Explainer: House votes in favor of the Equality ActOn Thursday the U.S. House of Representatives voted in favor of a controversial bill titled the Equality Act. This legislation, filed as H.R. 5, seeks to expand the definition of “sex” to include “sexual orientation” and “gender identity” (SOGI) and would revise every title of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to add these categories as new protected classes in the federal code. (See also: What is the Equality Act? and The Equality Act: A dangerous law with a clever name) The vote was 224-206, with all Democrats and three Republicans voting in favor of the legislation. The Republicans who voted for the act were Brian K. Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania and John Katko and Tom Reed of New York. Last Congress, the Equality Act passed in the House, but did not come up for a vote in the Senate. When the House voted for the bill in 2019, the vote was 236-173, with 23 representatives not voting. Eight Republicans joined every Democrat to vote for passage of the legislation. The eight members of the GOP to vote for the bill were Mario Diaz-Balart of Florida, Susan Brooks of Indiana, John Katko, Tom Reed, and Elise M. Stefanik of New York, Greg Walden of Oregon, Brian K. Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania, and William Ballard Hurd of Texas. Fitzpatrick and Katko were also co-sponsors of the bill. This Week at the ERLC
What You Need to ReadJason Thacker and Josh Wester with Should Amazon be able to ban books?
David Prince with Will the Equality Act be the end of female sports?
Jared Crabtree with Helping parents navigate conversations about race
![]() News From Capitol HillWhile H.R. 5, also known as the Equality Act, unfortunately passed the House of Representatives yesterday, its future path to become law remains uncertain. The bill will require 60 votes in the Senate to overcome the filibuster in order to bring it to a floor vote. In its current form, the Equality Act would likely fall short of this threshold. Commenting on the debate over H.R. 5, Russell Moore said:
The ERLC opposes H.R. 5 because it would punish faith-based charities for their core religious beliefs about human dignity and marriage, undermine civil rights protections for women and girls, and force Americans to fund abortion through taxpayer dollars. For more on why Christians should oppose this harmful legislation, see our Equality Act resource page where you can find articles, podcasts, and our policy brief. In days ahead, our policy team will continue to promote and defend the human dignity and religious liberty of all people on Capitol Hill, before the courts, and in the public square. This week, Questions and Ethics re-launches on the Russell Moore Podcast. Dr. Moore talks about what you should do when your family is divided over politics and gives advice on how to talk to combative family members about difficult political issues. He also shares some practices that we can use to not inflame the relationships, even as we communicate truth. On Capitol Conversations, Katie Glenn from Americans United for Life joins Jeff and Chelsea to talk about the abortion policies hidden in the Equality Act, the pro-life movement in state legislatures, and how the promotion of justice for life-affirming laws requires supporting good legislation while also opposing bills that are harmful to the common good. From The Public SquareSouthern Baptists oust 2 churches over LGBTQ inclusion
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