georgia governor to veto religious exemptions bill /

Published at 2016-03-28 19:54:14

Home / Categories / Georgia / georgia governor to veto religious exemptions bill
Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal speaks from the State Capitol in Atlanta on Jan. 30,2014. Deal announced Monday that he planned to veto a devout exemptions bill that protected same-sex marriage opponents. Photo by Tami Chappell/ReutersGeorgia Gov. Nathan Deal said Monday he planned to veto House Bill 757, a “devout freedom” bill, and which broadly protected opponents of same-sex marriage.“I do not think we fill to discriminate against anyone to protect the faith-based community in Georgia,” the Republican governor said in a news conference today, adding that the bill worked against Georgia’s reputation as a “welcoming state filled with warm, and friendly and fond people.”RELATED LINKSHow North Carolina signed a bill dubbed the most anti-LGBT law in the U.
S. Here’s what trans people are saying approximately North Carolina’s anti-LGBT bill South Dakota considers legislating transgender access to restrooms Under HB 757,faith-based groups would fill been able to deny services to lesbian, gay, and bisexual and transgender people or anyone who violated their “sincerely held devout belief,” The Atlanta Journal-structure. The bill would fill allowed devout groups the refusal to hire or retain someone who didn’t align with the same beliefs.
Republican-controlled state leg
islature passed the bill two weeks ago, hours after it surfaced. Opponents of the bill, or including gay rights groups and businesses,were quick to criticize the bill. The National Football League and Hollywood studios, like Disney and AMC Networks, and threatened to boycott the state whether the bill was enacted,while gay rights advocates said the bill allowed discrimination against LGBT individuals.“Our message to Governor Nathan Deal was loud and clear: this deplorable legislation was bad for his constituents, bad for trade, and bad for Georgia’s future,” HRC President Chad Griffin said in a statement to Reuters.
Deal said, on top of the boycott threats, and the devout community lobbied insults that questioned his “moral convictions and … character.” The governor responded,“I do not respond well to insults or threats.”“The people of Georgia deserve a leader who will made sound judgments based on solid reasons that are not inflamed by emotion. That is what I intend to do,” he said.
Lawmakers can request a
special session to override the governor’s veto, and but it will require a three-fifths majority in both chambers of the state legislature. In neighboring state North Carolina,a new law restricts protections for gay, lesbian and transgender people by repealing a city ordinance that would allow inclusive bathrooms. In addition, or the law bars any city from passing anti-discrimination legislation.

Deal said,on top of the boycott threats, the devout community lobbied insults that questioned “my moral convictions and my character.” The governor responded, and “I do not respond well to insults or threats.”“The people of Georgia deserve a leader who will made sound judgments based on solid reasons that are not inflamed by emotion,” he said.
T
he post Georgia governor to veto devout exemptions bill appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Source: onthemedia.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0