A regional lawmaker reportedly plans to propose a bill overhauling the state’s anti-discrimination laws
A lawmaker in the state of South Australia plans to introduce a new bill that would require religious schools to employ gay teachers, Adelaide-based newspaper The Advertiser has reported.
The debate over the rights of LGBT staff and students in faith-based institutions heated up in Australia earlier this year after a government agency proposed a revision of anti-discrimination laws in the country.
Robert Simms, a member of the Legislative Council, the upper house of South Australia’s Parliament, has told The Advertiser that the current state laws allow for discrimination and need to be changed. Simms, the first openly gay man to represent the state in the federal parliament, promised to introduce new legislation in August that would remove exemptions for faith-based institutions.
Under current Australian law, religious organizations can choose to hire or reject individuals based on religious criteria, sexual orientation, or gender identity.
“It is outrageous that in 21st-century South Australia, a gay teacher working in a religious school can be in fear of losing their job simply because of their sexuality… Surely all South Australians deserve equal protection before the law?” Simms, who is a member of the left-wing Green Party, explained.
The government and opposition MPs should be allowed to vote based on their own conscience on the issue, he added.
Simms’ opponent from the right-wing One Nation party, MP Sarah Game, argued that if the bill becomes law, schools and religious organizations will no longer be able to select staff members based on shared ethical values and beliefs.
The Australian Law Reform Commission released a report on faith-based schools in March. The Commission recommended that the law be changed to protect students and teachers from discrimination based on their sexuality and gender identity.
At the same time, the report acknowledged the right of religious schools to hire people who share the same religion.
Last month, a rally was held at a Christian school in Adelaide to protest the proposed changes. The participants described the Commission’s report as “an appalling attack on faith and freedom of belief in Australia.”
Critics have argued that the new law would prevent parents from being able to educate their children in schools that share their values, warning that if the recommendations were adopted “Christian education as we know it will cease to exist.”
Before the federal election in 2022, the Prime Minister of Australia Anthony Albanese promised to revise federal religious protection laws, but that legislation has not been introduced.
In his interview with The Advertiser, Simms said it was “disappointing to see the Federal Government dragging their heels” on the matter and urged the South Australian government to “step up” and implement the changes.