Under extensive pressure to veto a controversial piece of legislation many believe will open the door to broad discrimination, Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer headed into a day of meetings Wednesday with supporters and opponents of SB 1062 — a bill that would allow businesses the right to deny services to any person based on religious beliefs, and one that has become a watershed moment for gay rights.
The governor has not yet said what she will do with the legislation, which landed on her desk Monday, but she did vow on Twitter to “do the right thing for the State of Arizona” regarding SB 1062.
I assure you, as always, I will do the right thing for the State of Arizona. #SB1062
— Jan Brewer (@GovBrewer) February 26, 2014
Meantime, outside her office a chorus of voices championing equality has reached fever pitch, with companies rushing to join the ranks of business leaders and lawmakers urging Brewer to use her executive power to kill the bill. Apple, Intel, Marriott Hotels, Starwood Hotels and Resorts, PetSmart, Yelp, Delta and American Airlines have all denounced the legislation, and the NFL indicated it hasn’t ruled out the possibility of moving Super Bowl XLIX — due to take place next year at University of Phoenix Stadium — in protest.
Both Republican senators from Arizona have spoken out publicly against the measure, as have three Republican state senators who voted for the bill, including one of its co-sponsors. Former presidential candidates Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich have also said a veto is the best option. Even Brewer’s closest advisers are recommending she nix the legislation, according to The Arizona Republic.
That was the scene awaiting the Republican governor, no stranger herself to controversial legislation, as she touched down in Phoenix Tuesday after returning from the winter conference of the National Governors Association in Washington, D.C. Opponents are hopeful all the noise they’re making could provide enough political cover for Brewer to veto the bill without looking like she’s defying her core constituency.
On Wednesday, the onslaught of criticism and threats to pull business from the state continued. JPMorgan Chase and American Express both told Business Insider they wanted to see the bill vetoed. The CEO of San Francisco-based software company, Salesforce, said he would “never do another corporate event in Arizona” if SB 1062 became law. The Hispanic National Bar Association announced that it was pulling its 2015 convention from Phoenix. The Major League Baseball said it has a “zero-tolerance policy for harassment or discrimination based on sexual orientation” and would “neither support nor tolerate any words, attitudes or actions” that go against its values. And Secretary of State John Kerry openly questioned whether the bill could pass constitutional muster.
“I cannot imagine how that law would withstand the scrutiny of the Supreme Court of the United States,” said Kerry in an interview with msnbc’s Andrea Mitchell. “I would hope that she will make the right decision.”









