Texas AG Drops Lawsuit Seeking To Block Gay Workers From Caring For Sick Spouses
Earlier this year, we told you how bigoted Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton was trying to prevent gay workers from taking unpaid leave to care for their sick spouses.
It was a particularly heartless example of Paxtons vigorous defense of the states same-sex marriage ban, but he somehow succeeded in convincing a federal judge to block the benefits that had been extended to gay couples by the Obama administration under the Family Medical and Leave Act.
However, in light of the U.S. Supreme Courts ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges, Paxton has quietly conceded the FMLA lawsuit. Last Friday, Paxton and attorneys general from four other states who joined the case filed a voluntary dismissal.
The Texas Tribune reports:
The federal rule change applied to federal and state employees and private sector employees at workplaces with 50 or more employees. When the rule change was first made, only Texas couples who were legally married in other states would have been eligible for the benefits.
Asked for comment on the dismissal, Cynthia Meyer, a spokeswoman for the AGs office, said, Our filing speaks for itself. The state had spent at least $26,881 on the case, according to legal costs obtained from the AGs office.
This is the second case related to same-sex marriage that Texas has dropped in light of the high courts ruling. This month, Paxtons office ended its defense of the states now-defunct ban on same-sex marriage.
Read more:
http://www.towleroad.com/2015/07/texas-ag-drops-lawsuit-seeking-block-gay-workers-caring-sick-spouses/