Australia Is What Happens When You Disarm Your Citizens
Oh, We Know What the Brown University Shooter Reportedly Said Before Opening Fire
To the Shock of No One, Australian PM Says Bondi Terrorists Motivated by...
If You Were Hoping That Trump Would Tone Down His Remarks on Rob...
Nice Try, Dems, But Your Little Stunt Against Kristi Noem Last Week Imploded...
When One Seeks Updates on the Brown University Shooting, It Shouldn't Devolve Like...
And We Had Another Brown University Shooting Presser That Went Totally Off the...
It’s Not Hard to NOT Be a Jerk
The (Non-Christmas) Lists
Tell Me Why We Lie to Ourselves
The Destructive Force Enabling Mayhem
Time to Bring Our Troops Home From Syria
Dreaming of a White Christmas
Outlawing Extremist Islam Is the Answer
Promoting Fake Iranian Opposition at Your Own Risk
Tipsheet

North Carolina Legislature Upholds Religious Liberty, Overturns Governor's Veto

North Carolina's legislature voted to override the veto of its Republican governor today, upholding the rights of public officials to opt out of marriage ceremonies due to sincerely held religious beliefs.

Advertisement

The legislature had originally approved the bill in anticipation of the upcoming Supreme Court ruling, which is widely expected to strike down all state bans on same-sex marriage. But the bill was vetoed by the state's Republican Governor Pat McCrory, who said that while he personally holds to the traditional definition of marriage, "we are a nation and a state of laws."

North Carolina had received pressure from the business community to scrap the bill.

But after a period of regrouping, both chambers of the North Carolina legislature gathered the three-fifths support necessary to overturn the governor's veto. The final Senate vote was 69-41.

The bill in no way poses obstacles to same-sex couples who wish to get married in the state. It merely preserves for public officials the right to recuse themselves from personally granting marriage licenses for periods of at least six months. Proponents of the law see this measure as a reasonable religious liberty compromise with same-sex marriage laws.

Utah is the only other state to have adopted this particular exemption.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement