The U.S. House
of Representatives has once again passed the Equality Act, a comprehensive LGBTQ+ civil rights
bill.
The House had
approved the bill in 2019, but it never came to a vote in the Senate, which had
a Republican majority then. Supporters are hoping for a better outcome this
year, as the Senate is split 50-50 between Republicans and Democrats and Vice
President Kamala Harris has the tie-breaking vote.
The vote in
the House Thursday was 224-206, with three Republicans joining all the
chamber’s Democrats in supporting the legislation. The three were Reps. John
Katko and Tom Reed, both of New York, and Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick of
Pennsylvania. Two Republicans did not vote.
The act
would amend existing civil rights laws, such as the Civil
Rights Act of 1964 and the Fair Housing Act of 1968, to ban discrimination
based on sexual orientation and gender identity. In addition to employment and
housing, it would ban such discrimination in other aspects of life including
education, credit, jury service, federal funding, housing, and public
accommodations. It would also make clear that the Religious Freedom Restoration
Act of 1994 does not provide legal cover for anti-LGBTQ+ discrimination. It is
the successor to the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, a narrower piece of
legislation that never passed both houses of Congress in the same session.
The Supreme
Court’s decision last year in Bostock v. Clayton County established that
anti-LGBTQ+ employment discrimination is sex discrimination and therefore not
allowed under the Civil Rights Act. Since Joe Biden became president, he
has promised to implement this decision throughout the
federal government, and that started with an announcement from the Department
of Housing and Urban Development prohibiting such discrimination in housing. But
passage of the Equality Act would make it much harder for a future court
decision or president to undo bans on discrimination. Biden has said adoption
of the act would be a priority in his first 100 days as president.
The bill was introduced in the House by out Rep. David Cicilline of Rhode Island, and LGBTQ+ ally Sen. Jeff Merkley of Oregon introduced the bill in his chamber. All nine LGBTQ+ members of the House voted for it. One of them, Mark Pocan of Wisconsin, delivered a stirring speech Thursday calling out the anti-LGBTQ+ and especially anti-trans actions of some Republicans.
https://twitter.com/repmarkpocan/status/1365037173943263238?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1365037173943263238%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.advocate.com%2Fpolitics%2F2021%2F2%2F25%2Fhouse-passes-equality-act-now-senate
LGBTQ+ and
allied groups were jubilant over the House vote and called on the Senate to
pass the act; it could face a barrier in that chamber because of the
legislative procedure known as a filibuster — the requirement that it takes 60
votes, not a simple majority, to end debate on a bill and move to a vote on the
bill itself. Some Democrats want to get rid of the filibuster.
A sampling of
statements from various organizations:
“Today’s vote
is a major milestone for equality bringing us closer to ensuring that every
person is treated equally under the law.” — Human Rights Campaign
President Alphonso David
“We applaud
the House for supporting this bill once again, as it did in 2019, and urge the
Senate to follow suit. As Black History Month concludes, we implore Senators to
vote in favor of the Equality Act like their lives depend on it, as ours
do.” — National Black Justice Coalition Executive Director David
Johns
“The
protections provided by the Equality Act are supported by more than 80 percent
of the public, and the bill is supported by more than 100 religious
organizations. Today’s bipartisan vote is just another demonstration that
legislation is long overdue.” — Winnie Stachelberg, executive vice
president for external affairs, Center for American Progress
“We cannot
successfully fight HIV/AIDS without ending discrimination against the LGBTQ
community. Overt or perceived discrimination is a major reason why many LGBTQ
Americans do not seek out needed health care, including HIV testing, care, or
prevention education. It also deeply affects such basic things as keeping HIV
medications in their homes or accessing health care benefits through their
employer. By ensuring their protection under the law in every state and
territory, the Equality Act will have a tremendous impact on our efforts to end
HIV by 2030.” — NMAC Executive Director Paul Kawata
“The House
passage of The Equality Act is a victory for all Americans and for our
country’s core values of equal treatment under law. This landmark civil rights
law secures those protections for every LGBTQ person, to live without fear of
discrimination.” — GLAAD President and CEO Sarah Kate Ellis
“It is
disgraceful that until now, LGBTQ+ people were not included by name in these
essential protections. We urge the US Senate to quickly pass the Equality Act
so that LGBTQ+ people can finally receive the dignity and respect they
deserve.” — Scott McCoy, interim deputy director, LGBTQ rights and special
litigation, Southern Poverty Law Center
“Today, the
U.S. House of Representatives passed, yet again, the Equality Act, as it has
done in years past. And, once again, the Equality Act now goes to the U.S.
Senate. We hope and trust this year, it will finally get the hearing in the
Senate that it so richly deserves. After years of ignoring this important
legislation, the Senate needs to take care of business and pass the Equality
Act.” — Lambda Legal CEO Kevin Jennings
"Today’s
bipartisan passage of the Equality Act is the result of decades of hard-fought
activism by women, people of color, and the LGBTQ
community — particularly transgender individuals of
color — to ensure that no American faces discrimination based on
their sex, gender, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, or gender
identity." — National Center for Lesbian Rights Executive
Director Imani Rupert-Gordon
“This is a
defining moment in our nation’s political history and soon U.S. senators will
decide their legacy on equality for LGBTQ people. History is not kind to those
who oppose or filibuster civil rights legislation and excuses won’t pass muster
with future generations. An overwhelming number of Americans support the
Equality Act — including a majority of Republicans — and
today the U.S. House voted for the will of the people. It is imperative
senators be given that same opportunity to vote and understand that the history
books will remember their decision.” — LGBTQ Victory Institute President
and CEO Annise Parker
SOURCE: ADVOCATE
Well, it looks like Kamala is going to have to come in and break that tie... EAT IT, MITCH. EAT IT!
ReplyDeleteThis needs to be a done deal ✅
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