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Attorneys General Liz Murrill and Lynn Fitch file suit to promote strong accommodations for pregnant workers – while respecting State laws that protect life
Attorneys General Liz Murrill (Louisiana) and Lynn Fitch (Mississippi) filed suit today challenging the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s
(EEOC) attempt to hijack the protections of the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act
to promote the Biden administration’s effort to impose a national abortion
regime.
In their suit, the Attorneys General explain how the
Pregnant Workers Fairness Act fills a gap between the Pregnancy Discrimination
Act, which prohibits workplace discrimination on the basis of pregnancy,
childbirth, or related medical conditions; the Americans with Disabilities Act,
which requires employers to offer affirmative accommodations to workers
experiencing qualifying disabilities; and the Family and Medical Leave Act,
which provides unpaid extended leave for a serious health condition, such as pregnancy
or childbirth, for qualified employees.
“The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act was originally a
bipartisan law passed by Congress to support mothers. This new action by the
EEOC is another example of bureaucrats rewriting acts of Congress to their own
liking, and it’s unconstitutional. We will continue to challenge this
administration’s overreach and protect pregnant women,” said Attorney General
Liz Murrill.
“The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act was a bipartisan effort
to help women in the workplace while they are pregnant and following
childbirth,” said Attorney General Lynn
Fitch. “But the Biden
Administration is threatening to derail commonsense measures, like adequate
seating, bathroom and water breaks, and relaxed dress codes, by reading into
the law required accommodations for elective abortion, even where that
overrides the will of the people or the religious liberty of the employer. This Administration will stop at nothing to
undo the Dobbs decision, which gave the people back their power over abortion
policymaking, and to impose a national abortion regime.”
The new law was supported by a broad coalition of
organizations, including pro-life groups like the U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops, which stated that the law would advance its “goal of ensuring that no
woman ever feels forced to choose between her future and the life of her child
while protecting the conscience rights and religious freedoms of employers.”
During debate on the law, Senator Bob Casey
(D-Pennsylvania) specifically rejected the position the EEOC has embraced in
this rule when he stated, “under the Pregnant Workers Fairness
Act, the [EEOC] could not – could not – issue any regulation that requires
abortion leave, nor does the act permit the EEOC to require employers to
provide abortions in violation of State law.”
The complaint was filed in the U.S. District Court
for the Western District of Louisiana.
Files
- download File-StampedLouisianav.EEOC-Complaint.pdf