Friday, April 29, 2016
Thursday, April 28, 2016
Missouri House Committee Rejects Religious Freedom Bill
A Missouri House committee
on Wednesday rejected a so-called religious freedom bill that sought
to protect people opposed to the marriages of gay and lesbian
couples.
Senate Joint Resolution
No. 39 would have protected people such as clerks, clergy and
businesses who didn't want to serve gay couples as it relates to
their marriages.
According to the
Associated Press, three Republicans joined three Democrats in voting
against the measure, which cleared the Missouri Senate last month.
Democratic Governor Jay
Nixon had condemned the proposal, saying it would “condone
discrimination,” but Nixon's approval is not needed on
constitutional amendments, which are placed before voters.
The Missouri Alliance for
Freedom denounced the vote in a statement posted online: “We are
not finished. While today's results are not optimal we are not going
anywhere. Religious freedom is not negotiable.”
Wednesday, April 27, 2016
North Carolina HB2 Sponsor Buck Newton: "Keep Our State Straight"
North Carolina State Senator Buck
Newton on Monday delivered a speech in which he made a call to “keep
our state straight.”
Newton is currently campaigning to be
the state's next attorney general.
Supporters and opponents of the state's
controversial House Bill 2 clashed on Monday, holding competing
rallies as lawmakers returned to work.
At a rally in support of the measure,
which prohibits transgender people from using the bathroom of their
choice at public institutions and blocks cities from enacting LGBT
protections, Newton repeated the unsubstantiated claims of
supporters.
“We all know folks that had a
difficult time. Whether folks are struggling with drugs or
struggling with their marriages, figuring out what it is that they're
supposed to be doing in life, we can all have sympathy for that,”
Newton is seen telling the crowd in a video recorded by Progress
North Carolina Action. “But that does not mean that we should
expose our wives and our sisters and our children to the sexual
predators in the bathrooms. We must say no. We must say no.”
“Go home, tell your friends and
family who had to work today what this is all about and how hard we
had to fight to keep our state straight,” he
later added.
State Democrats have called on Newton
to apologize.
“One of the Republican sponsors of HB
2 just admitted the real purpose of the law: to make North Carolina
unwelcoming to LGBT people,” said a spokesman for the North
Carolina Democratic Party.
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
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