Arizona
Gov. Jan Brewer has vetoed a hot-button measure that would have
permitted businesses in the state to deny service to gay and lesbians
for religious beliefs.
At a news
conference at the state capitol just after 7:45 p.m. ET, Brewer said the
bill "could result in unintended and negative consequences."
"I sincerely believe that Senate Bill 1062 has the potential to create more problems than it purports to solve," Brewer said.
The
controversial bill sparked outcry from LGBT activists and drew vocal
criticism from civic leaders, business interests and state economic
groups.
Sen. John McCain, R-Az.,
who urged Brewer to veto the bill, said Wednesday evening that he hopes
"we can now move on from this controversy and assure the American
people that everyone is welcome to live, work and enjoy" the state.
Opponents of the bill applauded Brewer's decision.
“Discrimination
has no place in Arizona, or anywhere else,” said Alessandra Soler,
executive director of the ACLU of Arizona. “We’re grateful that the
governor has stopped this disgraceful law from taking effect, and that
Arizona will remain open for business to everyone.”
GLAAD CEO and President
Sarah Kate Ellis said Brewer "demonstrated that basic respect for LGBT
people extends across party lines, and anti-LGBT bias isn't just bad
politics, it's bad for business."
Defenders of the measure had said it was a key safeguard of religious freedom.
Major corporations had come out strongly against the proposal. Apple, Inc., which recently announced plans to build a new manufacturing plant in Mesa, Az., was joined by American and Delta airlines, Marriot Hotels, Intel, PetSmart, Yelp, Major League Baseball and others in announcing their opposition to the bill.
Major corporations had come out strongly against the proposal. Apple, Inc., which recently announced plans to build a new manufacturing plant in Mesa, Az., was joined by American and Delta airlines, Marriot Hotels, Intel, PetSmart, Yelp, Major League Baseball and others in announcing their opposition to the bill.
The
bill threw Arizona's stint as host of next year's Super Bowl into
jeopardy, too. The NFL had been mulling moving the game from the
Phoenix-area city of Glendale if the bill were signed into law, Sports Illustrated reported.
And
several Republicans — from McCain and Sen. Jeff Flake to former GOP
presidential nominee Mitt Romney — pressed her to veto the bill.
The
Republican-controlled state legislature passed the measure last week.
At the time, Brewer was in Washington, D.C., for the National Governors
Association meeting, and she did not return to Phoenix until Tuesday.
The
bill permitted any business, church or person to cite the law as a
defense in any legal action brought by the government or individual
claiming discrimination.
Proponents called the
bill a slight adjustment to the state's existing freedom law, which does
not grant protections to people based on sexual orientation. But the
law would have trumped local ordinances that offer protections for LGBT
individuals in places like Phoenix, Flagstaff and Tucson.
1 comment:
Good!
Now the only ones that can discriminate are those that will refuse to patronize a business that has beliefs they don't agree with.
And they will say that's not discrimination.
Hypocrites.
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