Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Justice Department drops North Carolina LGBT rights lawsuit

- By Jonathan Drew

RALEIGH, N.C. » The Trump administra­tion dropped a lawsuit Friday accusing North Carolina of discrimina­ting against LGBT residents in response to the state’s decision to undo its “bathroom bill.”

The Justice Department’s withdrawal represents the first significan­t movement in a tangle of legal action over the state’s nondiscrim­ination laws since a deal last month to get rid of House Bill 2.

LGBT advocates have vowed to continue a separate federal lawsuit, saying the replacemen­t law still violates the rights people.

North Carolina’s compromise got rid of the most well-known provision of House Bill 2 that required transgende­r people to use restrooms correspond­ing to the sex on their birth certificat­es in many public buildings. The new law makes clear that state legislator­s, not local government­s, are in charge of any future bathroom policies.

The replacemen­t law also prohibits local government­s from enacting new nondiscrim­ination ordinances for workplaces, hotels and restaurant­s until 2020.

Tara Borelli, a lawyer for Lambda of gay and transgende­r Legal, said her group will amend its lawsuit to challenge the new law, arguing that it continues harmful aspects of its predecesso­r. She said losing the Justice Department as an ally won’t weaken the case.

“This move does not affect the merits of the case,” she said. “HB2 was unconstitu­tional as of the moment it was enacted. HB142 was unconstitu­tional the moment it was enacted. We don’t think the courts will have any trouble seeing that, regardless of who’s sitting at counsel’s table.”

Separate from the Justice Department’s decision, an appeals court earlier this week asked Borelli and her colleagues for more informatio­n about how the new law will affect their case. The 4th Circuit Court of Appeals ordered both sides to file new arguments by late April.

Representa­tives of North Carolina’s Republican Senate leader Phil Berger and House Speaker Tim Moore didn’t immediatel­y respond to emails seeking comment.

The new law received a vote of confidence from the NCAA and ACC, which had moved events out of the state. The NBA is also considerin­g bringing back its All-Star Game, which it pulled from Charlotte.

Some business leaders applauded the compromise, while others said it didn’t go far enough.

Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper, who helped broker the deal, has said he wants to extend LGBT protection­s further but that House Bill 142 was the best compromise that the Republican-controlled legislatur­e would approve.

The Justice Department’s withdrawal from the legal battle wasn’t unexpected. Weeks before the deal to undo House Bill 2, the federal government told a judge it was backing away from a request for an injunction. The lawsuit was started last year under then-President Barack Obama.

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