UPDATE: BuzzFeed News reports that Trump's executive order will not include protections for people and companies looking to exempt themselves from adhering to LGBTQ protection based on religious objection. There had been speculation that the order would include protections that came from a leaked draft of the bill from earlier this year. But according to BuzzFeed News, a senior White House official reportedly said there are no plans for an executive order addressing LGBTQ issues. The New York Times reports the order is expected to expand religious freedom, address tax exemptions imposed on churches, and allow organizations to be exempt from birth control mandates.

On Tuesday, reports surfaced that Donald Trump plans to sign an executive order on religious liberty that could reportedly allow individuals and organizations to cite religious objections in order to exempt themselves from adhering to policies such as LGBTQ protections and contraception mandates according to Politico. Conservative and and faith leaders were reportedly invited to the White House on Thursday, which happens to be the National Day of Prayer, and there's speculation the signing of the executive order could take place that day.

The executive order is reported to be an updated version of a draft order entitled “Establishing a Government-Wide Initiative to Respect Religious Freedom,” which was leaked to The Nation in February. The original four-page draft created wide-reaching exemptions for people and organizations that claim religious or moral objections to same-sex marriage, premarital sex, abortion, and trans-identity. The language specifically calls for the protection of “religious freedom when providing social services education, or health care; earning a living, seeking a job, or employing others; receiving government grants or contracts; or otherwise participating in the marketplace, the public square, or interfacing with Federal, State, or local governments.”

After the original draft was leaked, sources told Politico that vice president Mike Pence and a small group of conservative allies worked to revise the language and applied pressure to Trump to sign the new draft. A source who has reportedly seen the new text, however, told Politico that “the language is very, very strong,” and that the content of the leaked bill was not altered for the new executive order.

This executive order could resemble various religious exemption bills passed in states around the country, including one signed by Pence when he was governor of Indiana. Pence’s original bill was so reviled that he eventually signed a subsequent act that limited its scope.

Civil liberties groups are already gearing up for a legal battle over this potential executive order. ACLU deputy legal director Louise Melling released a statement saying, “If President Trump signs an executive order that attempts to provide a license to discriminate against women or LGBTQ people, we will see him in court.”

President and CEO of GLAAD Sarah Kate Ellis also released a statement condemning the discriminatory intention of the act calling it “un-American” and saying that “it would do nothing except give national license to discriminate, and endanger LGBTQ people and their families.”

The courts have already blocked three executive orders issued by Trump, including both iterations of his travel ban and his attempt to pull funding from sanctuary cities.

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