Louisiana Republicans are fighting for a new kind of religious freedom law – one critics are calling far worse than the Indiana law that prompted national outrage earlier this month.
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HB 707 — the “Marriage and Conscience Act” — says the state can’t take “adverse action” against someone for opposing same-sex marriage for religious reasons; sponsor Rep. Mike Johnson told msnbc he’s hoping the bill will come up for a vote in the next few weeks. If passed, this law would likely ensure, for example, that the state couldn’t punish a state worker who refuses to process paperwork on a name change following a gay marriage in another state, or a police officer who didn’t want to police a same-sex wedding ceremony.
“This Louisiana bill really does what people accused the Indiana law of doing,” leading religious freedom expert and University of Virginia law professor Doug Laycock told msnbc. While Indiana’s law offered up individuals accused of discrimination a legal defense that a judge could then weigh, Laycock explained, this law gives religious individuals absolute protection from state action, without balancing interests of – for instance – whether a gay individual’s right to services outweighs the religious individual’s freedoms.
Laycock has weighed in on both sides of this debate before, having written an amicus brief last year supporting Hobby Lobby’s right to not pay for birth control, and another this year in support of same-sex marriage.
“The sponsor and the governor says it doesn’t authorize discrimination, I have no idea what that means, it pretty clearly does,” he added.
Gov. Jindal – who has made the bill a priority in his final legislative session — defended its intentions in an email interview with msnbc.
“This is not about discriminating against anyone or about judging people. This is simply about protecting the essential religious freedom rights in the First Amendment,” he said.
HB707 is the kind of bill that’s likely to earn him some street cred among Christian conservatives, the very group of voters he’s working to woo ahead of a likely presidential bid. In Iowa last week, he sought to portray himself as a defender of so-called “religious freedom.”
“Look, we’ve all been paying attention to what’s happening in Arkansas and Indiana. There is an assault on our religious liberties here in America,” he said in Cedar Rapids, Iowa last week. “Those on the left will try and distort this and try and mischaracterize this, they’ll try and distract us. Let’s make no mistake about what’s happening here and what’s a stake.”
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Jindal is polling in single digits, below leading Republican colleagues former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush — one of the most gay-friendly Republicans eyeing a 2016 bid so far — and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, who has said he supports traditional marriage, but also dodged an awful lot of questions on same-sex marriage.
A legislative fight over religion could help get the Louisiana Republican get ahead among social conservatives and Jindal told msnbc he believes religious liberty will “absolutely” be a central issue in the 2016 election.
“I am concerned about the erosion of religious liberty rights that is happening today in our country,” he said, adding that while he’d have to see the specifics, he’d likely support similar legislation on a national scale. “We must fight with everything we have to protect it, and we can do that in a way that respects everyone and loves everyone.”
Critics say the Louisiana law – which originally focused on protecting those who believe in “traditional marriage,” but has since been amended to focus on those who oppose same-sex marriage after critics protested that divorces could be caught up in this law – is one of broadest, most discriminatory bills in the country.
Business interests, Democrats, and activists in the state have slammed the law and vowed a fight, arguing that it’ll hurt tourism and create a discriminatory environment.









