CNN reached out to The Satanic Temple for comment but did not immediately hear back.
A spokesperson from Boston Mayor Michelle Wu’s office said the office was “carefully reviewing the Court’s decision and its recognition of city governments’ authority to operate similar programs,” adding: “As we consider next steps, we will ensure that future City of Boston programs are aligned with this decision.”
Boston, according to the city’s website, no longer accepts flag raising applications as of October 19, 2021.
The push comes after the nation’s highest court unanimously ruled on Monday that Boston had violated the First Amendment rights of a group seeking to briefly raise a Christian flag atop a city flagpole outside of City Hall as a part of a city program celebrating Boston’s greater community.
The court said that the flag display amounted to a public forum and because many other groups were allowed to raise their flags in celebration of the Boston community, the city could not discriminate on the basis of the religious group’s viewpoint without violating the Constitution.
“We conclude that, on balance, Boston did not make the raising and flying of private groups’ flags a form of government speech,” Justice Stephen Breyer wrote.
The Satanic Temple, according to its Twitter account, was founded in 2013 and is the only federally recognized international (non-theistic) religious Satanic organization.