U.S. House Passes Public Expression of Religion Act by a 244 to 173 Vote

Sep 26, 2006

Washington, D.C. - Today, the United States House of Representatives passed the Public Expression of Religion Act (HR 2679, also known as PERA). The final vote was 244 in favor to 173 against. The Act was sponsored by Congressman John Hostettler from Indiana with 66 cosponsors.

PERA now goes to the Senate and if passed, anyone who sues government officials over an Establishment Clause violation and wins could not recover damages, attorney's fees or costs, but could still obtain a court order halting any unconstitutional action. PERA would stop advocacy groups like the ACLU from using the threat of monetary awards to force the removal of Christmas displays, religious symbols from city seals or memorials, or to stop other public acknowledgement of religion.

Mathew D. Staver, Founder and Chairman of Liberty Counsel, who testified before House and Senate Judiciary Subcommittees in favor of the bill, commented: "Now that the Public Expression of Religion Act has passed the House, we urge the Senate to move quickly to approve the bill. There is no valid reason for the Senate to delay a vote on PERA." He concluded, "The Public Expression of Religion Act will encourage local government officials to stand up to those who would chisel religious symbols from our public buildings and wipe our religious heritage from the public square."

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