Los Angeles Times

Houston LGBT advocates hopeful

The city equal rights measure defeated at polls may be revisited.

- molly.hennessy-fiske @latimes.com Twitter: @mollyhf By Molly Hennessy-Fiske

HOUSTON — A controvers­ial citywide nondiscrim­ination measure overwhelmi­ngly rejected by voters here this week may not be dead.

Voters rejected the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance 61% to 39% after a protracted 18-month legal and political battle, but it could be revived by the City Council, experts said, particular­ly if one of the contenders in an ongoing mayoral runoff champions the measure that would provide nondiscrim­ination protection­s for gay and transgende­r people.

The Democratic mayoral contender, state lawmaker Sylvester Turner, supported the ordinance and garnered 31% of the vote. His Republican opponent, Bill King, opposed the ordinance, pledging not to reintroduc­e it if it failed, and won 25% of the vote.

“So as long as you have people who want to resurrect it, and I think Sylvester Turner will want to, it’s an issue the voters are going to have to consider,” said Paul Simpson, chairman of the Harris County Republican Party. “It’s clearly an issue that could come back up again. The question becomes: What would the next mayor and City Council do?”

Concerns about transgende­r women using women’s bathrooms fueled a popular campaign against what opponents dubbed “the bathroom ordinance.”

Some conservati­ves have floated the idea of modifying the ordinance, removing controvers­ial protection­s for transgende­r individual­s. Others oppose any efforts to revive it.

“How many more times do those council members want to go through this when the voters have already spoken?” Simpson said. “Just listen to the citizens.”

King, the former mayor of outlying Kemah, would not revive the ordinance, a spokesman said. “The court systems have spoken, the voters have spoken, and as far as Bill is concerned, that’s it,” Jim McGrath said, adding, “It’s been a horribly divisive issue for the city.”

It’s not clear what Turner would do.

“I don’t think you can read from yesterday’s vote that people were saying yes to discrimina­tion,” Turner said Wednesday. “It’s an opportunit­y for everyone to take a deep breath, continue to have a conversati­on, to work to build a very unified city. We’ll see what unfolds.”

Turner says he plans to work to prevent discrimina­tion in the city, but “what form that will be, how you would present that, it’s way too early to say.”

The ordinance was originally passed by the City Council in May 2014, but after opponents petitioned and sued to bock it, the Texas Supreme Court ruled it had to be repealed or put to a vote.

Mayor Annise Parker, the first openly lesbian mayor of a major U.S. city, refused to modify the ordinance in the face of what she called discrimina­tory “fear mongering” and “deliberate lies” targeting “a little-understood minority” in the LGBT community.

Parker said Wednesday that she and the City Council, which approved the measure 11 to 6, may take the ordinance up again during her remaining two months in office. “There’s a strong desire on the part of the council members who voted for it,” she said.

Parker said they could reconsider the measure in whole or in parts — for instance, employment and housing protection­s — but said she would not agree to exclude any of the 15 protected groups.

“We have a responsibi­lity to try to be thoughtful and figure out a way to bring those protection­s back,” she said, adding that if they don’t, she hopes the next mayor does.

Doing so would cement Parker’s legacy but imperil Turner’s campaign by alienating African American voters he needs to win, said Brandon Rottinghau­s, an associate professor of political science at the University of Houston.

But if city leaders drop the ordinance and Turner distances himself from it, Rottinghau­s said, Turner’s Republican opponent can still use it to “drive a wedge into the African American community, which is bread and butter for the Turner campaign.”

Turner, 61, a black, Harvard-educated lawyer, has been negotiatin­g a complicate­d relationsh­ip with both the African American and LGBT communitie­s during this, his third, campaign for mayor.

 ?? Brett Coomer ?? RITA PALOMAREZ, left, and Linda Rodriguez pray Tuesday at an election watch party for opponents of the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance.
Brett Coomer RITA PALOMAREZ, left, and Linda Rodriguez pray Tuesday at an election watch party for opponents of the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance.

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