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Breaking: Indiana Republicans Advance ‘Super RFRA’ Bill Masquerading As LGB Civil Rights Legislation

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Bill Offers Zero Protections For Transgender Hoosiers, Repeals Last Year’s Disastrous RFRA But Also Hard-Fought LGBT Protections 

After nearly five hours, Indiana Senate Republicans voted for legislation claiming to advance civil rights protections for lesbian, gay, and bisexual Hoosiers that is opposed by both the religious right and LGBT organizations. In a 7-5 vote, lawmakers on the Senate Rules and Procedures Committee decided to pass onto the full senate a bill that repeals the Religious Freedom Restoration Act and the hard-fount protections for LGBT people, and replace it with a bill that has zero protections for transgender people, plus increased carve-outs that enable religious discrimination.

“Lawmakers still aren’t listening,” Freedom Indiana campaign manager Chris Paulsen said in a statement sent to NCRM after Wednesday night’s vote. “Tonight, they took a bad bill and made it worse for LGBT people in our state who have to live each day in fear that they could be fired, denied housing or turned away from a public place for who they are.”

Ahead of the bill’s hearing today, Lambda Legal labeled the bill, SB 344, a “super” RFRA “that would facilitate religious discrimination.” Its religious exemptions “are broader than the religious refusal law passed last spring that has marked Indiana as a state of intolerance, tarnished the state’s reputation, and deprived it of convention revenue,” Camilla Taylor, Counsel at Lambda Legal had warned.

Calling SB 344 “big step backwards for all LGBT Hoosiers, but particularly transgender people, Lambda Legal adds the bill “would erode local authority to protect people from discrimination through municipal and county ordinances,” “permit publicly funded discrimination by social service agencies,” and “permit businesses to refuse to serve same-sex couples celebrating a wedding or anniversary.”

During the extensive hearing, the religious right brought significant out-of-state support. Speakers included infamous icons of the anti-gay establishment. Among them, Melissa Klein, owner of Sweetcakes by Melissa, who was ordered to pay damages to a same-sex couple, and florist Barronelle Stutzman, who also refused to service a same-sex couple.

The legislation was authored by Senate Republicans Travis Holdman and Brandt Hershman.

 

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‘Mealy-Mouthed Lies’: Johnson Decimated Over Health Care Claims

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Speaker of the House Mike Johnson is under fire over claims he made about Obamacare allegedly failing Americans, and his desire to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

Asked if he supported repealing ObamaCare, Johnson told reporters that he believed the health care program “was created to implode upon itself,” and has “failed the American people.”

“It was promised to be a great success, to make healthcare more affordable. It’s done exactly the opposite.”

He claimed that the “Republican Party is the party that has the plans to fix it,” and that it’s “a very, very complicated series of measures and steps that you have to take to fix it.”

Republicans have “lots of plans on the table,” he said, including, probably, “a hundred different ideas on how to fix it.”

READ MORE: ‘Seem Very Nervous’: Top Trump Officials Blasted After Lashing Out at ‘No Kings’ Protests

“Now, it takes a long time to build consensus in a legislative body to do those kinds of things. And we have lots of plans on the table. We have whole caucuses who work on this around the clock all the time.”

Johnson has kept Republican House members in their home districts for weeks since the shutdown began.

He also pointed to the “reforms” Republicans made to Medicare, as an example of how they might fix the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

NBC News reported that “Johnson’s comments escalate the battle one day before the Senate is slated to return to Washington, albeit with no clear path to end the shutdown. It will test the patience and resolve of both parties as federal employees — including members of law enforcement, air traffic controllers and TSA staff — are slated to miss paychecks.”

READ MORE: ‘Cornerstone of American Freedom’: National Security Group Blasts Johnson Attack

U.S. Senator Patty Murray, the vice chair of the Appropriations Committee, blasted the House Speaker.

“5 minutes of mealy-mouthed lies,” she wrote in response to the Speaker’s claims. “Republicans wanted to repeal the ACA with no replacement—they failed. This summer, they cut $1 trillion from health care, gutting Medicaid & sabotaging the ACA.”

“They have no health care plan and they want to let your premiums more than double,” she said.

Democrats have demanded Republicans continue the Affordable Care Act subsidies they struck down in the so-called “Big Beautiful Bill,” that will, they say, skyrocket premiums to possibly double or even triple current levels.

READ MORE: Johnson: Trump Will Stop Firing Federal Workers When the Government Reopens

 

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Johnson: Trump Will Stop Firing Federal Workers When the Government Reopens

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Speaker Mike Johnson on Monday defended the administration’s Friday night firing of thousands of federal employees, contending that President Trump and Budget Director Russ Vought were compelled by the shutdown to act, and alleged firing federal workers will end when the shutdown does — explanations experts widely reject as unfounded.

Asked about the terminations, Speaker Mike Johnson claimed to have little knowledge of them, despite widespread reporting. He suggested the layoffs were a consequence of the shutdown, telling reporters that “the executive branch, the Office of Management and Budget, has to determine what are the most efficient and effective programs.”

“It’s a difficult task,” Johnson told reporters. “It’s not one that they relish. They don’t want to do it. Listen, the president’s own words, and the Russ Vought’s own words, and everybody who’s involved. They want the government to be opened. They’re begging Chuck Schumer and the Democrats. That’s how to make all this stop. They want this to end immediately, and they want it at the end before it started.”

READ MORE: ‘Seem Very Nervous’: Top Trump Officials Blasted After Lashing Out at ‘No Kings’ Protests

Vought, some felt, had appeared to celebrate the layoffs when he announced them on Friday. Politico noted that “Vought’s post appears to follow through on a threat to inflict more political pain on Democrats.”

“The RIFs have begun,” the OMB director had written on social media, referring to his reduction-in-force plans. Politico reported he had sounded the “layoff siren.” Initial estimates were that about 4,200 employees had lost their jobs across at least nine government agencies.

U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), the vice chair of the Appropriations Committee, reportedly blasted Trump and Vought:

“Once again, when President Trump and his self-described ‘grim reaper’ decide to ignore the pleas of congressional Republicans and conduct more mass firings, they are choosing to inflict more pain on the American people.”

“No one is making Trump and Vought hurt American workers—they just want to,” she added.

U.S. Senator Andy Kim (D-NJ) responded to Vought, writing: “A reminder that Russell Vought previously said he wanted Gov workers ‘to be traumatically affected. When they wake up in the morning, we want them to not want to go to work because they are increasingly viewed as the villains…We want to put them in trauma.'”

READ MORE: ‘Cornerstone of American Freedom’: National Security Group Blasts Johnson Attack

Experts denied the legality and condemned the perceived motivations for the firings.

Brendan Duke of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities wrote: “Firing federal employees during a shutdown is not only illegal but must be seen for what it is: blatant extortion. The Trump Administration is using working people and their families as pawns in a power play with no concern for who gets hurt.”

“Claims that the shutdown has forced their hand are false,” Duke added. “Nothing about a shutdown justifies these firings or makes them necessary. That’s why they haven’t happened in past shutdowns – including in the first Trump admin.”

“Russ Vought is now officially using the government shutdown as a pretext for his continued attempts to permanently gut the civil service,” wrote Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW). “The executive branch cannot unilaterally reduce agency funding that Congress has allocated: This is a serious separation of powers issue.”

READ MORE: ‘I Know People. They Don’t Believe That’: Marjorie Taylor Greene Scorches Johnson

 

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‘Seem Very Nervous’: Top Trump Officials Blasted After Lashing Out at ‘No Kings’ Protests

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Several senior members of President Donald Trump’s Cabinet began the week Monday morning by denouncing the upcoming nationwide “No Kings” protests scheduled for Saturday. The demonstrations, first held in June to oppose authoritarianism and government corruption, drew millions of participants across the country and are expected to do so again.

As other Republicans last week, U.S. Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy implied on Monday that congressional Democrats are waiting until after the protests to try to reopen the government. Democrats have put forth multiple pieces of legislation to end the shutdown but Republicans have blocked them.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, who last week alleged the rallies are “hate America” protests, has stated repeatedly that he will not bring to the floor for a vote any bill from the Senate to end the shutdown that is not the continuing resolution the House passed weeks ago. Prior to the shutdown, President Trump told congressional Republicans to not negotiate with Democrats.

READ MORE: ‘Cornerstone of American Freedom’: National Security Group Blasts Johnson Attack

“The No Kings protests, Maria, really frustrating,” Secretary Duffy told Fox Business host Maria Bartiromo.

“I mean, this is part of Antifa, paid protesters,” he alleged.

President Donald Trump has attempted to designate “Antifa” as a domestic terrorist organization. Antifa is not an organized group.

“It begs the question, who’s funding it, but, yeah, Democrats want to wait for a big rally of a No Kings protest, when the bottom line is, who’s running the show in the Senate?” Duffy asked, attempting to pin the blame on Democrats.

“Chuck Schumer’s not running the show,” he said of the Democratic minority leader. “The No Kings protesters, or organizers, are running the show.

“Is AOC threatening a primary against Chuck Schumer. Is she running the show?” he said of U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY).

Duffy insisted, “You need a strong leader in the Senate to take control and make decisions, and Chuck Schumer’s blowing in the breeze, he has no power, no authority, because he’s given it up to his primary opponent, potentially an AOC, or to the No Kings protest organizers, and it’s shameful.”

Duffy was not alone.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent also blasted Democrats over the No Kings protests.

READ MORE: ‘I Know People. They Don’t Believe That’: Marjorie Taylor Greene Scorches Johnson

“If in fact, they are waiting for this ‘No Kings’ protest, you know, No Kings means no paychecks. No paychecks, and no government,” Bessent also told Bartiromo. “And, Maria, I think the dirty secret here for why this has dragged on for so long is the Democratic friends in the mainstream media have been downplaying the shutdown.”

“This is getting serious,” Bessent warned,  “it’s starting to affect the real economy. It is starting to affect people’s lives.”

Critics blasted the White House.

The Bulwark’s founder and publisher, Sarah Longwell, observed: “These guys seem very nervous about the upcoming No Kings protest.”

Media Matters senior fellow Matthew Gertz added, “The administration’s target isn’t ‘antifa,’ it is dissent.”

“Nobody is paying us, Sean,” wrote Fred Wellman, a pro-democracy podcaster, Army veteran of 22 years who served four combat tours, and a candidate for the U.S. House from Missouri. “We are angry. Welcome to freedom of speech. You must have missed that part of the Constitution when you were partying on MTV.”

READ MORE: ‘Unfolding Rapidly’: Trump Wants to ‘Stoke Violence’ to Invoke Insurrection Act Says Expert

 

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