Shouts of "Shame, shame, shame," erupted in the U.S. House of
Representatives on Thursday as Republican lawmakers narrowly defeated
legislation to protect the civil rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender employees of government contractors.
The measure,
an amendment to a veterans and military construction spending bill introduced
by New York Democrat Sean Maloney, initially had enough "yes" votes
to pass, according to the count in the House chamber.
But House
Republican leaders extended the time allowed for the vote as they urged enough
party members to change their positions to defeat it by a vote of 213 to 212.
All 183
Democrats who voted backed the amendment, joined by 29 Republicans. All 213
"no" votes were from Republicans. Eight House members - three
Republicans and five Democrats - did not vote. Lawmakers are allowed to change
their vote in the few minutes between voting and the result being declared.
LGBT
rights have been a hot-button issue during the 2016 election season. National
politics have featured debate over whether making cakes for same-sex couples
violates bakers' religious freedom or whether the government should decide
which public bathrooms are used by transgender people.
Democrats
chanted "Shame, shame, shame," at Republicans. "House
Republicans are so committed to discriminating against LGBT Americans, that
they broke regular order to force their members to reverse their votes and
support Republicans' bigotry," Nancy Pelosi, the House Democratic leader,
said in a statement.
Republicans
who backed the provision said it was necessary to protect the religious rights
of military contractors and not intended to be discriminatory.
Thursday's
emotionally-charged vote came hours after the House late on Wednesday passed a
$602 billion defense authorization bill that included "religious
freedom" language that critics said would allow contractors to
discriminate against LGBT individuals.
The House
Rules committee had angered Democrats by voting along party lines late on
Tuesday not to allow a vote on an amendment to the National Defense
Authorization Act that would have eliminated that language.
The House
also backed by 265-159 a separate Democratic amendment to the spending bill
that limits the display of the Confederate battle flag on flagpoles at federal
veterans' cemeteries.
The
measure angered some conservative Republicans from southern states, who argue
that the flag is a symbol of their heritage.
Some
lawmakers have been seeking to limit displays of the Confederate banner since a
racially motivated murder of nine black parishioners at a church in Charleston,
S.C. last year.
(Reporting
by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Tom Brown and Alistair Bell)
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