NOVEMBER 7, 2009
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Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.), chair of the House Judiciary Committee, introduced a federal hate crimes bill with Rep. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) and 137 co-sponsors last week. Photo by Lauren Victoria Burke/AP)
 
 
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Top 10 gay bills in Congress

Five bills, denoted below with an asterisk, have been re-introduced so far this year and others — including the Employment Non-Discrimination Act — are expected to be re-introduced in the coming weeks and months.

 
Employment Non-Discrimination Act: Calls for banning private sector employment discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.

*Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act: of 2007: Calls for giving the federal government authority to prosecute hate crimes based on a victim’s sexual orientation, gender identity, gender or disability. [Introduced in House March 20]

*Military Readiness Enhancement Act: Calls for repealing the U.S. military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy so that gay male, lesbian and bisexual troops would be allowed to serve openly. [Introduced in House Feb. 28]

Uniting American Families Act: Calls for amending the U.S. Immigration & Nationality Act to allow foreign nationals who are same-sex domestic partners of U.S. citizens to apply for the same immigration rights offered to foreign nationals who legally marry U.S. citizens. Similar to the existing law’s application to heterosexuals, the bill calls for prosecution of same-sex couples who fraudulently form a partnership to enable a foreigner to obtain immigration rights.

*Domestic Partner Health Benefits Equity Act: Calls for amending the Internal Revenue Code to end taxation of health insurance benefits for domestic partners. Under the current IRS Code, legally married employees do not pay taxes on their employers’ contribution to their health insurance benefits that cover their spouses and dependent children. But gay and lesbian employees must pay taxes on similar benefits as if they were ordinary income. [Scheduled for introduction in House March 29]

Domestic Partners Benefits & Obligations Act: Calls for providing health insurance and other benefits to same-sex and opposite-sex domestic partners of federal government employees. Under current law, these benefits are only available to legally married spouses of federal employees. The bill sets various requirements to define a domestic partnership, including an affidavit that the partners live together, are not relatives, are over 18 and are not married.

Clarification of Federal Employment Protections Act: Declares that, “federal employees are protected from discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation” and “[repudiates] any assertion to the contrary.” Gay-supportive members of the House of Representatives introduced the bill to overrule a controversial decision by U.S. Special Counsel Scott Bloch not to enforce a longstanding federal employment policy banning sexual orientation discrimination against federal workers.

Family Medical Leave Inclusion Act: Calls for amending the Family & Medical Leave Act of 1993 to allow government and private sector employees to take leave to care for a domestic partner who has a serious health condition. The bill also would allow medical leave for the care of a same-sex married partner or the parent-in-law, adult child, sibling or grandparent of a same-sex partner who has a serious health condition.

*Responsible Education About Life Act: Calls for creating a $206 million federal grant program to award funds to states for comprehensive sexuality education that is not linked to advocacy of abstinence-only-until-marriage. Supporters say the bill is needed because existing sexuality education programs funded by the federal government are linked to abstinence-only policies. [Introduced in House and Senate on March 22]

*Early Treatment for HIV Act: Calls for allowing low-income, childless adults with HIV to become eligible for Medicaid coverage before they develop full-blown AIDS. Under current law, people who meet the income requirements for Medicaid are ineligible for the federal health program if they have HIV but are not “disabled” by having AIDS. [Introduced in Senate March 13]

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Hate crimes bill promotes ‘cross-dressing,’ critics say
Proposal receives 137 co-sponsors in House

HOME > NEWS > NATIONAL NEWS

Mar 30, 2007  |  By: LOU CHIBBARO J  | COMMENTS      Printer Friendly Version

Any thoughts that a transgender protection clause in the federal hate crimes bill would slip through Congress without controversy were put to rest last week as social conservative groups blasted the legislation as a pro-homosexual measure that would promote “cross-dressing” and “transsexualism.”

Representatives of a bipartisan coalition of advocacy groups supporting
the bill, including the International Association of Chiefs of Police, brushed off the attacks, saying the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2007 enjoys widespread support.

“The right wing has been spreading lies and myths about hate crimes legislation for 20 years,” said Matt Foreman, executive director of the National Gay & Lesbian Task Force. “The fact is that most lawmakers see through this nonsense.”

Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.), chair of the House Judiciary Committee, and Rep. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) introduced the bill along with 137 co-sponsors on March 20. All but eight are Democrats.

The bill, H.R. 1592, authorizes the federal government under certain circumstances, to prosecute hate crimes based on a person’s sexual orientation, gender identity, gender and disability. The bill would expand an existing federal criminal law that provides for similar federal prosecution of hates crimes based on a victim’s race, religion and ethnicity.

The legislation would limit federal involvement to hate crimes consisting of acts of violence against persons and for cases where local or state prosecutors seek out federal assistance or are unable or unwilling to prosecute such cases themselves.

In one of its most controversial provisions, the bill gives federal prosecutors authority to intervene in cases where a jury verdict or a sentence by a judge “left demonstratively unvindicated the federal interest in eradicating bias-motivated violence.”

Gay rights leaders have said this provision was needed for potential, although rare, cases where a local judge or jury might issue an unusually lenient sentence or verdict in a case where the evidence in a hate crime appears overwhelming against the person charged.

The legislation also authorizes the U.S. Attorney General to provide financial assistance to state and local law enforcement agencies that encounter unusually high expenses associated with investigating and prosecuting hate crimes.

“Far left Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers has once again introduced his so-called ‘hate crimes’ bill to provide special federal protection for homosexuality, cross-dressing and transsexualism,” the anti-gay Traditional Values Coalition said in a March 22 statement.

“The ultimate goal of Conyers’ bill is to silence all opposition to the homosexual/transgender political agenda,” said Traditional Values Coalition director Andrea Lafferty in the statement. “So-called ‘hate speech’ will be suppressed because it supposedly incites individuals to violence against homosexuals/transgenders,” Lafferty said.

A statement released by Conyers’ office says the bill “applies only to bias-motivated violent crimes and does not impinge public speech or writing in any way.”

Pointing to the text of the bill, the statement notes that the bill “includes an explicit First Amendment free speech protection” for persons accused of hate crimes under the bill that is modeled after a similar provision in the Washington State hate crimes law.

Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) and a group of Senate co-sponsors were expected to introduce an identical version of the hate crimes bill in the Senate next month, according to Christopher Anders, a gay rights attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union’s national legislative office in Washington, D.C.

“This bill applies to crimes of violence that involve bodily injury,” Anders said. “This is not about thought police or political correctness. This is about stopping violence.”

The House passed a nearly identical version of the hate crimes measure, which included a gender identity clause covering transgender persons, in 2005. The Senate passed a slightly different version without the transgender provision several years earlier.

Backers of the bill say they believe there are more than enough votes in the House to pass the bill this year and that more than 50 members of the 100-member Senate are poised to vote for the bill.

But Capitol Hill observers are uncertain whether supporters can line up 60 votes to overcome a possible Senate filibuster if opponents choose to take that route to block the bill. The White House, meanwhile, has declined to say whether President Bush would sign or veto the bill if it clears the House and Senate.

A two-thirds majority vote in both the House and Senate would be needed to overturn a presidential veto.

The hate crimes bill became the fifth gay- or AIDS-related bill to be introduced in Congress so far this year out of a list of at least 10 pieces of legislation that gay rights and AIDS advocacy groups have promoted for the past several years. ...

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