April 27, 2015

Indiana Pastors Alliance Protests RFRA 'Fix' At Statehouse

Ron Johnson, executive director of the Indiana Pastors Alliance, speaks during a rally at the Statehouse. - Brandon Smith

Ron Johnson, executive director of the Indiana Pastors Alliance, speaks during a rally at the Statehouse.

Brandon Smith

During a rally at the Statehouse Monday, members of the Indiana Pastors Alliance used words like “shock,” “outrage,” and “betrayal,” while accusing GOP leaders of “selling out” religious liberty when they passed the religious freedom bill’s “fix.” 

The religious freedom bill, or RFRA, ignited a firestorm earlier this session over accusations it would be used to discriminate against the LGBT community.  Lawmakers quickly worked to quell the outrage by enacting a so-called fix that said the law couldn’t be used to deny services to anyone.  But Indiana Pastors Alliance Executive Director Ron Johnson says the fix was akin to passing a gay rights bill. 

Johnson says GOP leaders “cowardly capitulated” to the pressure of what he calls the “gay mafia,” a “media lynch mob,” and big business.  And he says leaders need to be held accountable.

“We’re the ones that write the checks.  We’re the ones that make the phone calls.  We’re the ones that are going out there doing the grunt work of this party," Johnson said to a cheering crowd. "We’re the ones that ask them, ‘Are you standing for life?’ ‘Oh yes we are.’ ‘Are you standing for marriage?’ ‘Oh yes we are.’ ‘Will you protect my religious liberty?’ ‘Oh yes we are.’ And then you come down here and you roll over and you cave in and you blame us.”

Both Senate GOP Leader David Long and Speaker Brian Bosma – who Johnson called out by name in his speech – say the RFRA fix didn’t harm religious liberty and won’t be revisited this session.

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