U.S. Rep. Randy Fine’s declaration that “the greatest threat to religious freedom is Mainstream Islam” exposes a fundamental and disqualifying contradiction at the heart of his leadership role on religious liberty.
Fine made the statement publicly while announcing his chairmanship of a House Foreign Affairs Committee Republicans hearing on defending religious freedom around the world. The post was not a misquote, nor a clipped excerpt. It was a clear, categorical claim—aimed not at extremism, not at violence, not at authoritarian regimes, but at “Mainstream Islam” itself.
That distinction matters. And it is precisely why Fine’s statement raises serious questions about fitness, bias, and constitutional credibility.
A Role Demanding Neutrality—Not Hostility
The mandate of any congressional body tasked with religious freedom is unambiguous: to defend the right of individuals and communities to practice their faith without discrimination, persecution, or collective suspicion. That mandate applies universally—across borders and across beliefs.
Islam is one of the three major Abrahamic religions, practiced by roughly 1.9 billion people worldwide. To brand its mainstream adherents as a threat is not policy analysis—it is religious generalization.
No serious religious-freedom framework permits a chair to define a global faith community as inherently dangerous while claiming to defend freedom of belief.
Conflation by Design
Fine did not qualify his statement by referencing Islamist extremism, terror networks, or state-enforced theocracy—targets routinely criticized by bipartisan lawmakers and human-rights advocates alike. Instead, he chose a broader label that sweeps ordinary believers, reformers, minorities, and peaceful practitioners into a single accusatory category.
This is not an accidental rhetorical slip. It is a deliberate conflation.
By doing so, Fine collapses the critical distinction between belief and abuse, between faith and force—a distinction that underpins U.S. constitutional protections and international human-rights law.
The Constitutional Problem
The First Amendment does not protect religions conditionally. It does not carve out exceptions based on popularity, geopolitics, or cultural discomfort. The Establishment Clause and the Free Exercise Clause together prohibit the government from favoring or disfavoring a religion as such.
When a lawmaker entrusted with advancing religious liberty publicly identifies a specific religion as a civilizational threat, that posture collides head-on with constitutional neutrality.
At minimum, it undermines credibility. At worst, it signals that “religious freedom” is being selectively applied—defended for some, denied to others.
International Consequences
The United States routinely condemns foreign governments for demonizing religious minorities—whether Christians in parts of the Middle East, Jews under antisemitic regimes, or Muslims in authoritarian states. That moral authority evaporates when U.S. officials mirror the same logic at home.
If “Mainstream Islam” is framed as a threat by an American committee chair, what credibility remains when Washington objects to collective punishment, profiling, or repression abroad?
A Question of Fitness, Not Opinion
This is not about silencing criticism of ideas. It is about institutional responsibility.
A chair of a religious-freedom hearing is not a talk-radio host. The role demands restraint, precision, and adherence to principle. Fine’s statement demonstrates none of the above.
You cannot credibly defend religious freedom while branding one of the world’s largest religions as a menace.
You cannot claim neutrality while practicing categorical suspicion.
And you cannot chair a forum on liberty while advancing rhetoric that mirrors the logic of religious exclusion.
The issue is no longer disagreement. It is disqualification.
If religious freedom is to mean anything beyond a slogan, it must be defended consistently—or not claimed at all.







