Republican stonewalling stalls LGBTQ advances
When marriage equality became the law of the land in 2015, President Barack Obama ordered the White House lit in the colors of the rainbow flag. Four years later, the Trump administration and Republicans in Congress and statehouses across the nation are stonewalling progress on LGBTQ nondiscrimination legislation. | Evan Vucci / AP

NEW YORK (AP)—The LGBTQ rights movement’s top legislative priority, a comprehensive nondiscrimination bill called the Equality Act, will be introduced in Congress on Wednesday, but the excitement will be tempered by political reality: The bill could well be doomed, at least for this year, by lack of Republican support.

That dynamic mirrors the situation nationwide. Twenty mostly Democratic-run states already have comprehensive nondiscrimination protections for LGBTQ people, comparable to what the Equality Act would mandate nationally. The protections extend to employment, housing, public accommodations, and public services.

The other 30 states—where Republicans hold full or partial power—have balked at taking that step, illustrating that LGBTQ rights are as polarized along partisan lines as abortion, climate change, and other hot button issues.

The result is a patchwork map in the U.S., with a majority of states making it legal for an LGBTQ person to be fired, evicted, or barred from public facilities because of sexual orientation or gender identity.

“No one’s civil rights should be dependent on what ZIP code they live in,” said JoDee Winterhoff of the Human Rights Campaign, a national LGBTQ rights group.

Opponents of nondiscrimination bills, meanwhile, say that such measures can infringe on religious and other beliefs.

“The Equality Act would undermine the freedom to think and act according to our beliefs,” said Emilie Kao of the conservative Heritage Foundation. Citing recent cases in the news, she said faith-based adoption agencies should not be required to serve same-sex couples, and entrepreneurs such as bakers and florists should be not be required to provide their services for same-sex weddings.

The Equality Act was first introduced three years ago; it would add gender identity and sexual orientation to existing federal nondiscrimination laws covering such realms as employment, housing, education, and public spaces, and services. The new version specifies that the act would cover retail stores, emergency shelters, banks, transportation, pharmacies, and legal services.

In Congress, the bill has near-unanimous Democratic backing and seems certain to pass the House. But its supporters have struggled to find even a few Republican co-sponsors, and its chances in the GOP-controlled Senate appear slim.

“The path forward may require another election,” said James Esseks, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s LGBT & HIV Project.

Esseks is hopeful that federal courts may broaden some protections for LGBTQ people, notably with regard to workplace discrimination. But he says the Equality Act eventually will be needed to “fill all the gaps” and provide comprehensive protections in conservative states that are unlikely to enact LGBTQ rights bills on their own.

This year, LGBTQ nondiscrimination bills have been filed in more than a dozen state legislatures where the GOP either is in full control or, in the case of Virginia, controls one chamber. Two such bills passed Virginia’s Democratic-controlled Senate, but GOP leaders in the House of Delegates refused to consider them. None of the bills in other states appear headed for passage.

Some examples:

— In West Virginia, the state Senate’s GOP leadership let an LGBTQ non-discrimination bill die without a hearing, despite a plea from 12 mayors to consider it.

— In North Dakota, a measure that would prohibit housing or workforce discrimination based on sexual orientation was defeated in the House by a 70-22 vote.

— In Arkansas, the state Supreme Court refused to let the city of Fayetteville enforce a local ordinance banning discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity. The court cited a state law aimed at preventing local protections for LGBTQ people.

— In Arizona, LGBTQ activists considered it a breakthrough when two GOP lawmakers signed on as sponsors of a nondiscrimination bill. But the measure failed to advance; it was denounced by the conservative Center for Arizona Policy as a threat to individuals and organizations “who have a historic understanding of marriage and gender.”

For LGBTQ activists, the biggest victory this year came in New York, where the legislature expanded existing nondiscrimination protections to cover transgender people. Republicans controlling the state Senate had long blocked that move, but Democrats took over the chamber in November’s midterm elections.

Until 2015, when the U.S. Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage nationwide, marriage was the dominant issue animating opponents of LGBTQ rights.

Since then, LGBTQ non-discrimination laws and full civil liberties for transgender people have taken center stage. Opponents of the latter say they can be problematic in terms of access to public restrooms and locker rooms, as well as transgender women’s participation in some competitive sports.

LGBTQ activists, citing numerous national polls, say a solid majority of Americans support nondiscrimination protections for LGBTQ people.


CONTRIBUTOR

David Crary
David Crary

New York-based reporter with The Associated Press, covering national social issues.

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