

Whether or not they place local law above federal law depends on what the statements actually promise.

By Dr. John E. Finn
Professor Emeritus of Government
Wesleyan University
Introduction
Severalย cities and towns, mostly in the American Midwest and South, are responding to a surge of proposed and approved legislation that restricts gay and transgender peopleโs rights by declaring they are โsanctuariesโ for people who identify as LGBTQIA+.
States like Alabama, Texas, Florida, North Dakota and Montana haveย passed 84 lawsย in 2023 aloneย that restrict LGBTQIA+ rights, primarily targeting transgender kids.
Some of these laws require teachers toย call trans students by the name and pronounย they were assigned at birth, for example, andย prohibit any studentsย from discussing sexual orientation or gender identity.
In September 2023, the small town of Lake Worth Beach, Florida, was the latest to say that it was โa safe place, a sanctuary, aย welcoming and supportive cityย for LGBTQIA+ individuals and their families to live in peace and comfort.โ
At least 15 states and cities have dubbed themselvesย LGBTQIA+ sanctuariesย over the last several years.
Sanctuaries are generally considered local refuges, where people who are afraid of persecution or discrimination have legal immunity from particular government policies or laws.
As aย scholar of constitutional lawย and a student of sanctuary movements, I think that sanctuary declarations of all kinds raise important questions of constitutional law.
The most difficult is the question of whether and when these declarations violate the U.S. Constitution by placing state or local law above federal law.
The short answer is that it depends on what these declarations actually promise.
Sanctuaries’ History in the U.S.

Sanctuaries are a long-standing part of the United Statesโ constitutional history.
In the 1980s,ย for example, Los Angeles, Chicago and Boston, among other places, said they wouldย not cooperate with federal immigrationย officials trying to deport Central American migrants. These citiesโ representatives said the migrants were eligible for asylum and had fear of returning to their homelands because of persecution โ but federal judges still did not give them the right to stay in the U.S.
More recent examples include the proliferation ofย Second Amendment sanctuariesย in local towns and countiesย in 42 states, which say they will not enforce a variety of federal gun laws.
Now, Tallahassee, Florida, is among the places that is consideringย declaring itself a LGBTQIA+ sanctuary. Other places โย including Austin, Texasย andย Kansas City, Missouriย โ have also made themselves LGBTQIA+ sanctuaries over the last few years.
Most of the sanctuaries focus on the rights and protection of trans kids and their families, in particular.
In some places, like Austin, the aim is to create a โsafe place, a sanctuary, forย transgender children and their families.โย In Kansas City, the intent is to make the city โa sanctuary for people seeking orย providing gender-affirming care.โ
Are They Legal?

Sanctuary declarations raise important and difficult questions of constitutional law, especially when they claim immunity from federal laws or the U.S. Constitution. Thatโs because the Constitutionย contains Article 6, commonly known as the supremacy clause, which says that the Constitution and federal laws trump any state or local law.
The supremacy of the Constitution to state and local laws is a key part of how the U.S. government works. It means that state and local governments must act within the confines of the Constitution, even when state or local lawmakers disagree with federal law.
So, does the Constitution allowย places to say that they will not followย discriminatory laws, such as those that prevent trans students or faculty from use of the restrooms that match their gender identity?
The answer often depends on a sanctuary declarationโs precise wording and meaning.
Some sanctuary declarations, like theย Lake Worth Beach resolution, are simply rhetorical statements of support or opposition to a particular cause or policy. They have little or no legal consequences.
Others, like someย Second Amendment resolutions, announce that local officials, often sheriffs or other law enforcement personnel, will not enforce or comply with laws restricting guns that they regard as unconstitutional.
In these sorts of cases, the proclaimed sanctuaries directly challenge what the Constitution says, specifically that the Constitution and federal laws areย โthe supreme Law of the Landโ. State laws or laws passed by lower levels of government cannot overrule them.
Devil Is in the Details
It is important to note, however, that not all sanctuary declarations violate Article 6.
When it comes to whether sanctuaries declared by states, cities or small towns are legal, the devil is in the details โ as with most things concerning the Constitution.
A sanctuary resolution that only says that local officials disagree about what the Constitution means or requires, without pledging to break federal law, is simplyย freedom of expression.
Consequently, a claim of sanctuary for LGBTQIA+ people that simply declares a city or a town a safe and welcoming space, without calling for anything else or any kind of direct violation of federal law, is constitutionally protected. This is what the Lake Worth Cityย sanctuary declaration does.
A more complex case arises when sanctuary spaces claim immunity not from federal law, but rather from state or local laws that impede a certain group of peopleโs rights. These kinds of sanctuary declarations do not ordinarily challenge the authority of Article 6 or the Constitution, in general, because the sanctuary claim is made against state laws, not federal law or the Constitution.
Indeed, in many such instances, these sanctuaries seek to protect peopleโs federal civil liberties and rights against discriminatory state laws. This is what theย Lake Worth Beach resolutionย and otherย LGBTQIA+ resolutions do.
These sanctuaries actually reinforce the Constitutionโs authority by insisting upon the power of peopleโs basic, constitutional principles and rights over discriminatory state laws.
Sanctuaries that promise a safe space for people who identify as part of the LGBTQIA+ community do not undermine federal constitutional law.
Instead, they seek to make good on the Constitutionโs commitments to equality and human dignity against discriminatory policies. Unlike some sanctuary resolutions, most LGBTQIA+ sanctuaries do not threaten the Constitution โ they celebrate it by insisting upon the supremacy of basic constitutional rights and principles without violating Article 6.
Originally published by The Conversation, 11.29.2023, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution/No derivatives license.


