Pence's words came against a backdrop where Republicans are
continuing to cast legislative votes for, anti-gay discrimination.…
Embattled Indiana Republican Governor Mike Pence
told reporters on Tuesday that the storm surrounding the state’s
decision to pass a discriminatory religious freedom law had finally
passed. Pence confidently declared:
I think the difficult time that Indiana just passed through two weeks ago is behind us.
Reeling from his declining approval numbers, and
a sustained backlash from passing the law, Pence is trying to put the
controversy behind him. Indiana hired a global public relations firm, Porter Novelli, and the state is paying them over two million dollars to try to mend Indiana’s tarnished image.
Pence defended hiring the PR firm, and he stated:
We’ve got a great story to tell. I really do believe that we are through the storm, that now’s the time to heal.
Whether it is wishful thinking or cynical damage
control, Pence’s words came against a backdrop where Indiana Republicans are continuing to cast their votes for, rather than against,
anti-gay discrimination.
Republican lawmakers shot down a bill
introduced by Democrat Rep. Ed Delaney (Indianapolis) on Tuesday which
would have extended statewide protections to gays and lesbians from
discrimination in housing, employment, education and public
accommodation. They also killed a separate measure,
on a 40-10 party-line vote, simply to create a committee to study the
possibility of adding statewide protections from discrimination based on
sexual orientation and gender identity.
So
while Governor Pence is trying to declare the storm is over, members of
his party continue to keep the issue alive, by refusing to reject
discrimination against LGBT residents. No matter how much Governor Pence
spends on pricey PR firms to repair Indiana’s image, the Hoosier brand
will remain soiled, as long as Republicans continue to dominate state
politics with their antiquated, homophobic views. Instead of hiring a
PR firm maybe the Republican Party should shift their focus away from
damage control, and actually try to do the right thing, by rejecting
discrimination in all its forms.
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