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San Francisco Mayor: Civil Servants Cannot Deny Marriage
"If you don't want to provide a marriage certificate and you've got a job that does that, then you should think twice about why you got the job in the first place and maybe you should get a new job. Talk about a slippery slope, Mr. County Clerk down in San Diego."
"I was pretty shocked about all that, candidly," Mayor Newsom told Reuters, "and pretty outraged." He continued:
"This is a civil marriage that civil servants have a responsibility to provide, so for civil servants on religious grounds to start passing judgments, they, I think, are breaking the core tenet of what civil service is all about.""I've got very strong religious beliefs. So now, all of a sudden, I don't have to do certain things, even though that's my responsibility as mayor?"
Well said, Mr. Mayor. This has been bugging me since the controversy, which to my mind never became nearly controversial enough, over pharmacists being allowed to not fill prescriptions for substances to which they have religious or moral objections.
The San Diego clerks are government employees, whose sole reason for employment is to carry out their designated role in the functioning of the government of the state of California. Of course they're entitled to opinions about those government functions, but I don't see how they can be permitted to let those opinions interfere with the performance of their job.
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