Showing posts with label ENDA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ENDA. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 23, 2014

READ This Silly Religious Group Response to the LGBT Executive Order


The bishop-Chairmen of two USCCB Committees responded with great concern to President Obama’s July 21 executive order to prohibit federal government contractors from what the Administration deems “sexual orientation” and “gender identity” discrimination and to forbid “gender identity” discrimination in the employment of federal employees. The problems the bishops identify in the order relate both to the flaws in its core prohibitions, and to its lack of religious freedom protection.

Two USCCB Chairmen – Archbishop William E. Lori of Baltimore, Chairman of the Ad Hoc Committee for Religious Liberty and Bishop Richard J. Malone of Buffalo, Chairman of the Committee on Laity, Marriage, Family Life and Youth – together issued the following statement.

Today’s executive order is unprecedented and extreme and should be opposed.

In the name of forbidding discrimination, this order implements discrimination. With the stroke of a pen, it lends the economic power of the federal government to a deeply flawed understanding of human sexuality, to which faithful Catholics and many other people of faith will not assent. As a result, the order will exclude federal contractors precisely on the basis of their religious beliefs.

More specifically, the Church strongly opposes both unjust discrimination against those who experience a homosexual inclination and sexual conduct outside of marriage, which is the union of one man and one woman. But the executive order, as it regards federal government contractors, ignores the inclination/conduct distinction in the undefined term “sexual orientation.” As a result, even contractors that disregard sexual inclination in employment face the possibility of exclusion from federal contracting if their employment policies or practices reflect religious or moral objections to extramarital sexual conduct.

The executive order prohibits “gender identity” discrimination, a prohibition that is previously unknown at the federal level, and that is predicated on the false idea that “gender” is nothing more than a social construct or psychological reality that can be chosen at variance from one’s biological sex. This is a problem not only of principle but of practice, as it will jeopardize the privacy and associational rights of both federal contractor employees and federal employees. For example, a biological male employee may be allowed to use the women’s restroom or locker room provided by the employer because the male employee identifies as a female.

In an attempt to avoid these needless conflicts, states that have passed “sexual orientation” or “gender identity” prohibitions have overwhelmingly included protections for religious employers. When the U.S. Senate, which is controlled by the President’s own party, passed the similar Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) last year, it included religious liberty protections as well. Indeed, all prior versions of ENDA had at least some religious liberty protections. But the executive order is an anomaly in this regard, containing no religious liberty protections. In this way, the order, which is fundamentally flawed in itself, also needlessly prefers conflict and exclusion over coexistence and cooperation.

Regarding federal contractors, the Executive Order will take effect after rules to be promulgated by the Department of Labor implementing the Executive Order become final. Regarding federal employment, the Executive Order is effective immediately.

source 

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Chad Griffin pens Reasons why HRC supports ENDA


As I reported yesterday, LGBT groups are no longer supporting the Religious Exemptions version of ENDA. However, the HRC is to some degree.

HRC President Chad Griffin explains why in a piece he wrote for Buzzfeed.

The Human Rights Campaign supports the Employment Non-Discrimination Act for a very simple reason. It will guarantee millions of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people in all 50 states explicit, reliable protections from discrimination in the workplace. We call on our allies in Congress to improve this bill’s overly broad religious exemption. A strong ENDA is worth fighting for because we cannot ignore the urgent need of countless LGBT people who do not have the luxury of waiting for these protections.

All of us in the LGBT movement knew that passing ENDA wasn’t going to be easy in the 113th Congress. In fact, we knew it would require the biggest legislative campaign in the history of this movement. We all knew the bill wouldn’t be perfect, because legislating always involves compromises. But we also knew that there were two red lines we would not cross. The bill had to be inclusive of the entire LGBT community, and it had to ensure that private employers could never cite a religious reason to fire or refuse to hire an employee.

But regardless of whether or not ENDA passes in this session of Congress, it is time for the LGBT movement to throw its weight behind a fully comprehensive LGBT civil rights bill. A bill that, at long last, would bar discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity in all core civil rights categories — including housing, public accommodations, credit, education and, if ENDA fails to pass, in employment. This is a visionary idea that Congresswoman Bella Abzug brought to Congress in 1974. Its time has come.
read the rest after the jump

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Major LGBT Orgs No Longer Support ENDA

Due to the religious exemptions foolishness within the current ENDA proposal, The American Civil Liberties Union, Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders, Lambda Legal, the National Center for Lesbian Rights, and Transgender Law Center have dropped their support.

Here's the letter (via John Becker)

Joint Statement on ENDA Withdrawal by JohnMBecker

Interesting Quote: Julian Bond



"As LGBT people have gained greater equality under the law, we are hearing similar objections to the ones I heard in response to the civil rights gains of African-Americans in the 1960s. We hear people asking for exemptions from laws - laws that prohibit discrimination - on the ground that complying would violate their religious beliefs. ... There are some who feel that ENDA must allow religiously affiliated organizations - far beyond churches, synagogues and mosques - to engage in employment discrimination against LGBT people. We haven't accepted this in the past, and we must not today."
source 

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Interesting Quote: Sen. Orrin Hatch


“While the specifics of this executive order are not yet clear, I believe it must include the same religious protections that are included in the bipartisan Employment Non-Discrimination Act that passed the Senate. ENDA strikes a good balance to ensure that discrimination based on sexual orientation will not be tolerated, but also that one of our nation’s fundamental freedoms — religious freedom — is still upheld. The same must be said for any Obama Administration initiative on this issue.”

source

Monday, March 24, 2014

Interesting Quote: Vice President Joe Biden


"My grandkids, my children, and their kids are going to be shocked, it shocks the conscious that this very moment in American history, in some states, an employer can fire you just because of who you are, or who you love. It’s close to barbaric. I mean think about this, a man, no I really mean this. Imagine, imagine, 20 years from now, as America look back and say how in the hell could that have ever been allowed? The country’s moved on. The American people have moved on, it’s time for the Congress to move on, and pass ENDA. Pass ENDA now. Not tomorrow, now!"

source

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Interesting Quote: John Boehner on ENDA


"I am opposed to discrimination of any kind, in the workplace and any place else. But I think this legislation that I’ve dealt with as chairman of The Education and The Workforce Committee…is unnecessary and would provide a basis for frivolous lawsuits. People are already protected in the workplace. I’m opposed to continuing this. Listen, I understand people have differing opinions on this issue, and I respect those opinions. But as someone who’s worked in the employment law area for all my years in the State House and all my years here, I see no basis or no need for this legislation."
source 

Thursday, November 7, 2013

ENDA Vote Update: Senate passes, Heads to House


Some updates on the Senate ENDA vote.

Senate rejected that messy religious exemption amendment in a 43-55 vote. And, they voted 64-34 to end debate on ENDA. The final vote happens today.

Update!!

In a 64 to 32 vote, ENDA moves forward to the House for consideration.

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Interesting Quote: Tim Cook


We urge senators to support the Employment Nondiscrimination Act, and we challenge the House of Representatives to bring it to the floor for a vote.

Protections that promote equality and diversity should not be conditional on someone's sexual orientation. For too long, too many people have had to hide that part of their identity in the workplace.

Those who have suffered discrimination have paid the greatest price for this lack of legal protection. But ultimately we all pay a price. If our coworkers cannot be themselves in the workplace, they certainly cannot be their best selves. When that happens, we undermine people's potential and deny ourselves and our society the full benefits of those individuals' talents.

So long as the law remains silent on the workplace rights of gay and lesbian Americans, we as a nation are effectively consenting to discrimination against them.

Congress should seize the opportunity to strike a blow against such intolerance by approving the Employment Nondiscrimination Act.

source

Monday, November 4, 2013

ENDA advances in Senate with 61 Votes!


Oh Snap!

Senate advances ENDA with 61 votes! Seven, yes, SEVEN Repubs joined in to stop any filibusters against the bill.

The final vote was 61-30.

More to come

John Boehner Opposes ENDA


John Boehner is a bastard!

Earlier today, this fool came out and opposed ENDA.

His spokesman said this:
"The Speaker believes this legislation will increase frivolous litigation and cost American jobs, especially small business jobs."
You know what else cost jobs, Bone-Head, a government shutdown. But that didn't stop you from keeping that foolishness going. Boehner's non-support will be a hard slam for ENDA supporters. If he's against it, it may not see the light of day in the House.

But on a good note, Sen. Dean Heller came out in support of ENDA, making him the 60th member of Congress to support it.

Interesting Quote: President Obama



As a result, millions of LGBT Americans go to work every day fearing that, without any warning, they could lose their jobs -- not because of anything they've done, but simply because of who they are.

It's offensive. It's wrong. And it needs to stop, because in the United States of America, who you are and who you love should never be a fireable offense.

That's why Congress needs to pass the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, also known as ENDA, which would provide strong federal protections against discrimination, making it explicitly illegal to fire someone because of their sexual orientation or gender identity. This bill has strong bipartisan support and the support of a vast majority of Americans. It ought to be the law of the land.

Americans ought to be judged by one thing only in their workplaces: their ability to get their jobs done. Does it make a difference if the firefighter who rescues you is gay -- or the accountant who does your taxes, or the mechanic who fixes your car? If someone works hard every day, does everything he or she is asked, is responsible and trustworthy and a good colleague, that's all that should matter.
source 

Sunday, November 3, 2013

Interesting Quote: Brian Brown


Why is ENDA so dangerous? Because with the precedent set by this bill, courts in states around the country would soon find easy rationale for ruling that any organization or business that treats same-sex 'marriage' as different from man-woman marriage are discriminatory by definition. Under the law, individuals holding the common-sense belief that marriage is about giving kids a mom and a dad would be subject to punishment. Expressions of support for true marriage in the workplace would no longer be a fundamental right, but discriminatory, bigoted and an actionable offense!
This is from his weekly letter to me.

Friday, November 1, 2013

Interesting Quote: Laverne Cox

"Getting to play Sophia Burset in the Netflix original series Orange is the New Black is a dream come true for me. As an out transgender woman of color, I don't take the enormity of me being able to live my dreams lightly. This is not the case for so many of my transgender brothers and sisters. Everyone should have the same chance to get ahead, to support themselves and their families and to live their dreams. They should have the same chance to build a career doing something that they love to do. Having explicit federal laws like the Employment Non-Discrimination Act will make that possible for transgender people and I urge the U.S. Senate to swiftly pass this bill."

source

Monday, October 28, 2013

Harry Reid announced that he will bring ENDA up for Senate Vote


Today, Harry Reid announced that the Senate would take up a vote on ENDA before Thanksgiving.

He said this:
"We haven't taken this up for a number of years. We tried, it failed in the House before, but we're going to take it up again."
This vote has been in midst of controversy for years. Hopefully, this will actually happen and we can move... Oh, wait, it has to go through the House. Great Hera!

source

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

New Poll: Most Americans support ENDA


A conservative poll reveals that a majority of Americans support ENDA.

TargetPoint surveyed 2,000 registered voters and learned some important things:


  • 80% believed that federal law to protect LGBT workers already exist. 
  • 60% said anti-LGBT discrimination is a problem in our country.
  • One that note, 54% of self-described Republicans agree.
  • 68% support a federal law that protects LGBT Americans from workplace discrimination.
  • 56% said they support a federal workplace nondiscrimination law.
Things are looking good for ENDA. Can we get on it already?

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Senate committee will vote on ENDA on July 10th


Good news!

The Senate Health, Education, Labor & Pensions Committee has scheduled a vote for ENDA on July 10th. This is considered step one in this process and hopefully, move forward with ENDA being ready for a full vote in Congress.


More to come

source

Sunday, June 16, 2013

GOP Candidate Gabriel Gomez supports ENDA


This is interesting news.

Massachusetts GOP candidate for the U.S. Senate Gabriel Gomez believes that no one should be discriminated against in the working world and fully supports the legislation.

Washington Blade has more:
In a statement provided to the Washington Blade from his campaign via email, Gabriel Gomez, a former Navy SEAL, announced his support for ENDA in response to an inquiry on the legislation.

“I support ENDA, because I do not believe in discrimination of any kind, including discrimination by sexuality,” Gomez said.

Gomez, who after leaving the military became a private equity investor, hasn’t before explicitly addressed ENDA, although he said in March during a Republican primary debate that he opposes discrimination. In the same debate, Gomez said he backs DOMA repeal and marriage equality.
Again, very interesting.

He's kinda hot.

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Viktor is a small town southern boy living in Los Angeles. You can find him on Twitter, writing about pop culture, politics, and comics. He’s the creator of the graphic novel StrangeLore and currently getting back into screenwriting.