Scholars Say,” in the immediate wake of the presidential candidate’s attack on a San Diego-based federal judge presiding over a case involving Trump University. The right-leaning American Family Association’s director of governmental affairs, Sandy Rios, said in an interview in May that “the question is how hard he would fight to protect religious freedom — and that’s the question mark with Donald Trump,”
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