The Columbus Dispatch

House OKS LGBTQ legal safeguards

Equality Act faces uphill battle in Senate

- Kevin Freking

WASHINGTON – The Democratic­led House passed a bill Thursday that would enshrine LGBTQ protection­s in the nation’s labor and civil rights laws, a top priority of President Joe Biden, though the legislatio­n faces an uphill battle in the Senate.

The bill passed by a vote of 224-206 with three Republican­s joining Democrats in voting yes.

The Equality Act amends existing civil rights law to explicitly include sexual orientatio­n and gender identification as protected characteri­stics. The protection­s would extend to employment, housing, loan applicatio­ns, education, public accommodat­ions and other areas. Supporters say the law before the House on Thursday is long overdue and would ensure that every person is treated equally under the law.

“The LGBT community has waited long enough,” said Rep. David Cicilline, D-R.I., who is gay and the bill’s lead sponsor. “The time has come to extend the blessings of liberty and equality to all of Americans regardless of who they are and who they love.”

Republican­s broadly opposed the legislatio­n. They echoed concerns from religious groups and social conservati­ves who worry the bill would force people to take actions that contradict their religious beliefs. They warned that faith-based adoption agencies seeking to place children with a married mother and father could be forced to close, or that private schools would have to hire staff whose conduct violates tenets of the school’s faith.

“This is unpreceden­ted. It’s dangerous. It’s an attack on our first freedom, the first freedom listed in the Bill of Rights, religious liberty,” said Rep. Mike Johnson, R-LA.

The House passed the Equality Act in the last Congress with unanimous Democratic support and the backing of eight Republican­s, but Donald Trump’s White House opposed the measure and it was not considered in the Senate, where 60 votes will be needed to overcome procedural hurdles. Democrats are trying to revive it now that they have control of Congress and the White House, but passage still appears unlikely in the evenly divided Senate.

The Supreme Court provided the LGBTQ community with a resounding victory last year in a 6-3 ruling that said the Civil Rights Act of 1964 applied to LGBTQ workers when it comes to barring discrimina­tion on the basis of sex. Civil rights groups have encouraged Congress to follow up that decision and ensure that anti-bias protection­s addressing such areas as housing, public accommodat­ions and public services are applied in all 50 states.

Biden made clear his support for the Equality Act in the lead-up to last year’s election, saying it would be one of his first priorities.

Democratic Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon, D-PA., said the Equality Act is needed to end “the patchwork of state laws” around gay rights and create “uniform nationwide protection.”

“It’s been personal since my baby sister came out to me almost 40 years ago,” Scanlon said. “For many people all across this country and across this House, that is when the fight hits home.”

The debate among lawmakers on Capitol Hill also become personal. Rep. Marie Newman, D-ill., whose daughter is transgende­r, tweeted a video of herself placing a transgende­r flag outside her office. Her office is across the hall from Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, RGA., who was recently blocked from serving on two committees because of past comments and tweets.

“Our neighbor, @REPMTG, tried to block the Equality Act because she believes prohibitin­g discrimina­tion against trans Americans is ‘disgusting, immoral, and evil.’ Thought we’d put up our Transgende­r flag so she can look at it every time she opens her door,” Newman tweeted.

Greene responded with a video of her own in which she puts up a sign that reads: “There are Two genders: MALE

and FEMALE. “Trust The Science!”

“Our neighbor, @Repmariene­wman, wants to pass the so-called “Equality” Act to destroy women’s rights and religious freedoms. Thought we’d put up ours so she can look at it every time she opens her door,” Greene tweeted.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Dcalif., pointed to the exchange to advocate for the bill Thursday.

“It breaks my heart that it is necessary, but the fact is, and in fact we had a sad event here even this morning, demonstrat­ing the need for us to have respect,” Pelosi said, at one point pausing and taking a deep sigh. “Not even just respect, but take pride, take pride in our LGBT community.”

Gay and lesbian members of Congress spoke about how meaningful the bill is for them.

“Look, we’re not asking for anything that any other American doesn’t already enjoy,” said Rep. Chris Pappas, D-N.H. “We just want to be treated the same. We just want politician­s in Washington to catch up with the times and the Constituti­on.”

Leaders at the U.S. Conference of

Catholic Bishops wrote lawmakers this week to say they had grave concerns about the bill. Among the concerns they raised is that the bill would expand the government’s definition of public places, forcing church halls and equivalent facilities to host functions that violate their beliefs, which could lead to closing their doors to the broader community.

Republican­s cited an array of consequenc­es they said could occur if the bill passed into law, from eliminatin­g the existing ban on the use of government funds for abortion, to allowing transgende­r people into women’s shelters and transgende­r youth into girls sports. Democrats likened the effort to past civil rights battles in the nation’s history.

Cicillini challenged Republican­s, “I hope you will bear in mind how your vote will be remembered years from now.”

Some of the nation’s largest corporatio­ns are part of a coalition in support of the legislatio­n, including Apple Inc., AT&T, Chevron and 3M Co., just to name a few of the hundreds of companies that have endorsed it.

New York prosecutor­s now have former President Donald Trump’s tax records after a protracted court battle, representi­ng an expected boost to a widerangin­g investigat­ion into Trump’s finances and the operations of the Trump Organizati­on.

A spokesman for Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance confirmed Thursday that the records were obtained Monday, when the Supreme Court refused Trump’s request to block a subpoena for the records.

Vance spokesman Danny Frost declined to comment further.

Vance sought several years of Trump’s tax returns and financial documents as part of an investigat­ion into alleged hush money payments made during the 2016 presidenti­al race in addition to a broader review of possible criminal activity at the Trump Organizati­on.

Trump’s attorneys had asked the high court to intervene in the case after losing the legal battles in lower courts. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit ruled in early October that Trump’s accountant, Mazars USA, must comply with the subpoena, rejecting Trump’s claims that it was too broad and was issued in bad faith to harass him. The former president has cast the Manhattan prosecutor­s’ inquiry as a “witch hunt” and has fought for years to to keep his tax returns under wraps.

Even though prosecutor­s have the records, the documents still may not become public because of the secrecy of grand jury proceeding­s.

Contributi­ng: Kristine Phillips

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ, POOL/AP FILE ?? Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon, D-PA., said that the Equality Act is needed to help create ‘uniform nationwide protection.’
JULIO CORTEZ, POOL/AP FILE Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon, D-PA., said that the Equality Act is needed to help create ‘uniform nationwide protection.’

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