Nineteen Republican Attorney Generals from across the United States have written a letter to the Biden government demanding it backtracks on a proposed rule that would effectively ban Christian parents from fostering children.
The policy proposal, introduced by the Children and Families Administration in September this year, demands that children who self-identify as LGBT be placed in homes that “facilitate the child’s access to age-appropriate resources, services, and activities that support their health and well-being.”
If the proposal is implemented, “individuals and organizations of faith will be discouraged from beginning or continuing to provide foster care services because they will be penalized for their beliefs and excluded from helping large numbers of foster children,” the letter states.
The Attorney Generals explain the move is likely unconstitutional, since it indirectly reverses the Supreme Court ruling in Fulton v City of Philadelphia, which found in 2021 that Christian adoption agencies could not be excluded from government programs because they believe a child should be in a home with a mother and father.
They also highlighted the potential risk of minors being housed with males identifying as females, as the rule would require children to be placed in a home consistent with their gender identity. The result “would needlessly create potentially dangerous situations for children.”
“The proposed rule infringes on the freedom of religion and the freedom of speech, fundamental rights preserved by the First Amendment… [and] will harm children, harm families, and harm States, all to advance an ideology,” the Attorney Generals concluded.