Congress Drops Hate Crimes Bill
By ANNE FLAHERTY Associated Press Writer
Congress has
dropped legislation that would have expanded laws against hate crimes to include
attacks on gays after it became clear the measure wouldn't pass the House, aides
said Thursday.
The bill, sponsored
by Sen.
Edward Kennedy,
D-Mass., was widely supported by Democrats and some moderate Senate Republicans.
But because it was attached to a major defense policy bill that would have
authorized more money for the
Iraq
war, many anti-war Democrats said they would oppose it.
"We don't have the
votes," said one House Democratic aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity
because conference negotiations on the defense bill were ongoing. "We're about
40 votes short, not four or six."
The development is
a blow to civil rights groups which say that broadening federal laws are
necessary to address a rise in crimes motivated by hate and based upon a
person's sexual orientation or gender identity.
The military bill
was "the last clear chance this year for Congress to make a meaningful effort to
stop hate crime violence," said Wade Henderson, president of the Leadership
Conference on Civil Rights.
In a joint
statement issued Thursday, Kennedy and
Sen. Carl
Levin, D-Mich.,
said they were disappointed the House refused to attempt a vote on the
legislative package, even if it would have failed. Levin, chairman of the Armed
Services Committee, oversees the defense bill.
"At a time when our
ideals are under attack by terrorists in other lands, it is more important than
ever to demonstrate that we practice what we preach, and that we are doing all
we can to root out the bigotry and prejudice in our own country that leads to
similar violence here at home," the senators said.
House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi, D-Calif., said she was "strongly committed" to the bill and will
continue to work to send it to
President Bush.
But, she added, "it is clear that attaching the language to the (Defense
Department) authorization bill would not create a successful outcome in the
House."
Under current
federal law, hate crimes include acts of violence against individuals on the
basis of race, religion, color or national origin. Federal prosecutors have
jurisdiction only if the victim is engaged in a specific federally protected
activity such as voting.
Kennedy's bill
would have extended the category to include sexual orientation, gender, gender
identity or disability. It also would give federal authorities greater leeway to
participate in hate crime investigations, and allow them to step in if local
authorities were unwilling or unable to act.
The measure would
have provided $10 million over the next two years to help local law enforcement
officials cover the cost of hate crime prosecutions.
The bill is named
for Matthew Shepard, a gay college freshman who died after he was beaten into a
coma in 1998 in
Laramie, Wyo.
The Senate voted
60-39 in September to attach the bill as amendment to the 2008 defense
authorization bill. Nine Republicans broke ranks and sided with Democrats in
support of the measure.
The House did not
include similar provisions in its version of the defense bill, which it passed
in May by a 397-27 vote.
While Democratic
leaders said they supported the bill, the bundled package posed too high a
hurdle. A substantial number of liberal House members routinely vote against the
annual defense bill because of the billions it authorizes in combat operations
and for programs such as missile defense.
At the same time,
some conservative Democrats and Republicans said they would oppose the
legislation if the hate crimes provisions were attached — either because they
don't think hate crime laws should be changed or because they don't think the
issue should be tied to a bill for the troops.
In a private
meeting on Wednesday, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., and House
Democratic Whip
James Clyburn,
D-S.C., told Levin that if the Senate continued to insist on the hate crimes
provisions, the defense legislation would fail.
Levin and other
Senate Democratic leaders agreed to back down to allow the defense bill to move
forward.
The White
House called the Senate bill unnecessary, but
stopped short of issuing a veto threat.
"State and local
law enforcement agencies are effectively using their laws to the full extent
they can," said
White House spokeswoman Dana Perino in September.
House and Senate
negotiators finalized the defense bill in a closed-door meeting on Thursday. The
agreement puts the measure on track to be sent to the president's desk before
lawmakers leave this month for their holiday break.
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