California Governor Vetoes Bill To Ban Caste Discrimination
California Governor Gavin Newsom has vetoed a bill passed recently by the state legislature to explicitly ban caste discrimination, citing existing laws that already prohibit ancestry discrimination, which made the bill “unnecessary.”
Report says Newsom signed the bill, officially called Senate Bill 403 or SB 403, California would have become the first-ever US state to explicitly ban caste discrimination.
Meanwhile, Newsom’s veto is a big setback for activists who had been advocating for the legislation. US discrimination laws ban ancestry discrimination though they do not explicitly mention a prohibition on casteism.
California’s legislation targeted the caste system in South Asian and Hindu immigrant communities by adding caste as a protected class to the state’s existing anti-discrimination laws.
Revisions
The bill was introduced and authored by Democratic state Senator Aisha Wahab, an Afghan American, in March. An earlier version of it passed the state Senate before undergoing revisions.
The revised version, which listed caste under ‘ancestry’ and not as a separate category, was passed by California’s state Assembly in late August and by the state Senate in early September with a near-unanimous vote.
The bill defined caste as “an individual’s perceived position in a system of social stratification on the basis of inherited status.”
“Because discrimination based on caste is already prohibited under these existing categories, this bill is unnecessary,” Newsom said in a letter to California state lawmakers posted on the website of the governor’s office. “For this reason, I cannot sign this bill.”
Activists opposing caste discrimination said it is no different from other forms of discrimination like racism and hence should be outlawed. Opponents of the bill in California said that since US laws already ban ancestry discrimination, a legislation of this type becomes meaningless and only serves to stigmatize the entire community, mostly Hindus and South Asians, with a broad brush.
Report says prior to Newsom’s veto, the movement to fight caste discrimination in North America had picked up energy in recent months.
Meanwhile, earlier this year, Seattle became the first US city to outlaw caste discrimination after a city council vote and Toronto’s school board became the first in Canada to recognize that caste discrimination existed in the city’s schools.
The caste system is among the world’s oldest forms of rigid social stratification. It dates back thousands of years and allows many privileges to upper castes but represses lower castes. The Dalit community is on the lowest rung of the Hindu caste system; members have been treated as “untouchables.”
India outlawed caste discrimination over 70 years ago, yet several studies in recent years show that bias persists. One study found people from lower castes were underrepresented in higher-paying jobs.
REUTERS/Christopher Ojilere