It’s not just about birth control.
When the Supreme Court ruled last week that closely held corporations like Hobby Lobby wouldn’t have to cover the cost of contraception because of sincerely held religious beliefs, it didn’t take long for many to see the coming storm. If companies are allowed to treat women differently in access to health care, after all, what’s to stop them from discriminating against LGBT individuals based on the same religious grounds?
In the fight over LGBT rights, the Hobby Lobby decision is already beginning to do three things: embolden supporters of so-called religious freedom bills in several states; encourage the push for a religious exemption in executive protections for LGBT employees; and put backers of the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) in a position where they feel they have to withdraw support.
While widespread opposition last legislative session managed to kill more than a dozen measures across the country that if passed would have allowed broad anti-gay discrimination, the Hobby Lobby ruling has offered supporters of such bills a glimmer of hope for next year.
“I do think that ruling will have a major impact,” said the Rev. Terry Fox, a Southern Baptist minister in Wichita, Kansas, and a leader of the successful movement to ban same-sex marriage in that state. “The Supreme Court has given a strong statement that people have a right in business if they have religious convictions to take a stand.”
Fox is now focusing on getting a religious freedom bill, which resembles the federal Religious Freedom and Restoration Act (RFRA) through the Kansas legislature.
RFRA, passed in 1993 and signed by President Bill Clinton, carved out an exemption in federal laws that would substantially burden someone’s free exercise of religion, unless the law in question addressed a compelling government interest and was the least restrictive way of accomplishing that goal. In the Hobby Lobby case, the Supreme Court determined that the mandate for contraceptive coverage under the Affordable Care Act failed to meet that high bar.
If passed, the Kansas bill would build off an existing state RFRA and shield businesses that choose to turn away gay people on religious grounds. House Bill 2453, which passed the Kansas House of Representatives earlier this year, was one of many religious freedom measures sweeping legislatures across the country, and igniting a torrent of criticism along the way.
The movement was spurred in large part by high-profile discrimination claims, such as one in Colorado — where a baker refused to make a wedding cake for a same-sex couple — and one in New Mexico — where a photographer refused to shoot a same-sex commitment ceremony. Both business owners lost in court, having violated the states’ non-discrimination laws.
Unlike Colorado or New Mexico, however, Kansas does not provide statewide protections for LGBT individuals. That means that as of now, there is no non-discrimination law based on sexual orientation or gender identity in the state with which to have a religious objection. But opponents believe the proposed bill’s language would invite broad discrimination in virtually every aspect of a person’s life, and allow government officials to ignore legally valid same-sex marriages, should the state’s ban on such unions fall.
“If we’re going to lose the marriage amendment, then we’re going to need some other laws,” said Fox.
While Kansas is deeply conservative, lawmakers there have failed to pass a religious freedom bill the last four years in a row due to vocal opposition among the state’s business owners and civil liberties advocates. Similar backlash reached a fever pitch in Arizona last legislative session, prompting Republican Gov. Jan Brewer to veto that state’s version of the bill. After that, religious freedom legislation fizzled out in every state but Mississippi, where it went into effect on July 1.
Today, Fox believes that the Supreme Court’s Hobby Lobby ruling, which affirmed RFRA at the expense of Obamacare’s contraceptive mandate, will turn the tide.
“I had the opportunity to meet with the leadership in Kansas, and I do believe we will get a similar bill passed this coming year,” he said. “We have a history in Kansas when churches come together that we can influence our legislature.”
Opponents disagree.
“I think if the legislature wants to wade into this fight for the fifth year in a row, they’re welcome to try to make the case,” said Tom Witt, executive director of Equality Kansas. “They learned a hard lesson this winter that when you advocate for open discrimination against anybody, the public is not going to stand for it.”
Kansas may not be the only state to see a rematch in the religious freedom fight.
“I think it’s a certainty that states will run with this, that some other courts will adopt wide-ranging views of the significance of Hobby Lobby, and that there will be tremendous damage attempted not just to other forms of birth control, but to issues like LGBT rights,” said Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State and one of the original architects of RFRA.
Along with many other progressives at the time, Lynn intended RFRA to be a shield against government interference in religious liberty, not a sword — shrouded in religion — to use against others.
“This is a real Pandora’s box with some ugly critters coming out of it already,” Lynn said.









