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For Immediate Release
Contact: (202) 466-3234,Joe Conn,Rob Boston,Sandhya Bathija

Attorney General's Statement On 'Faith-Based' Job Bias Is Encouraging, Says Americans United

Attorney General Eric Holder told the House Judiciary Committee
yesterday that the Obama administration does not support religiously
based hiring discrimination in taxpayer-funded "faith-based" programs.

Americans United for Separation of Church and State said the
statement is welcome and urged the Obama administration to back it up
by revoking Bush-era executive orders that permit hiring bias by
religiously affiliated social services that take public funds.

WASHINGTON

Attorney General Eric Holder told the House Judiciary Committee
yesterday that the Obama administration does not support religiously
based hiring discrimination in taxpayer-funded "faith-based" programs.

Americans United for Separation of Church and State said the
statement is welcome and urged the Obama administration to back it up
by revoking Bush-era executive orders that permit hiring bias by
religiously affiliated social services that take public funds.

"We are encouraged that Attorney General Holder has reiterated the
administration's commitment to non-discrimination," said the Rev. Barry
W. Lynn, executive director of Americans United. "Now is the time to
act decisively."

Holder's statement came during an exchange with U.S. Rep. Robert
Scott (D-Va.). Scott noted that Obama, as a candidate for president,
vowed to end religious discrimination in publicly funded faith-based
programs but as president has left in place Bush-era policies that
permit it.

Asked Scott, "Is it the policy of this administration now to allow
the discrimination on a case-by-case basis, that one group can say,
'Well, we don't hire people based on race and religion' and another
group where we're not going to allow you to discriminate on the base of
race and religion? Is it the policy of this administration to allow
discrimination?"

Holder replied, "No, it's not the policy. That is not the policy.
The policy of the administration is to interact with faith-based
organizations or any organization in a way...."

Scott interrupted to ask, "Which you can do without discriminating and without proselytizing?"

Replied Holder, "Well, operate with them, interact with them in a
way that's consistent with, with the law, consistent with our values
and consistent with the way in which this administration, I think, has
postured itself on a whole range of, of issues."

Scott continued, "Let's be clear. Is the policy of this
administration to allow discrimination? Is the policy of the
administration going to be that discrimination will not be allowed?"

Holder replied, "We are -- yes, that is not the view that we share.
We do not have a view that discrimination is, is appropriate. And we
want to, as I said, interact with these organizations where these
issues are presented in such a way that we are acting consistent with
the law and acting, again, consistent with what our values are, both as
a nation and as an administration."

AU's Lynn thanked Scott for raising the issue and encouraged Congress to continue to monitor developments closely.

"Religious bias in taxpayer-funded programs is simply unacceptable,"
Lynn said. "With the attorney general now on record as opposing this
type of discrimination, we can hope that the White House will move
swiftly to end it."

Americans United is a religious liberty watchdog group based in Washington, D.C. Founded in 1947, the organization educates Americans about the importance of church-state separation in safeguarding religious freedom.