AG Todd Rokita & State Rep. Mike Speedy announce advisory opinion clarifying that no laws require use of preferred pronouns

Rokita

After State Rep. Mike Speedy raised the issue, Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita this week produced an advisory opinion clarifying that neither state nor federal law requires a coworker to use the preferred pronouns and names of fellow employees.

An employer therefore is likely not liable in cases where staff members choose not to use new names and pronouns that are gender-nonconforming, the opinion states – provided that a reasonable person would not find the work environment to be objectively hostile.

“Hoosier businesses should not be burdened with policing employees’ words to make sure their attitudes align with the latest, wokest fads,” State Rep. Speedy said. “They face enough needless government regulations without being on the hook for enforcing politically correct views of transgenderism.”

No federal court, AG Rokita said, has found occasional use of non-preferred pronouns alone, even if intentional, to be actionable discrimination or create a hostile work environment.

“Most Hoosiers agree that we all should extend love and compassion toward individuals beset with gender dysphoria,” Rokita said. “Treating these individuals with respect, however, does not require us to deny basic truths, as we see them.”

Rokita added that “the times call for common sense.”

“We must oppose the radical agendas of extremists,” Rokita said, “who would force us all to march in lockstep with the transanity that dominates so many facets of society, from Hollywood to corporate boardrooms.”

The advisory opinion notes that courts have left unsettled the question of how a pattern of pronoun usage in referring to another person might create a hostile working environment that potentially could give rise to an action under Title VII – which is part of the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964 that prohibits employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex and national origin.

Click here to watch Attorney General Rokita’s live press event announcing the opinion.