Supreme Court Refuses To Hear Early Challenge To Mississippi's Anti-Queer Law

Businesses and government workers who want to deny service to LGBTQ people for religious reasons can go right ahead.
Hannah Flood, an American University student from Maine, holds her rainbow flag high outside the Supreme Court on Dec. 5, 2017.
Hannah Flood, an American University student from Maine, holds her rainbow flag high outside the Supreme Court on Dec. 5, 2017.
Bill O'Leary/The Washington Post via Getty Images

The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to take up a lawsuit challenging a controversial Mississippi law that queer activists fear will have devastating effects on civil rights in the state.

The justices’ decision on Monday left in place a lower court ruling that declared the plaintiffs in the case did not have the legal standing to challenge the 2016 law, because they couldn’t show they had been harmed by legislation that hadn’t yet gone into effect when they sued.

The Protecting Freedom of Conscience from Government Discrimination Act, or H.B. 1523, gives Mississippi businesses and government employees with strong religious objections the right to refuse to serve lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender customers. The law ― which was passed by a Republican-controlled legislature and signed by a Republican governor ― serves to protect conservative Christian beliefs about marriage, sex and gender. It went into effect in October amidst the ongoing legal battle.

Beth Littrell, a lawyer with the Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund representing the plaintiffs, said that the beliefs undergirding H.B. 1523 “leave the state’s most vulnerable in harm’s way.”

Bobbi Gray (left) and Celeste Swain of Gulfport, Mississippi, pose for photos at the courthouse after getting married on June 29, 2015. Their wedding was the first state-sanctioned same-sex marriage ceremony in Harrison County, Mississippi.
Bobbi Gray (left) and Celeste Swain of Gulfport, Mississippi, pose for photos at the courthouse after getting married on June 29, 2015. Their wedding was the first state-sanctioned same-sex marriage ceremony in Harrison County, Mississippi.
John Fitzhugh/Biloxi Sun Herald/Getty Images

The people challenging H.B. 1523 included same-sex couples, civil rights advocates and progressive Christians, Reuters reports. One of those plaintiffs was the inclusive Joshua Generation Metropolitan Community Church in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, led by Pastor Brandiilyne Mangum-Dear.

On Monday, Mangum-Dear wrote on Facebook that the Supreme Court’s decision left her with a sense of righteous anger.

“Today, as a Pastor, as a queer citizen of Mississippi I say to you I’m sorry! This bill is harmful and hateful without any invocation!” she wrote. “This bill sends a very clear message and that message in itself is harmful... and I’m sorry that our state and our court system doesn’t recognize that! I pray that no further harm comes to our community, but I fear that inevitably it will!”

The Supreme Court’s decision not to review the law at this point “is not an endorsement” of H.B. 1523, Littrell pointed out. It also doesn’t negate Obergefell v. Hodges, the court’s landmark 2015 ruling in support of same-sex marriage.

Supporters of marriage equality gather outside the Supreme Court on April 28, 2015.
Supporters of marriage equality gather outside the Supreme Court on April 28, 2015.
Paul Morigi/Getty Images

Studies have shown that many Americans don’t support the faith-based refusal of services. The Public Religion Research Institute found last year that 61 percent of Americans oppose allowing small-business owners to refuse to provide products or services to gay or lesbian people on the grounds of their religious beliefs. Among the various religious groups surveyed, PRRI said there was not a single one in which a majority favored religiously based service refusals.

As for the Mississippi law, it’s likely to be challenged again by future plaintiffs who will be able to show they’ve been harmed.

The fight isn’t over yet, Littrell told HuffPost.

“We will keep fighting in Mississippi until we overturn this harmful law, and in any state where antigay legislators pass laws to roll back LGBT civil rights,” she said in a statement. “Unfortunately, the Supreme Court’s decision today leaves LGBT people in Mississippi in the crosshairs of hate and humiliation, delaying justice and equality.”

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