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Georgia's 'religious liberty' measure is back on track with GOP support

Greg Bluestein, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution on

Published in Religious News

ATLANTA — The Republican-backed push to pass “religious liberty” legislation seems back on a fast-track Wednesday after a House committee cleared the legislation, a week after two GOP lawmakers joined Democrats in a surprise move that blocked it.

This time, Republicans had the votes to muscle the controversial proposal through the House Judiciary Committee without changes sought by critics to include antidiscrimination protections.

Republican state Rep. Deborah Silcox, who represents a swing Sandy Springs district, was the lone GOP member to vote against the measure on Wednesday. It could reach a House vote for final passage before the April 4 end of the legislative session.

Silcox and Republican state Rep. Stan Gunter, R-Blairsville, both objected to the legislation last week, joining with the panel’s Democrats to temporarily stall it. Gunter, who chairs the panel, didn’t join the 9-6 vote on it this week.

Religious conservatives in Georgia have long pushed to pass the legislation, modeled after the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993, to provide an extra layer of legal protection for people of faith from government interference.

 

The measure would limit the government’s ability to pass or enforce laws that conflict with religious beliefs.

But critics have framed the legislation as a thinly veiled effort to sanction discrimination against LGBTQ+ Georgians and warned that its passage could bring steep economic backlash.

Once the center of debate under the Gold Dome, other culture wars issues such as transgender restrictions and immigration crackdowns inspired by President Donald Trump have taken up more oxygen.

But supporters are confident the measure, which cleared the Senate along party lines, will reach Kemp’s desk next week. And GOP state Sen. Ed Setzler, the bill’s sponsor, said he’s worked with the governor’s aides to craft a measure that he’s signaled he would sign.


©2025 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Visit at ajc.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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