Lodi News-Sentinel

Court won’t hear challenge to Cal law banning state-funded travel to Texas

- David G. Savage

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday rejected an unusual complaint from the state of Texas alleging that California had unconstitu­tionally discrimina­ted against it by refusing to pay the travel costs of California state employees who go there.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton had sued directly in the high court alleging that California imposed “economic sanctions” on Texas and 10 other conservati­ve states that passed laws permitting discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n. The other states were Alabama, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Mississipp­i, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota and Tennessee.

Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel A. Alito Jr. dissented from the decision to not hear the case.

Paxton had argued that California’s actions violated the Constituti­on’s protection for interstate commerce.

California state lawyers said Texas misstated what was at issue.

In 2016, the California legislatur­e passed AB 1887, which prohibits state agencies from approving “statefunde­d or state-sponsored travel” to any state that enacted a law that discrimina­tes against LGBTQ people.

The measure “is not a trade embargo or travel ban. It does not bar any commerce or prohibit any travel into or out of California,” California state attorneys said. “It instead limits what out-of-state travel California will pay for.”

In December, the justices rejected another novel legal challenge from Paxton, who had urged the court to toss out the electoral votes of four states: Pennsylvan­ia,

Michigan, Wisconsin and Georgia — which were crucial to President Joe Biden’s victory over Donald Trump.

Paxton was also behind the broad challenge to the Affordable Care Act that reached the high court. He claimed the entire law should be voided because

Congress in 2017 reduced the tax penalty to zero for those who did not have health insurance.

 ?? MIHOKO OWADA/SIPA USA ?? A tree blooms around a barbed wire fence behind U.S. Supreme Court Building on March 17 in Washington, D.C.
MIHOKO OWADA/SIPA USA A tree blooms around a barbed wire fence behind U.S. Supreme Court Building on March 17 in Washington, D.C.

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