Obama
Announces Shocking Change To Civil Rights Act… This Will Change America
(Washington Post) – The White House
endorsed legislation Tuesday that would amend the 1964 Civil Rights Act to ban
discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity.
White House press secretary Josh
Earnest said the Obama administration had been reviewing the bill “for several
weeks.”
“Upon that review it is now clear
that the administration strongly supports the Equality Act,” he said. “That
bill is historic legislation that would advance the cause of equality for
millions of Americans.
“We look forward to working with
Congress to ensure that the legislative process produces a result that balances
both the bedrock principles of civil rights . . . with the religious liberty
that we hold dear in this country,” Earnest added.
Although there is little chance that
this Congress will approve the legislation — which was introduced in July by
Democratic Sens. Jeff Merkley (Ore.), Tammy Baldwin (Wis.) and Cory Booker
(N.J.), and Rep. David N. Cicilline (D-R.I.) — President Obama’s support
elevates the question of whether lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender
Americans need greater legal safeguards. Last week, Houston voters rejected
an ordinance that would have barred discrimination against gay and
transgender people after opponents said it would allow men disguised as women
to enter women’s restrooms.
The White House’s endorsement of the
Equality Act came on the same day that Obama became the first sitting U.S.
president to be featured on the cover of an LGBT publication, after he was
named Out magazine’s “Ally of the Year” for 2015.
In the wake of the Supreme Court’s
decision in June to legalize same-sex marriage, activists have been pressing
for expanded protections based on sexual orientation and gender identity beyond
employment discrimination, which had been the focus of past legislation. A bill
that would have banned workplace discrimination passed the
Senate with bipartisan support in 2013 but did not advance in the House.
With Republicans now in control of
both chambers of Congress, there is little chance that the Equality Act, which
has the support of 37 Democrats and two independents in the Senate and 170
Democrats in the House, will become law before Obama leaves office.
Still, the decision by the nation’s
first African American president to back the measure is significant. Some
leading civil rights groups — including the NAACP and the Leadership Conference
on Civil and Human Rights — have been slow to endorse the legislation.
Although those groups support the
idea of a broad LGBT anti-discrimination bill, they have been skeptical about
reopening the landmark 1964 law for revisions.
Wade Henderson, president of the
Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, said in an interview that the
civil rights community has “supported the concept of the Equality Act from its
very inception.”
“It recognizes, however, there are
questions that could benefit from further analysis,” he added. “Before it moves
forward, there’s hope that those can be addressed.”
A majority of Americans, including
Republicans, say in public surveys that they back civil rights safeguards based
on sexual orientation and gender identity. Over the past six months, for
example, the Public Religion Research Institute has found overall support
at 68 percent or higher.
After Earnest’s announcement
Tuesday, Human Rights Campaign President Chad Griffin said in a statement that
“the White House sent a strong message that it’s time to put the politics of
discrimination behind us once and for all.”
“The unfortunate reality is that,
while LGBT Americans can legally get married, millions remain at risk of being
fired or denied services for who they are or who they love because the majority
of states still lack explicit, comprehensive non-discrimination protections,”
Griffin added.
Conservatives argue that the
Equality Act would infringe on those Americans who object to homosexuality and
being transgender on religious grounds. In July, the conservative Witherspoon
Institute published an essay by Andrew T. Walker saying that, if
enacted, the bill would “further erode religious liberty, transform public
opinion on sexuality, and harm the public perception of those who believe in
traditional or biblical sexual morality.”
The White House announcement comes
after media coverage of celebrities such as Caitlyn Jenner and Laverne Cox, as
well as a series of lawsuits, has increased the profile of transgender people.
Jenner accepted a “Woman of the Year” award from Glamour
magazine Monday night; Cox was one of the recipients last year.
On Tuesday, the American Civil
Liberties Union, the ACLU of Iowa and lawyers at the Des Moines firm Babich
Goldman filed a complaint with the Iowa Civil Rights Commission against Drury
Inn for discriminating against a black transgender woman in July.
Meagan Taylor and a friend, who also
is black and transgender, checked into the hotel in West Des Moines on their
way to a funeral and were interrogated by the staff there, according to the
complaint. At some point between check-in and the next morning, the ACLU
statement says, Drury Inn staff members called the police to report that they
suspected Taylor and her friend were prostitutes because they were “men dressed
like women,” and Taylor was arrested and held in solitary confinement.
Local police charged Taylor with
possessing hormone pills without a copy of the prescription, but those charges
were later dropped.
“This ordeal was humiliating, scary
and traumatizing,” Taylor said in the complaint. “I realized I was not welcome
in a public place simply because of who I am.”
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/obama-supports-altering-civil-rights-act-to-include-gender-discrimination/2015/
http://www.teaparty.org/obama-announces-shocking-change-civil-rights-act-will-change-america-129128/
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