The U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark ruling Monday barring workplace discrimination against gay, lesbian and transgender workers certainly seemed to catch some by surprise.
Take USA Today, for example.
The URL on the national newspaper’s story indicates that the court denied protection to LGBT workers. Oops!
Kelsey Dallas, national religion reporter for the Salt Lake City-based Deseret News, closely follows high court cases with faith-based ramifications.
“Genuinely shocked,” she tweeted concerning the 6-3 decision. “I had prewritten only one version of this story and predicted a ruling against gay and transgender workers based on debate during oral arguments.”
Why was Dallas so surprised?
I asked her that in a Zoom discussion that also included Elana Schor, national religion and politics reporter for The Associated Press; Daniel Silliman, news editor for Christianity Today; and Bob Smietana, editor-in-chief of Religion News Service.
Watch the video to hear Dallas’ reasoning. (Hint: It’s not just that Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote the majority opinion.)
Learn, too, what all the panelists think the decision means for religious hiring practices, the court’s 5-4 conservative split and the Nov. 3 presidential election.
Among related must-read coverage: Schor’s AP story on why the religious right laments the ruling but sees opportunities, Yonat Shimron’s RNS story on conservatives looking to the next cases on religious liberty and Elizabeth Dias’ New York Times story on the “seismic implications.”
Why did the decision rattle Christian conservatives? The Washington Post’s Sarah Pulliam Bailey explains.
At the Deseret News, Dallas asks, “Are we headed toward a federal version of the Utah Compromise on LGBTQ rights?” And Religion Unplugged’s Timothy Nerozzi talks to legal experts worried about what the ruling means for religious institutions and employers.
Finally, the Wall Street Journal’s Catherine Lucey delves into how the ruling complicates President Donald Trump’s effort to hold evangelical voters.
Once again, @JenBerryHawes has gutted me with the survivors’ personal reflections. An absolute must-read.
Racism. Violence. A slowly dying son. 5 years after the Emanuel massacre, echoes… @postandcourier #chsnews https://t.co/Yqh3XYFOKS
— Liz Foster (@TheDizzyLizzieB) June 16, 2020
Power Up: The Week’s Best Reads
1. Racism. Violence. A slowly dying son. 5 years after the Emanuel massacre, echoes abound: Wednesday marked the five-year anniversary of a white supremacist’s massacre of nine black worshipers at the Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, S.C.
As always, Pulitzer Prize-winning Post and Courier writer Jennifer Berry Hawes’ coverage of that milestone is powerful and graceful, as one journalist described it. And if you haven’t already, definitely read Hawes’ book “Grace Will Lead Us Home: The Charleston Church Massacre and the Hard, Inspiring Journey to Forgiveness.”
Continue reading “Landmark LGBT Ruling: What It Means For Exemptions, Evangelicals And The Election“ by Bobby Ross, Jr., at Religion Unplugged.