Arizona’s Legislature has passed a
controversial bill that would allow business owners, as long as they
assert their religious beliefs, to deny service to gay and lesbian
customers.
The bill, which the state House of
Representatives passed by a 33-27 vote Thursday, now goes to Gov. Jan
Brewer, a Republican and onetime small business owner who vetoed similar
legislation last year but has expressed the right of business owners to
deny service.
“I think anybody that owns a business can
choose who they work with or who they don’t work with,” Brewer told CNN
in Washington on Friday. “But I don’t know that it needs to be
statutory. In my life and in my businesses, if I don’t want to do
business or if I don’t want to deal with a particular company or person
or whatever, I’m not interested. That’s America. That’s freedom.”
As expected, the measure has drawn
criticism from Democrats and business groups who said it would sanction
discrimination and open the state to the risk of damaging litigation.
On Friday, the LGBT group Wingspan staged
a protest march to the governor’s office that drew about 200 people.
Some carried signs with messages “God created us all equal” and “Shame
on Arizona.”
The bill is being pushed by the Center for Arizona Policy, a
conservative group opposed to abortion and same-sex marriage. The group
has justified the measure on grounds that the proposal protects people
against increasingly activist federal courts.
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