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Efforts to pass federal hate crimes legislation have restarted in the U.S. House, and Sen. Ted Kennedy is expected to introduce the Senate version of the bill. A spokesperson said the senator ‘plans to introduce this very important piece of legislation soon,’ but didn’t offer a specific timeline. (Photo by Mel Evans/AP)
 
 
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Activists expect swift action on hate crimes
Bill poised to pass after first being introduced 12 years ago

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Apr 10, 2009  |  By: Chris Johnson  | COMMENTS      Printer Friendly Version

After languishing in Congress for 12 years, hate crimes legislation is expected to see swift movement due to strong support from lawmakers and a sympathetic president in the White House.

Joe Solmonese, president of the Human Rights Campaign, said the recent re-introduction of the bill in Congress was “one of the most important factors” in passing the legislation.

“The fact that we now introduced the bill in the House and are set to move in the next few weeks is going to … start this process, and hopefully it’ll be done and on the president’s desk in as expeditious a period as possible,” he said.

Becky Dansky, federal legislative director for the National Gay & Lesbian Task Force, similarly expected movement soon in the House on the legislation.

“We anticipate that things will move very quickly when the House comes back from recess,” she said. “The committee markup [will be] followed by floor consideration almost immediately.”

U.S. Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), the longest-serving openly gay member of Congress, announced Thursday that the House Judiciary Committee would consider the legislation the week of April 20. He's expecting the committee to pass the bill, and that the House will vote on the bill later this spring.

Frank said he's proud to have helped draft legislation that respects free speech while offering "needed protection to those who are victims of physical crimes based on hatred."

"The law already increases penalties for crimes motivated by hatred in several categories, so the absence of protection for [LGBT] people is particularly egregious," he said. "This bill remedies that gap in a responsible way, fully respectful of constitutional rights and I look forward to it being passed and signed by a president who is committed to ending discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity."

On April 2, U.S. Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.), chair of the House Judiciary Committee, introduced the hate crimes bill in the House. The bill, H.R. 1913, is officially known as the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act. As of Tuesday, the bill had 42 co-sponsors.

The legislation would allow the Justice Department to assist in the prosecution of hate crimes committed against LGBT people that result in death or serious injury. The federal government could lend its assistance to local authorities or take the lead if local officials are unwilling or unable to prosecute cases.

The bill also would make grants available to state and local communities to train law enforcement officials, combat hate crimes committed by juveniles and investigate bias-motivated violence.

Conyers’ office didn’t respond to repeated requests for comment on the legislation.

Alejandro Miyar, a U.S. Justice Department spokesperson, said staff in his department “support strengthening federal hate crimes protection and are working with Congress to do so,” but wouldn’t offer further details.

During his campaign last year, Barack Obama pledged to support the legislation. Before he took office, HRC called on Obama to push for passage of the bill within six months of starting his administration.

Solmonese said he still thinks it’s possible for Obama to sign the measure within the six-month timeline.

“I would think that if it happened slightly outside of that first six-month period, it would be a matter of scheduling the vote in both chambers and nothing more than that,” he said.

Solmonese and Dansky said they expected a House floor vote on the legislation later this month or in May, but the timeline was less clear in the U.S. Senate.

“Getting some signals in terms of when the House is moving will help inform what’s going to happen in the Senate,” Solmonese said.

Although passage of the legislation is widely expected, Dansky said supporters of the bill “can’t afford to get lazy.” She said the strategy for passing the bill should involve Hill lobbying and grassroots mobilization.

Dansky said passage of the bill in the Senate “is not a given” and “there is a potential to face a filibuster.” She noted that support from moderate Republicans would be necessary to “hopefully avoid any obstructionist tactics” in the Senate.

Solmonese said winning approval of hate crimes legislation with the widest margin possible is important because it will help in passing future pro-LGBT legislation.

“I think the strength and the health of this vote and of this fight is going to have a lot to do with taking on the next fight,” he said.

As for congressional hearings, Solmonese said they won’t take place in the House and he wasn’t certain about whether any would happen in the Senate.

Dansky also said she didn’t think hearings were needed in either chamber of Congress.

U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.) is expected to introduce the Senate version of the bill, but had not ...

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wjf
Arlington, VA
0
After the suicide of Carl Walker-Hoover, the 11-year-old Massachusetts boy who hung himself last week after enduring daily anti-gay bullying, this bill just has to pass.  If there is resistance it will come from the GOP - fueled by the Religious Right.  trong>For those Gopers, please contact your party's leadership to make certain that they support this bill.

Posted 4/16/09 - 6:07 PM


mushroomhead
0
Quotewjf:

After the suicide of Carl Walker-Hoover, the 11-year-old Massachusetts boy who hung himself last week after enduring daily anti-gay bullying, this bill just has to pass.  If there is resistance it will come from the GOP - fueled by the Religious Right.  trong>For those Gopers, please contact your party's leadership to make certain that they support this bill.

There's no need for the legislation.  There are PLENTY of laws already on the books against murder, assault, manslaughter, and on and on.  Hate crimes legislation only renders redundant that which is already there.  What gays SHOULD do is protest liberal loony left judges who impose light sentences; get their butts cornered on tv, impeach them, or don't reelect them.  Protest to the appointing officials (i.e., governors, etc.) to find judges that will impose the max.  We don't need hate crimes legislation - all it would do is provoke more avenues of appeal to convicts.

Posted 4/16/09 - 7:47 PM


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