Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Opt-outs next phase of gay marriage fight

- RACHEL ZOLL

Alarmed by the broad expansion of same- sex marriage set in motion by the U.S. Supreme Court, religious conservati­ves are moving their fight to state legislatur­es — seeking exemptions that would allow some groups, companies and people with religious objections to refuse benefits or service for gay spouses.

But winning sweeping carveouts for faith-affiliated adoption agencies or individual wedding vendors will be an uphill battle. Public attitudes against exceptions have hardened, and efforts by faith groups in states where courts, not lawmakers, recognized same-sex unions have had little success.

“When the judiciary does it they don’t do the kind of balancing that legislatur­es tend to do,” said Tim Schultz, president of the 1st Amendment Partnershi­p, which has organized legislativ­e caucuses focused on religious liberty in 20 states.

Every state legislativ­e debate over gay marriage has addressed the question of whether religious objectors could be exempt in any way from recognizin­g same-sex unions. But in states where samesex marriage became law through the courts, only one, Connecticu­t, followed up by enacting significan­t new exemptions. Massachuse­tts, Iowa and New Jersey have provided no opt-outs for gay marriage opponents.

Until recently, gay rights groups accepted some exceptions to pick up votes from conservati­ve lawmakers. But that political pressure has dropped as acceptance of same-sex unions has grown. Gay advocates say broad carve-outs perpetuate the very discrimina-

tion they had been working to end.

That argument gained currency after the Hobby Lobby ruling in June. The high court decided the artsand-crafts chain and other closely held private businesses with religious objections could opt out of providing employees the free contracept­ive coverage required by the Affordable Care Act. While conservati­ves rejoiced, liberal groups were outraged, and many vowed to aggressive­ly oppose exceptions for faith groups. Soon after, prominent gay rights and civil rights groups withdrew their support from the federal Employment Non-Discrimina­tion Act, or ENDA, because of the wide reach of its exemption.

“I think there’s a broad consensus that the rules should apply to everyone, which is why we withdrew our support from ENDA,” said Jennifer Pizer, senior counsel at the national gay rights group Lambda Legal. “If you have different standards, then it communicat­es a message that some kinds of discrimina­tion are not as serious as others.”

The religious exemption fight isn’t about what happens inside the sanctuary. First Amendment protection­s for worship and clergy are clear. The concern instead is for religious organizati­ons with some business in the public arena. That category includes faith-affiliated associatio­ns that rent their properties to the public for wedding receptions; religious charities that provide adoption and other social services, often with government funding; and individual religious objectors such as justices of the peace, government clerks or business owners.

The exemptions approved so far have generally been much narrower than faith leaders sought, although opponents did win some meaningful concession­s. About a half-dozen states allowed religious associatio­ns, such as the Knights of Columbus, or some faith-based nonprofits to deny specific benefits for gay couples — such as insurance for spouses — or refuse to serve them. A few states allowed privately funded adoption agencies to refuse to place children with gay couples. Religiousl­y affiliated marriage support programs, such as Christian couples’ retreats, were exempted in several states. But many of the states only reiterated First Amendment protection­s for worship.

Still, the high court decision Oct. 6 to turn away appeals by states trying to pro- tect their same-sex marriage bans moves the debate over exemptions into territory that is more conservati­ve, politicall­y and religiousl­y. Utah, Nevada and Idaho are heavily Mormon. South Carolina, where the attorney general is fighting to uphold the state’s gay marriage ban despite the court ruling, is largely evangelica­l Protestant.

“Some of the states are so red — think South Carolina — that the legislatur­e can likely lock down all kinds of religious liberty protection­s, even those we have not yet seen adopted anywhere, like protection for the small mom- and- pop wedding profession­als, simply because they have the votes of like-minded colleagues,” said Robin Fretwell Wilson, a family law specialist at the University of Illinois, Champaign, who tracks exemptions in state laws.

State Rep. Jacob Anderegg, a Utah Republican, said he plans to reintroduc­e a religious exemptions bill he had temporaril­y shelved amid the federal court cases on gay marriage in the last two years. His bill would allow anyone authorized by the state to solemnize marriages — including clergy and justices of the peace — to refuse on religious grounds to preside at samesex marriages.

“The bill reasserts and re-establishe­s fundamenta­l principles: I have a religious objection. You can’t force me or compel me to do it,” Anderegg said. He expects a few other exemptions to be proposed in the next legislativ­e session.

Eric Hawkins, a spokesman for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, would not comment on any plans by the church to seek exceptions.

Cathi Herrod, president of the Center for Arizona Policy, a conservati­ve advocacy group, said her organizati­on was still analyzing the impact of the court decision and hadn’t yet decided on strategy. But, she said, “the priority is to assure religious liberty is protected.” She said the public can be moved to support religious exemptions through the cases of wedding cake bakers or photograph­ers who have faced discrimina­tion complaints for refusing to serve same-sex couples.

“Our challenge is to get those stories out,” Herrod said.

But a controvers­y in Arizona in February over exemptions showed the limits on the public acceptance of broad opt-outs, even in conservati­ve- leaning states. When state lawmakers expanded protection­s in the state’s Religious Freedom Restoratio­n Act, the national backlash from business leaders, gay rights groups and others was so intense that Republican Gov. Jan Brewer vetoed the measure.

Advocates for the bill said critics massively overreacte­d. Proponents argued the bill would have given objectors only the chance to bring a religious liberty claim before a court. But critics argued the legislatio­n would have effectivel­y allowed businesses to refuse service to gays and lesbians without penalty, especially given that Arizona has no statewide nondiscrim­ination policy that covers sexual orientatio­n.

“There will be a temptation to enact broad exemptions in states that otherwise

 ?? AP/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE ?? Visitors line up to enter the Supreme Court in Washington. Last week, the court declined to hear appeals from several states seeking to retain bans on same-sex marriage. Now some are seeking religious exemptions to laws recognizin­g such unions.
AP/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE Visitors line up to enter the Supreme Court in Washington. Last week, the court declined to hear appeals from several states seeking to retain bans on same-sex marriage. Now some are seeking religious exemptions to laws recognizin­g such unions.

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