News (USA)

Opponents of Houston LGBT ordinance sue city after failed referendum attempt

Opponents of Houston LGBT ordinance sue city after failed referendum attempt

HOUSTON — Opponents of Houston’s new protections for LGBT residents have sued the city after failing to collect enough votes for a repeal referendum.

Houston mayor Annise Parker announces that opponents of an LGBT-inclusive equal right ordinance did not submit enough valid signature to force a ballot referendum.
Houston mayor Annise Parker announced Monday that opponents of an LGBT-inclusive equal right ordinance did not submit enough valid signature to force a ballot referendum. KHOU-TV

The Houston Chronicle reports the lawsuit filed late Tuesday contests how signatures were counted for the referendum petition. It claims City Attorney David Feldman illegally verified the signatures.

Backers needed 17,269 signatures to place the repeal on the November ballot. They say they collected more than 50,000.

Feldman said Monday that less than half of the pages submitted were valid. Signers had to be verifiable as registered Houston voters. He says only 15,249 valid signatures were collected.

Feldman says his involvement didn’t cross ethical or legal lines. He says he has a specific duty to interpret the law and give legal advice.

The ordinance was approved by the city council on May 28, and consolidates city bans on discrimination based on sex, race, age, religion and other categories and increases protections on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity.

Mayor Annie Parker said Monday she was expecting opponents to take legal action challenging the city’s findings, and has delay implementation of the ordinance for now.

Associated Press contributed to this report.
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