The Arkansas House of Representatives eventually nixed the anti-adoption legislation, but M.V. Lee Badget, research director at the Williams Institute, doesn’t think the idea has lost momentum. “This is the second wave of the anti–gay marriage backlash,” he says. “The amendments that banned gay unions were successful, and there are some policy makers who want to keep walking down that road.”
Thus far, only Mississippi, Utah, Florida, and Nebraska have passed laws of the kind considered by Arkansas. But de facto discrimination against gay fostering or adoption is much more common. The Williams Institute found that “one third of agencies would reject a gay or lesbian applicant” either on religious grounds, whether they have a policy of dealing only with legally married couples, or because agency workers bring their own biases to the process. And no lawmaker could fix all of that.