Louisiana Republican Bobby Jindal announced
Tuesday that he intends to sign the ”Louisiana Marriage and Conscience
Act” into law when it crosses his desk. In a written statement, Jindal spokesperson Shannon Bates Dirmann wrote:
The bill
was introduced into the Louisiana legislature by Mike
Johnson (R-Bossier City). The legislation would allow private businesses
to refuse to recognize legal same-sex marriages. The law is more
far-reaching than the controversial Indiana “religious freedom” law
which sparked national outrage. The Louisiana measure
would grant a private company the right to deny gay and lesbian
couples the same benefits that they provide for straight married
couples.
University of Virginia Law Professor Douglas
Laycock described the Louisiana bill as more extreme than many similar
anti-gay measures passed by other states. Laycock notes:
It would be a license to the private sector to refuse, for religious or moral reasons, to recognize same-sex marriages. It covers not just churches and religious organizations, but also the for-profit sector, and with no limit on size or diversity of ownership.
Governor Jindal may be under the illusion that he
can sign the measure without enduring the public backlash that greeted
Indiana's Mike Pence, when Pence signed Indiana’s “religious
freedom” right to discriminate law. Louisiana still lags well behind the
rest of the nation in support for marriage equality. A 2015 LSU poll found 51 percent of Louisiana residents oppose marriage equality, compared to 42 percent who support it.
Nevertheless, a substantial percentage of Louisiana
residents support marriage equality. Furthermore, a high percentage of
visitors to the state also favor marriage equality, so Jindal may be
underestimating the potential backlash to passing a discriminatory law.
Jindal
spends much of his time surrounded by wingnut ideologues, so he may
not have his pulse on public opinion. On Good Friday, Jindal attended an Iowa prayer breakfast with Duck Dynasty celebrity Willie Robertson. The Louisiana idiot even quipped
that Robertson would make a fine running mate. Jindal has a point. If
he chose Willie Robertson as his running mate, it would be an honest
selection, that highlights just how dead serious the Republican cabal is
about wanting to continue waging a culture war against gay and lesbian
Americans.
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