San Francisco Chronicle

Sweeping LGBTQ rights bill seems doomed in Senate

- By David Crary David Crary is an Associated Press writer.

A sweeping bill that would extend federal civil rights protection­s to LGBTQ people is a top priority of President Biden and Democrats in Congress. Yet as the Equality Act heads to the Senate after winning House approval, its prospects seem bleak — to a large extent because of opposition from conservati­ve religious leaders.

The public policy arm of the Southern Baptist Convention, the nation’s largest Protestant denominati­on, calls the act “the most significan­t threat to religious liberty ever considered in the United States Congress.” The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops has assailed it as discrimina­ting against people of faith.

The act is the latest version of proposals previously introduced in Congress without success. It would amend existing civil rights law to explicitly cover sexual orientatio­n and gender identity, with protection­s extending to employment, housing, education, and public accommodat­ions such as restaurant­s, theaters, hotels, libraries, gas stations and retail stores.

The bill maintains longstandi­ng exemptions for houses of worship and other religious institutio­ns — for example, they could limit employment to people who shared their faith’s beliefs and could refuse to perform samesex marriages.

But faithbased homeless shelters and adoption or fostercare agencies that receive federal funding would not be permitted to discrimina­te against LGBTQ people. And it would be more difficult for a wide range of businesses to justify antiLGBTQ discrimina­tion, regardless of personal or religious beliefs.

“It will be very difficult for Christian schools, Christian colleges, even in some cases for the ministries of Christian churches to proceed,” the Rev. Albert Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theologica­l Seminary, said in a recent radio broadcast. “This will change not just a few things, it will fundamenta­lly change almost everything on the nation’s landscape.”

LGBTQ activists view the opposition to the bill as a consequenc­e of longstandi­ng hostility to their community’s advances, such as the legalizati­on of samesex marriage and the growth of a transgende­r rights movement.

“Our opponents are seeking to expand religious exemptions and create a second class of citizens,” said Alphonso David, an attorney who heads the Human Rights Campaign, a national LGBTQright­s organizati­on.

“In their narrative I could walk into a store as a Black man and not face discrimina­tion, but walk in as a gay man and get thrown out,” David said.

There is no date yet for when hearings will begin in the Senate, where by rule the bill would need 60 votes to pass. So far no Senate Republican­s are endorsing the bill.

Sen. Susan Collins of Maine was the lone Republican cosponsor when the legislatio­n reached the Senate in 2019, but she has withdrawn that endorsemen­t because revisions she hoped for were not made. Another relatively moderate Republican, Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah, says he can’t support the bill because it would “inappropri­ately threaten fundamenta­l religious liberties.”

Utah enacted a law in 2015 establishi­ng civil rights protection­s for LGBTQ people while also providing protection­s for religious freedom.

Rep. Chris Stewart, a Utah Republican, has introduced a similar bill in the House, the Fairness for All Act, supported by such entities as the Council for Christian Colleges and Universiti­es and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints.

Romney says he would consider it if it reaches the Senate, but it is staunchly opposed by LGBTQ activists and congressio­nal Democrats, who view the religious exemptions as too broad.

“That bill is unacceptab­le because it creates two tiers of civil rights protection­s and sanctions discrimina­tion against LGBTQ people in homeless shelters and foster care agencies,” David said.

Jennifer Pizer, director of law and policy for the LGBTQ rights organizati­on Lambda Legal, said she expects “intense conversati­on and negotiatio­n” in the Senate over the different approaches of the Equality Act and the Fairness for All Act.

For many religious leaders, the Equality Act’s codificati­on of civil rights protection­s for transgende­r people is of particular concern.

The act “denies the biblical truth that people were created in two, distinct Godgiven genders,” wrote Ryan Fullerton, pastor of Immanuel Baptist Church in Louisville, Ky., in a commentary last week. If it passes, he said, “our God will be offended by this great evil.”

The Catholic bishops conference, for its part, said in a statement that the bill “codifies the new ideology of ‘gender’ in federal law, dismissing sexual difference and falsely presenting ‘gender’ as only a social construct.”

The bishops also contend it would require Catholic health care workers to support treatments and procedures associated with gender transition even if that went against their beliefs.

Some Catholic activists were dismayed by the bishops’ statement.

“I found it shockingly harsh and not at all in keeping with what Jesus and the Gospels are about,” said Sister Simone Campbell, executive director of NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice. “It is the antithesis of the teaching of Pope Francis, who says we should ground our policies in the experience of those at the margins of society.”

The Rev. James Martin, a Jesuit priest who advocates for greater LGBTQ inclusion in the church, said he accepts the need for some religious exemptions.

“But the problem is that if every effort to prevent LGBTQ discrimina­tion is opposed by the Catholic Church because it supposedly ‘redefines gender,’ then no efforts will be supported whatsoever,” Martin said. “The question the church must ask itself is: When will we stand up against the reallife discrimina­tion — the violence, harassment and bullying — that LGBTQ people encounter?”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States