Black leaders emerge as powerful allies
in LGBT fight in South
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[June 23, 2016]
By Letitia Stein
(Reuters) - The U.S. battle over bathrooms
and wedding cakes is pushing many African-American leaders in the South
to the forefront of the latest civil rights frontier, as the threat of
discrimination overshadows long-held reservations on gay issues.
In Mississippi, black legislators have led calls to repeal their
state's newly adopted law permitting those with religious objections
to deny wedding services to same-sex couples and impose dress and
bathroom limits on transgender residents.
The president of the National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People (NAACP) in Mississippi is a plaintiff in a lawsuit
seeking to block the measure from taking effect on July 1. A federal
judge was to hear testimony in the case on Thursday.
In North Carolina, dozens have been arrested at statehouse rallies
organized by a diverse coalition led by the state NAACP conference
to protest a new law barring transgender people from using the
bathrooms of their choice.
"Here we are again, facing discrimination towards a group of
people," said Sonya Williams Barnes, a Mississippi black lawmaker
who opposed the measure and fears that her race could be the next
target. "Who knows where that is going to lead to."
Just four years after President Barack Obama rocked the religious
black community by supporting gay marriage, black leaders are
becoming some of the most forceful allies in the fight against a
recent wave of legislation seen as harmful to lesbians, gays,
bisexuals and transgender (LGBT) people.
Opposition to same-sex marriage has long offered common ground to
white conservative Republicans and religious African-Americans
otherwise more liberal in their political views, but the battle
lines are being redrawn, said Robert P. Jones, CEO of the
non-partisan Public Religion Research Institute.
The new wave of anti-LGBT measures is forcing many to come to terms
with contrasting views: Blacks who disapprove of homosexuality who
also strongly reject anti-gay discrimination.
"The experience of discrimination among non-white Americans really
does kick in," he said.
His research group's poll of 42,000 Americans last year showed that
about half of blacks nationally oppose same-sex marriage, more than
any other racial and ethnic group. In Mississippi, where Williams
Barnes chairs the legislative black caucus, nearly seven in 10
blacks disapprove, the survey found.
But it also found that two-thirds of blacks polled nationally
objected to allowing small business owners to refuse services to
LGBT people on religious grounds.
"We know what it's like once you allow racism and hatred to be
codified and to be written into the law," said Reverend William
Barber II, president of the NAACP in North Carolina.
LGBT OR CIVIL RIGHTS?
Still, the topic remains polarizing. At North Carolina's capitol
last month, several dozen mostly black preachers protested the
comparison of the transgender bathroom fight to the 1960s civil
rights movement against racial segregation.
"It is not a civil rights issue," said Reverend Bill Owens, founder
and president of the Coalition of African American Pastors, who
represents 7,700 church leaders nationally.
"I don’t want my daughter in the restroom with a man. I don’t want
my wife in the restroom with a man," he added in a phone interview.
"It is sick."
Other African-Americans have a different view. They see these new
laws as not just bad for the LGBT community, but also harmful to all
minority workers.
[to top of second column] |
Members of the black community join a diverse crowd of protesters
opposing North Carolina's HB2 "bathroom law" that restricts members
of the LGBT community from using the bathroom of their choice,
during a demonstration outside the state legislature in Raleigh,
North Carolina on May 16, 2016. REUTERS/Jonathan Drake
North Carolina's new law prevents cities from requiring private
businesses to pay workers a minimum wage above the state level and
makes it harder to sue over workplace discrimination.
Mississippi's law is so broad, critics say it could allow people
with religious objections to deny services to nearly anyone in a
relationship outside of heterosexual marriage, including single
mothers, as well as restrict bathroom access for transgender people.
Both laws were passed at a time of a deepening partisan divide in
southern legislatures, where white, Republican majorities can often
pass laws without the votes of black Democrats.
In North Carolina, Democratic state senators staged a walkout to
protest the bathroom legislation during a one-day special session in
March. The bill cleared the chamber unanimously and was signed into
law by Republican Governor Pat McCrory the same day.
"When it looks like all you want to do is sanction discrimination
against folk and mistreat them, you cause a totally different
reaction in the African-American community," said Dan Blue, a black
lawmaker and the Democratic leader of the North Carolina Senate.
In his state, the coalition including the NAACP protesting the
bathroom law also worked together to fight a state ballot initiative
that banned same-sex marriage in 2012 and a more recent state voting
law seen as disenfranchising minorities.
Distrust is similar in Mississippi, where Republican Governor Phil
Bryant signed his state's religious objections bill after
designating all of April to honor the heritage of the pro-slavery
Confederacy in the U.S. Civil War.
"They see it not just as a LGBT issue but as a Pandora's box being
opened back up to allow discrimination," said Erik Fleming, a former
black state legislator who is now director of advocacy and policy
for the American Civil Liberties Union of Mississippi, where a judge
has rejected its challenge to the state's law.
"There's an old saying: 'We’ve seen this movie before.'"
(Reporting by Letitia Stein; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Phil
Berlowitz)
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