"I would predict the bill passes on Monday," House Speaker Brian Bosma told BuzzFeed News. The governor said he intends to sign it into law, but critics say the measure is geared to allow discrimination against LGBT people.

Associated Press / Aj Mast

Of the 13 religious freedom bills introduced in state legislatures around the United States this year — which critics say would legalize discrimination against LGBT people — one leads the pack in Indiana, where a measure appears on the verge of passage with backing from the general assembly and governor. "I would predict the bill passes on Monday," Indiana House Speaker Brian Bosma told BuzzFeed News in a phone interview Thursday. Described by one of his critics as "the most powerful person in Indiana when the legislature is in session," Bosma had just wrapped up a House vote in which his Republican majority shot down six amendments to soften the bill, all from Democrats, in 60-to-30 votes. "I think the votes on the amendments were a strong sign of how the bill will fare in final passage," said Bosma. Bosma has tentatively scheduled a final vote for Monday, March 23.

"Christian bakers, florists and photographers should not be punished for refusing to participate in a homosexual marriage!" said one Christian organization supporting the bill.

At a news conference earlier this week, Gov. Mike Pence said, "I strongly support the legislation and will sign it if it reaches my desk.” A spokesperson confirmed Thursday that Pence's view on the legislation has not changed. SB 101 says that a "governmental

entity may not substantially burden a person's exercise of religion," while also applying the rules to businesses and interactions between private parties. It would ban employees from suing employers under law. After a cascade of court rulings to allow same-sex marriage, religious freedom has become an increasingly contested issue in capitals, courts, and places of public accommodation. Several businesses have turned away LGBT customers, claiming that providing services for same-sex weddings violated their faith. Opponents of the bill seem largely resigned to losing. "It does seem like they have decided that this should be the law in Indiana," Jennifer Wagner, a spokesperson for the LGBT advocacy group Freedom Indiana, told BuzzFeed News. "I think it is a backlash to marriage equality," Wagner added. She said progress for LGBT rights has given lawmakers urgency to pass a law that creates a "license to discriminate" against people based on their sexual orientation or gender identity. But Bosma countered, "No, I don't believe that at all. There has been a lot of hyperbolic discussion about what the bill will allow." The bill, Bosma argued, would establish a "legal standard when equality and religious freedom compete." He cited an advocacy letter sent to lawmakers by 16 law professors who support the bill. In his reading of the letter, Bosma said, the bill would "not allow that type of discrimination."

House Speaker Brian Bosma said the bill would "not allow that type of discrimination."