On Wednesday night, the Georgia
legislature introduced new language to its religious
freedom bill and passed
the bill in mere hours. Haste makes
waste. This new language significantly waters down a religious freedom bill
that had real force even though it was, as
we pointed out three weeks ago,
already lacking in certain respects.
The new version of the bill provides
Religious
Freedom Restoration Act levels of protection
for certain protected persons, but it explicitly says these protections cannot
apply in cases of “invidious discrimination.” Of course, no one is in favor of
invidious discrimination, but the problem is that in the hands of a liberal
judge, everything looks like
invidious discrimination even when it is not, such as religious universities or
adoption agencies that want their policies to reflect their teachings on marriage.
This apes the
bad “fix” that gutted the Indiana religious
freedom bill.
What this “fix” means in practice is
that if a new or existing law creating
special legal privileges based on sexual
orientation and gender identity conflicts with a sincere religious belief, the
Georgia religious freedom bill may provide no protection—not even the standard
balancing test that is the hallmark of religious freedom restoration acts. So
in an area where
we most need religious liberty protection,
the new Georgia law goes out of its way to disclaim it.
The Georgia bill also provides First
Amendment Defense Act-style protections with
respect to beliefs about marriage for certain faith-based organizations. But
here again, what it gives in one sentence, it takes away in another.
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The new version of the bill adopts a
very narrow definition of faith-based organizations, covering only churches,
religious schools, and “integrated auxiliaries.” Indeed, Georgia’s constrained
definition of religious organization mimics the one used by the Obama
administration to force the Little Sisters of the Poor to help provide
abortion-inducing drugs in their employee health plans because they don’t
qualify for an exemption as a religious organization. Faith-based organizations
come in all shapes and sizes, and there is no reason for Georgia to adopt such
a cramped vision of religious organization.
Finally, the new Georgia bill
provides no protection for bakers or florists or other similar wedding
professionals who cannot help celebrate a same-sex wedding. While it does
provide protections for priests and pastors not to have to perform same-sex
weddings and for everyone not to attend them, the U.S. Constitution already
provides such protections. So the bill doesn’t protect those who most need it,
but it protects those who already have it.
It is unfortunate that the Georgia
legislature caved to pressure from big business and special interests to water
down their weakened bill even further. Other states must
be vigilant against such cultural cronyism.
http://dailysignal.com/2016/03/18/georgia-guts-religious-freedom-bill/
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