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LGBT “Outlaws” Demand and get Yale to Pull Funds from Students Working for Christian Public Interest Groups

Cherie Vandermillen

[Troy Worden | Washington Examiner] Yale Law School will no longer offer financial aid to students who work at public interest groups with a traditional Christian view of marriage.

The law school announced the change in policy on March 25 by email, citing an extension in its “nondiscrimination” policy to cover summer public interest fellowships, postgraduate public interest fellowships, and loan forgiveness for public interest careers, according to The Federalist. In light of the policy extension, the law school will not pay stipends to students who work at organizations that are perceived to discriminate on the basis of “sexual orientation and gender identity and expression.”

Because nonprofit legal organizations are often unable to pay their tuition-burdened interns well, law schools typically provide stipends to students who work at these organizations as a way to encourage public service.

In support of its decision, the law school cited a unanimous recommendation from its Public Interest Committee. “The Law School cannot prohibit a student from working for an employer who discriminates, but that is not a reason why Yale Law School should bear any obligation to fund that work, particularly if that organization does not give equal employment opportunity to all of our students,” the committee’s recommendation read.

The law school initiated the policy change after demands from the Outlaws, an LBGT activist group on campus, to pull financial aid from students working at Christian public interest groups and clarify their admissions policies for students who support Christian views on sexuality and gender identity.

The decision comes one month after an attorney from Alliance Defending Freedom spoke on campus about the Masterpiece Cakeshop, LTD. vColoradoCivil Rights Commission legal case, where a gay couple sued a Christian baker in Colorado for refusing to bake a cake for their wedding.

Continue reading here.

[Editor’s Note: This article was written by Troy Worden and originally published at the Washington Examiner. Title changed by P&P.]