BY
Republican leaders in North Carolina on Thursday refused to back down from
a law regulating which restrooms can be used by transgender people after the
federal government told the state the law violated the U.S. Civil Rights Act.
The
state’s leading Republican lawmaker, House Speaker Tim Moore, told reporters in
Raleigh that North Carolina would not be “bullied” into meeting the U.S.
Justice Department’s Monday deadline to change the law.
North
Carolina is the first U.S. state to pass a law requiring transgender people to
use public bathrooms that correspond with the sex on their birth certificate
instead of the gender with which they identify.
Republican
legislators in several other states have proposed similar laws, making
transgender rights a hot-button social issue in an election year.
The
Justice Department's challenge is similarly unprecedented, though the agency
has in the past intervened on behalf of transgender individuals who have
alleged discrimination.
The
Republican National Committee urged state legislators in January to resist
federal policies that allow transgender people to use restrooms of their choice
at public schools.
The
Justice Department said in letters to North Carolina Governor Pat McCrory and
other state officials on Wednesday that the state had until Monday to decided
if it would stop discriminating against transgender state employees.
McCrory
affirmed his support for the “very common-sense rule” before a group of
business leaders on Wednesday night but said he did not know if the state would
fight the Justice Department. His office did not respond to questions on
Thursday.
If McCrory
does not stand down from enforcing the law, the Justice Department's civil
rights division could push for a court order. If a federal judge sides with the
agency, North Carolina would have to comply or face a reduction in federal
funding.
On Thursday,
Republican Senate leader Phil Berger's spokeswoman, Amy Auth, said state
lawyers were reviewing the letter. Berger on Wednesday said the department’s
position represented “a gross overreach."
North
Carolina's Secretary of Public Safety and officials at the University of North
Carolina also received similar letters on Wednesday.
Margaret
Spellings, president of the University of North Carolina system, said her
office would respond to the department’s letter by the deadline.
“We take
this determination seriously and will be conferring with the Governor’s Office,
legislative leaders, and counsel about next steps,” she said.
Justice
Department spokeswoman Dena Iverson would not say whether the department would
take legal action against the state.
The state
law is being challenged in federal court by critics including the American
Civil Liberties Union and Lambda Legal, which advocates for lesbian, gay,
bisexual and transgender (LGBT) rights.
"We've
never before seen a state do something as aggressive as require mandatory
discrimination against its own transgender employees," said Peter Renn, an
attorney with Lambda Legal, in a phone interview with Reuters.
Jillian
Weiss, an attorney who has argued in federal court for transgender rights, said
the Justice Department’s action against North Carolina showed the federal
government was willing to intervene when states passed laws reducing rights
based on gender identity and sexual orientation.
Weiss
predicts Mississippi, where a law allowing businesses to refuse service to gay
people takes effect in July, will be the department’s next target.
(Additional
reporting by Julia Edwards and Julia Harte in Washington; Editing by Alistair
Bell and Alan Crosby)
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