A controversial religious freedom bill that critics warn will sanction discrimination against LGBT people looks poised to become law in the Hoosier State.
Indiana’s Republican-controlled House of Representatives passed Senate Bill 101 Monday on a 63-31 vote, largely along party lines. The state Senate, also Republican-controlled, passed a slightly different version last month, and is expected to give final approval to the House-passed measure as early as Tuesday morning. Indiana’s Republican Gov. Mike Pence has already signaled his intention to sign the bill into law.
Modeled off of the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), which gained notoriety in the Supreme Court’s controversial Hobby Lobby ruling last year, Senate Bill 101 would prohibit a governmental entity from substantially burdening someone’s religious beliefs, unless that entity can prove it’s relying on the least restrictive means possible to further a compelling governmental interest.
Supporters say the bill is designed to protect people’s religious beliefs from unnecessary government intrusion. But opponents argue the measure would act as a license to discriminate, particularly against LGBT people, on religious grounds.
Citing RFRA, a religious business owner, for example, could refuse service to a same-sex couple. In more dangerous scenarios, critics foresee RFRA being used by doctors to withhold medically-necessary information from their patients based on the doctors’ religious beliefs.









