Breaking: Georgia House Passes Anti-Gay ‘Religious Freedom’ Pro-Discrimination Bill
Dangerous Legislation Passes House – Heads Back to Senate
The Georgia House just passed HB 757, a dangerous anti-gay bill that has been described as an “RFRA on steroids.” The vote for final passage of the bill was announced just this afternoon, a tactic Georgia lawmakers have used before to push through contentious legislation. The final vote was 104-65. The legislation, which passed the Senate last month by a vote of 38-14, now heads back to the Senate tonight for a final vote, then to the governor for his signature.
Sorry my friends. pic.twitter.com/Zw4JtLgMk9
— Margaret Kaiser (@RepKaiser) March 16, 2016
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution today calls the bill the “culimination of two years of debate, attacks, counter-attacks and emotional rhetoric, and the fears of corporate leaders and gay rights advocates that it could legalize discrimination in Georgia.”
Leaders of the 1.3 million-member Georgia Baptist Mission Board have led the effort for the past two years, calling on lawmakers to pass bills they said would protect religious viewpoints and prevent discrimination against religious groups. This year, for the first time, they explicitly linked the effort to same-sex marriage after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in June that state prohibitions on same-sex marriage are unconstitutional.
While there were changes made to the bill along the way between its passage last month by the Senate and today’s vote, the bill, known also as FADA (First Amendment Defense Act), like many RFRAs that have been making their way around the nation’s legislatures this year, makes anti-LGBT discrimination legal by providing special protections for people who wish to claim their religious faith prohibits them from performing certain acts, including baking a cake for a same-sex wedding, or allowing a child to be adopted by a same-sex couple.
Americans United for Separation of Church and State analyzed the legislation last month, and concluded the bill “allows any individual or ‘faith-based’ business, non-profit entity, or taxpayer-funded organization to ignore any law that conflicts with their religious beliefs about marriage.”
While the new version is said by some to be a compromise bill narrower in scope, some LGBT activists described it as worse than the original.
Georgia House Democratic Minority Leader:
#HB757 enshrines discrimination in to law, and that is not who we are as Georgians. #gapol
— Stacey Abrams (@staceyabrams) March 16, 2016
Some believe, or hope, Georgia’s Governor, Nathan Deal, will veto the legislation, and others believe there are enough votes to override his veto.Â
The statement from @GeorgiaUnites on surprise rewrite of “religious liberty” bill. https://t.co/zCUB079anF #gapol pic.twitter.com/bhugwmKcJ6
— Greg Bluestein (@bluestein) March 16, 2016
Some responses via Twitter:
Georgia State Rep. Taylor Bennett made an impassioned plea:
.@BennettForGA: “What are we saying to my gay mother? To @KarlaDrenner? To @keishawaites? To @Cannonfor58?” #gapol pic.twitter.com/Ay18TcFfz6
— Matthew Wilson (@mwilsonGA) March 16, 2016
Democratic Party of Georgia:
The #FADA bill that the House is voting on right now is even worse than before. #HB757 is state-sanctioned discrimination. Period. #gapol
— Georgia Democrat (@GeorgiaDemocrat) March 16, 2016
Others:
.@michaelcaldwell You should be ashamed. It is a disgusting bill and not worthy of Georgia. It is legislative gay bashing. #gapol
— Robbie Medwed (@rjmedwed) March 16, 2016
In a first, I’ve shed tears over a piece of legislation. A society with second-class citizens is not free. Georgia, my heart breaks. #gapol
— Anthony M. Kreis (@AnthonyMKreis) March 16, 2016
State Rep Karla Drenner opposing #ReligiousFreedom compromise, says debate is painful & hurts her heart #FADA #gapol pic.twitter.com/10lz4EOWcG
— Lori Geary (@LoriGearyWSB) March 16, 2016
Rep. Drenner “Reasonable people don’t do this…there’s something wrong with…your faith.” #HB757 #galeg #RFRA #FADA #PPA #OpposeHB757
— Hope L. Jackson (@HopeLJackson) March 16, 2016
Today, the GA House ignored ~500 businesses, @GovernorDeal & hundreds of thousands of Georgians who agree anti-#LGBT discrimination is wrong
— Georgia Unites (@GeorgiaUnites) March 16, 2016
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Image by Lori Geary via TwitterÂ
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This is a breaking news and developing story. Details may change. This story will be updated, and NCRM will likely publish follow-up stories on this news. Stay tuned and refresh for updates.Â

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