A bill that would ban workplace discrimination against homosexuals has drawn
a veto threat from the Bush administration on the eve of likely House action on
the legislation.
As the House prepares to take up the Employment Nondiscrimination Act on
Wednesday, October 24, the White House announced its opposition to the bill,
which would extend the same rights to gay, lesbian and bisexual people that
exist for gender, race and ethnicity.
The measure prohibits employers from basing hiring, firing, promotion or
compensation decisions on sexual orientation. Last week, the House Education and
Labor Committee approved the bill, 27-21, mostly along party lines.
In its statement of policy, the White House criticized the bill for using
“imprecise and subjective terms that would make interpretation, compliance and
enforcement extremely difficult,” echoing concerns outlined by Republicans on
the House committee who opposed the measure.
“For instance, the bill establishes liability for acting on ‘perceived’
sexual orientation, or ‘association’ with individuals of a particular sexual
orientation,” the White House said. “If passed, [the bill] is virtually certain
to encourage burdensome litigation beyond the cases that the bill is intended to
reach.”
The administration also asserted that the bill would curb religious liberties
because its exemptions for religious organizations are too weak. Other
objections centered on the bill allowing the federal government to seek civil
damages against state entities and on provisions that would “purport to give
federal statutory significance to same-sex marriage rights under state law.”
Despite White House opposition, the bill is likely to win narrow House
approval. That outcome was bolstered when Rep. Barney Frank, D-Massachusetts and
the bill’s author, removed provisions from the original bill that would extend
protections to transgender people.
A measure including that dimension would not have garnered enough support
from conservative Democrats to achieve House approval. In failing to address
transgender policy, however, the current bill will lose support from some
liberals.
To assuage their resentment, a transgender amendment is likely to be offered
during floor deliberations.
In some respects, corporations are ahead of this public policy debate. About
90 percent of Fortune 500 companies have inclusive employment policies that
encompass sexual orientation. In addition, 46 big companies supported the
original sexual orientation bill.
During last week’s committee action, Rep. George Miller, D-California and
chairman of the House labor panel, praised large corporations such as General
Mills, Cisco Systems, Kaiser Permanente, Microsoft, Citibank, Morgan Stanley and
Time Warner for implementing inclusive employment policies that cover sexual
orientation.
“While this is an encouraging trend, our entire workforce and our nation’s
competitiveness will benefit from making sure that every state and all large
workplaces are covered,” Miller said.
But the side of the aisle most often associated with big business is
resisting the bill. “The legislation raises several complex questions about how
it would impact employers, whether it would encroach on employee privacy, and
how it comports with existing anti-discrimination statutes,” said Rep. Howard
“Buck” McKeon, R-California and the labor panel’s highest-ranking
Republican.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the largest employer group in the nation, is
neutral toward the bill. It does not take a position on gender identity.
Its concerns about the broader bill were addressed when language was removed
that potentially would have allowed local governments to mandate that companies
provide benefits for same-sex partners.
“Our approach has been to be sure that the bill provides appropriate
protection without unintended consequences,” said Michael Eastman, the chamber’s
executive director of labor law policy.
—Mark Schoeff Jr.