The Equality Act could be voted on this week

Georgia Equality joined a coalition of more than 150 state, local and national lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) organizations in calling on Congress to swiftly pass the Equality Act. And now we need you to do the same!

HR 5, the bipartisan Equality Act, has 217 co-sponsors including 6 members of Georgia’s Congressional delegation Reps. David Scott, Hank Johnson, Sanford Bishop, Lucy McBath and both of Georgia’s newest House members; Rep. Nikema Williams and Rep. Carolyn Bourdeaux.   

The re-introduction of the Equality Act is a clear example of real progress toward full LGBTQ equality in Georgia. When this bill was introduced in the previous Congress, it had the support of 5 Representatives from Georgia, and now that number is 6 Representatives and 2 Senators. This law would be a significant step forward for the LGBTQ community, and we are committed to mobilizing our communities in Georgia to make sure our lawmakers know this is about people, not politics.

This landmark nondiscrimination and civil rights bill would update existing federal laws to protect people from discrimination based on their sexual orientation and gender identity. It has broad and deep support across lines of political party, demographics, and geography. with a majority of people in favor of the bill in every state in the country.

The passage of this bill will be the culmination of years of work to register and turn out the pro-equality vote, and of numerous meetings with congressional offices. The fact that now half of Georgia’s congressional delegation supports the Equality Act is a credit to all of us who have been instrumental in shifting the ground to make passage of this bill possible.

And now we are in a position to pass a law that would ensure that all LGBTQ Americans can live, work, and access public spaces free from discrimination, no matter what state they call home. So send your message to Congress right now!

Today, half of LGBTQ people in the US live in the 29 states that still lack comprehensive statewide laws — including Georgians. From our work around the state, we know firsthand that this patchwork of protections is unsustainable and leaves too many people behind.