South Australian legislator Robert Simms of the Greens Party is set to propose a bill, which if passed, will mandate religious schools in the state to employ homosexual teachers. The move is aimed at eliminating exemptions for faith-based organizations and is seen by Simms as a step towards equal protection under the law.
This idea, however, is facing significant backlash. The Australian Family Association (AFA) accuses Simms of hypocrisy, suggesting that his proposal restricts the rights of religious schools to employ staff according to their religious beliefs. Warwick D’Silva, AFA’s national president, compares this to political parties being forced to appoint members of opposition parties, which he asserts would infringe upon their civil and political rights.
D’Silva further adds that current exemptions for faith-based schools in South Australia’s Equal Opportunity Act protect the critical right of parents to have their children raised and educated in alignment with their beliefs. This, he argues, is a right recognized under international law. Should Simms’s proposed bill succeed, federal exemptions would still preserve religious schools’ freedom under the Federal Sex Discrimination Act.