USA TODAY International Edition

Gays face reversal of anti- bias protection­s

51 GOP House members urge Trump to sign order and fulfill vow to protect religious liberty

- Eliza Collins

Fifty- one members of the House asked Trump “to protect millions of Americans whose religious freedom has been attacked or threatened over the last eight years.”

Dozens of Republican lawmakers are asking President Trump to scale back Obama- era protection­s for gays and lesbians to make good on a campaign promise to protect religious liberty.

In early February, Trump reportedly was considerin­g an executive order that would reverse the former president’s orders prohibitin­g discrimina­tion against gays and lesbians in the federal workforce or by federal contractor­s. But the order was never signed.

A group of 51 members of the House wrote to Trump this month to “request that you sign the draft executive order on religious liberty, as reported by numerous outlets on February 2, 2017, in order to protect millions of Americans whose religious freedom has been attacked or threatened over the last eight years.” The letter has not been publicly released but was obtained by USA TODAY.

In February, the White House said Trump had no plans to sign such an order: “The executive order signed in 2014, which protects employees from anti- LGBTQ workplace discrimina­tion while working for federal contractor­s, will remain intact at the direction of President Donald J. Trump.”

But on Monday, a senior White House official told USA TODAY that some sort of policy to protect religious liberty was still in the works and that the president was trying to find middle ground. The official did not want to publicly discuss a policy that was still developing.

The official said that Trump has been clear about his support for the LGBT community — including after the shooting at a gay nightclub in Orlando and again during the Republican National Convention — and that he does not support any kind of dis-

criminatio­n. But Trump also believes there should be policies that allow for people to express and maintain their strongly held religious beliefs, the official said.

The official acknowledg­ed it would be a delicate balance and said the administra­tion was considerin­g how best to proceed.

Beyond the workforce protection­s, the widely circulated draft order would have eliminated the contracept­ive mandate that requires religious institutio­ns to provide health insurance for birth control. Republican­s lawmakers also are pushing for the order to allow for doctors to refuse to perform abortions based on religion. They also want to see protection­s for religious nonprofits to be able to express political opinions without losing their tax- exempt status.

Rep. Warren Davidson, R- Ohio, who led the charge on the April letter, said it made no sense to defend the Obama order or other policies he believes cause undue stress to people who are trying to practice their faith. Davidson brought up Catholic Charities, an organizati­on that helps facilitate adoptions and foster care but will not adopt to same- sex families. Branches of the organizati­on have had trouble with licensing because they will adopt only to married heterosexu­al couples.

“Fundamenta­lly, to Christians, you can’t say ‘ We’re going to protect your First Amendment rights and be the way they’ve always been,’ but now, to the Catholic church, ‘ If you want to place a baby for adoption you have to also place them with same- sex couples’ and the church says ‘ that’s an affront to our doctrine.’ You can’t have it both ways,” he told USA TODAY.

Davidson said Democrats should also be able to support religious liberty protection­s.

“It strikes me that broadly, in general, progressiv­es have been pretty welcoming to Muslims and have been very upset with the president and his tone with Muslims. I think this could be something that could be seen as a way to reach out and say, ‘ No, the First Amendment applies to everyone in America,’ ” Davidson said.

The letter’s signatorie­s, all of them men except for Missouri Rep. Vicky Hartzler, include some of the Republican caucus’ most conservati­ve members.

A similar letter was sent by Senate Republican­s this month.

“An executive order requiring federal government agencies to protect the right to religious freedom is necessary, and directing agencies to adhere to existing federal laws protecting religious freedom is sound policy,” it reads.

But not everyone sees religious liberty protection­s as necessary or even positive. Laura Durso of the Center for American Progress told USA TODAY that freedom of religion is already protected by the First Amendment, and any additional protection­s will create “a license to discrimina­te across a wide range of federal programs.”

“You can’t have it both ways in this administra­tion as much as they try to say ‘ We’re going to be a friend of the LGBT community but give people the right to discrimina­te against them,’ ” Durso said.

JoDee Winterhof, senior vice president for policy and political affairs at the Human Rights Campaign, an LGBT advocacy organizati­on, said that if Trump signed the order, it would “allow an unpreceden­ted expansion of tax- payerfunde­d discrimina­tion.”

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