The Kansas Senate decided on Friday
that they would kill the legislation that was passed earlier this week
by the state’s House of Representatives. The bill, known as House Bill
2453, would have opened the door to widespread segregation
and discrimination of those in the LGBT community. On Tuesday, the
House of Representatives, which is overwhelmingly Republican, passed the
bill with ease by a vote of 72-49. It was assumed that with a large
majority in the state’s Senate and the extremely conservative Sam
Brownback as Governor, the legislation was going to fly through and
become law.
Well, something happened along the way. Perhaps it was the fact that
the law made national headlines and had a lot of blowback. Or maybe it
was due to what Andrew Sullivan wrote on Friday
regarding what the law would do for the LGBT community. In his column,
Sullivan accurately noted that passing a law that so blatantly
discriminates gays and treats them like second-class citizens would
inevitably be the death knell for the religious right in its attempt to
prevent the advancement of gay rights.
Basically, by going forward with this, the gay community could
rightly point to this law and compare it to the Jim Crow laws of the
South. It also would have an avalanche effect on the GOP, as young
voters would be turned off by them for good due to their penchant for
bigotry. Sullivan nailed it with the following paragraph:
If the Republican Party wanted to demonstrate that it wants no votes from anyone under 40, it couldn’t have found a better way to do it. Some critics have reacted to this law with the view that it is an outrageous new version of Jim Crow and a terrifying portent of the future for gays in some red states. It is both of those. It’s the kind of law that Vladimir Putin would enthusiastically support. But it is also, to my mind, a fatal mis-step for the movement to keep gay citizens in a marginalized, stigmatized place.
Somebody got a hold of the Kansas Senate President, Republican Sen.
Susan Wagle, and told her that this would kill the party nationally if
they went through with it. Seeing that the GOP controls the Senate 32-8,
and knowing full well that an ultra religious fanatic like Brownback
would sign this bill as soon as he could, this had to be stopped while
still in the Senate. If this would have carried forward, the negative
impact on the national party would have been felt for years, if not
decades.
One heartening thing about this whole fiasco is it showed that even a
very conservative state like Kansas has its limits. Conservative
organizations like the Kansas Chamber of Commerce and the Kansas
Employers for Liberty Coalition urged the Senate not to pass this bill,
as it would cause all kinds of problems down the road for businesses.
People is Kansas were taking to social media and expressing their
displeasure with the bill. Overall, it was made apparent to the state’s
Republican lawmakers that they had made a drastic overreach with this
bill and better pump the brakes before they completely destroyed
themselves politically.
Now, this isn’t to say that the state’s Congress isn’t going to revisit
this and see if there is away they can still try to protect ‘religious
liberty’ while finding a way to offend and discriminate against gays.
They just have to try to find a way that isn’t so blatantly obvious that
a 4-year old would know what their intent is.
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