A group of more than 120 bipartisan state legislators have created
caucuses in nine states to address threats to religious liberty and
learn from the experiences of other lawmakers.
“These are the first state caucuses ever to focus exclusively on
religious freedom,” said Tim Schulz, state legislative policy director
at the American Religious Freedom Program of the Ethics and Public
Policy Center.
“There’s a renewed interest in religious freedom in the country,” he
explained, “and this growing attention is bringing together people of
all religious faiths and political ideologies.”
The American Religious Freedom Program organized a national
teleconference on Oct. 9 to announce the nation’s first state religious
freedom caucuses, formed by legislators in Arizona, Colorado, Florida,
Idaho, Kansas, Missouri, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, and Tennessee.
The caucuses are designed to unite state lawmakers who share an
interest in protecting religious liberty. They will facilitate
discussion, cooperation and leadership as each group of legislators
works to tailor particular laws to strengthen religious freedom amid the
specific circumstances faced by their state.
Schulz explained that the caucuses center around an understanding that
“the free exercise of religion is a constitutional right that, together
with the other First Amendment freedoms of speech and the press, is
foundational to all of our other freedoms.”
Therefore, protection of this right should not be left to the courts
alone, he said, but lawmakers also share in this responsibility.
“Also, diverse state communities need a place at each state capital
where they can bring their concerns and have total confidence that they
will be respectfully heard,” he added, noting that this is particularly
important for religious minorities, who are often underrepresented in
elected bodies.
The American Religious Freedom Program will help to both produce
specific educational materials for each state and form additional
caucuses in the hope that all 50 state legislatures will include such
caucuses by the end of 2013.
“As someone who’s been involved in my community and schools for years, I
can tell you firsthand that a vast majority of Arizonans cherish
America’s guarantee of religious freedom, and they want it protected,”
said Arizona Rep. Debbie Lesko.
She told of work in her state to stand up against the erosion of
religious freedom by protecting professors from being denied tenure over
their religious beliefs and defending the right of student religious
clubs to receive fair treatment alongside nonreligious clubs.
Lesko was the author of a major Arizona religious freedom law that
exempts religiously affiliated employers from the state’s contraception
mandate, which had raised concerns similar to those voiced over the
current federal contraception mandate.
Elements of Lesko’s conscience freedom legislation have now been
enacted in other states. The newly-formed caucuses will provide an
avenue for what Schultz described as “a significant multi-state
information sharing element” that will help lawmakers “build legislative
expertise” and learn from other states’ experiences in fighting similar
threats to religious liberty.
Also speaking at the teleconference was Tennessee Rep. John J. DeBerry,
Jr., who warned of “a militant assault against those things that we
believe and people of faith.”
He explained that religious citizens did not ask for a fight, but were
rather forced to defend their views against efforts “to remove our
freedoms and to remove any symbol of the things that we believe from the
public eye.”
DeBerry pointed to attempts to remove crosses from cemeteries where
fallen military heroes have been laid to rest and cautioned that in a
culture which views faith as being ignorant and narrow-minded, we cannot
take for granted “our ability to speak what we believe.”
“I think that it is our responsibility as Americans, as Bible believing
individuals, as people of faith, to make a stand for what we believe is
true,” he said, adding that “for us to do anything less is for us to
give up.”