The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

GOP: No litmus test over ‘religious liberty’

Candidates will be asked to commit, not vow, to advance cause.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

The Georgia GOP decided against imposing a litmus test on “religious liberty” legislatio­n for the Republican candidates for governor, adopting a resolution Saturday that supported the controvers­ial measure without including a pledge for gubernator­ial contenders to back it.

The compromise came after bitter debate at the Georgia GOP’s state committee over a proposal that initially called for the candidates to pledge their support for a state version of the Religious Freedom and Restoratio­n Act that would have put Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle in a bind.

The activists instead overwhelmi­ngly backed a resolution pushing candidates to “commit to advancing the cause of religious liberty” without prodding them to sign a pledge.

It came after a remarkable agreement over the language between Georgia GOP chair John Watson, a favorite of the party’s establishm­ent wing who was elected to lead the fractious party in June, and Mike Crane, a former state senator who is about as anti-establishm­ent as they come.

It was also a relief for Cagle, the presumptiv­e front-runner who has a complicate­d history with the religious liberty debate. He enthusiast­ically supported the measure last year and was critical of Gov. Nathan Deal’s veto, but this year he said it should be left up to Congress.

His three GOP rivals – Secretary of State Brian Kemp and

If it happens in Washington or under the Gold Dome — or somewhere else — and it affects Georgians, The Atlanta Journal Constituti­on has somebody there to tell you what it means. Follow our coverage at my AJC. com/politics.

state Sens. Hunter Hill and Michael Williams – have each supported the legislatio­n. To reinforce the point, Hill also issued a statement late Thursday saying he would “be the first candidate to sign my name” if the pledge had passed.

Supporters of the religious liberty legislatio­n typically want Georgia to join the 21 other states that have similar laws they say will protect people of faith from government intrusion, as well as strengthen legal protection­s for opponents of gay marriage.

The opponents, including powerful business boosters and gay rights groups, warn it amounts to legalized discrimina­tion and point to executives from dozens of big-name companies, including Apple, Disney and Time Warner, who threatened boycotts if Georgia adopted the legislatio­n.

The grass-roots activists who make up the Georgia GOP’s core have long embraced the legislatio­n, and members passed resolution­s supporting the legislatio­n the last two years – and sharply criticized Deal for his 2016 veto of the bill. But many on the committee — 200 or so of the party’s most committed volunteers and officials — drew the line at a pledge.

Randy Evans, a longtime Republican National Committeem­an now in line for an ambassador­ship, warned that “issue-based pledges” could lead to a wave of litigation and warned activists that supporting it could force the party to “dump money into lawyers’ pockets.”

Watson said while he was a “passionate” supporter of the religious liberty legislatio­n, he would staunchly oppose any requiremen­t that a candidate support it “because of the Pandora’s box it could open.”

Supporters of the pledge, including some of the party’s most conservati­ve activists, warned that nixing the language would send the wrong message to elected officials who they say often ignores their top priorities. Brant Frost V said it would signal that “those politician­s in Atlanta who take our money and then two-time us” can keep doing so.

“We know what’s going to happen,” he said, predicting that in 2019 the Metro Atlanta Chamber “is going to come in with their moneybags” and dissuade any candidate who hasn’t signed a pledge to oppose the measure.

Others say that the divisive debate could soon be a moot point either way: The U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear a case later this year that could decide whether these types of measures are constituti­onal.

After the vote, Watson thanked the feuding activists for setting aside their difference­s and finding a middle ground.

“What I just saw was a healing process that was very important,” he said. “We’re not always going to agree on things, but I do want to express my sincere gratitude for working together on this.”

 ?? AJC 2016 ?? When Gov. Nathan Deal vetoed religious liberty legislatio­n last year, supporters said their efforts were not over. The Georgia GOP considered having its candidates for the next governor take a pledge to back such legislatio­n, but the group will urge...
AJC 2016 When Gov. Nathan Deal vetoed religious liberty legislatio­n last year, supporters said their efforts were not over. The Georgia GOP considered having its candidates for the next governor take a pledge to back such legislatio­n, but the group will urge...

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