Houston Chronicle

Court rules Mississipp­i can enforce faith-based anti-LGBT law

- By Emily Wagster Pettus

JACKSON, Miss. — A federal appeals court said Thursday that Mississipp­i can enforce a law that allows merchants and government employees to cite religious beliefs to deny services to same-sex couples, but opponents of the law immediatel­y pledged to appeal.

A three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reversed a judge’s decision that had blocked the law.

U.S. District Judge Carlton Reeves had ruled that the law unconstitu­tionally establishe­s preferred beliefs and creates unequal treatment for LGBT people. His ruling prevented the law from taking effect last July.

The law does not take effect immediatel­y. Plaintiffs are allowed time to appeal.

The 5th Circuit panel did not rule on whether the law is constituti­onal. It said plaintiffs failed to prove they would be harmed by the law, “but the federal courts must withhold judgment unless and until that plaintiff comes forward.”

Protects three beliefs

Legal experts said the law is the broadest religious-objections measure enacted by any state.

Championed and signed in 2016 by Republican Gov. Phil Bryant, it aims to protect three beliefs: marriage is only between a man and a woman; sex should only take place in such a marriage; and a person’s gender is determined at birth and cannot be altered. It would allow clerks to cite religious objections to recuse themselves from issuing marriage licenses to samesex couples, and would protect merchants who refuse services to LGBT people. It could affect adoptions and foster care, business practices and school bathroom policies.

Robert McDuff, an attorney for some of the people who sued to try to block the law, criticized the appeals court for saying plaintiffs had failed to show they would be harmed.

“People should not have to live through discrimina­tion in order to challenge this obviously unconstitu­tional bill,” McDuff said.

Roberta Kaplan, an attorney who represente­d some of the other plaintiffs, said her clients have been harmed.

“The state communicat­ed a message loudly and clearly with the passage of HB 1523: Only certain anti-LGBT beliefs will get the protection and endorsemen­t of the state,” Kaplan said. “Under the logic of this opinion, it would be constituti­onal for the state of Mississipp­i to pass a law establishi­ng Southern Baptist as the official state religion.”

Kaplan and McDuff said they will appeal the decision by the 5th Circuit panel. Kaplan said she will ask the entire 5th Circuit to reconsider the arguments; McDuff said he will either do that or appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

McDuff said that when — or whether — the law will take effect depends on the outcome of the appeal.

‘Not meant to discrimina­te’

Gay and straight plaintiffs who sued the state say the law gives “special protection­s to one side” in a religious debate.

Supporters say the law protects Mississipp­ians’ rights to live out their faith.

“As I have said all along, the legislatio­n is not meant to discrimina­te against anyone, but simply prevents government interferen­ce with the constituti­onal right to exercise sincerely held religious beliefs,” Bryant said Thursday.

Kevin Theriot is an attorney for Alliance Defending Freedom, an Arizona-based Christian group that helped to write the Mississipp­i law. He praised the appeals court decision.

“The sole purpose of this law is to ensure that Mississipp­ians don’t live in fear of losing their careers or their businesses simply for affirming marriage as a husband-wife union,” Theriot said Thursday. “Those who filed suit have not and will not be harmed but want to restrict freedom and impose their beliefs on others by ensuring dissenters are left open to the government discrimina­tion that has already occurred in states without protective laws like this one.”

Douglas NeJaime is faculty director of UCLA’s Williams Institute, which researches issues dealing with sexual orientatio­nand public policy. He testified in June 2016 on behalf of plaintiffs who sued to block the Mississipp­i religious objections law. NeJaime said Mississipp­i was the only state to enact a law that lists specific religious beliefs to be protected in reaction to the 2015 legalizati­on of same-sex marriage.

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