Texas delegates Rene Diaz (L) and David Barton (R) chat while at the Republican National Convention at the Xcel Energy Center on September 3, 2008 in St Paul, Minnesota. Photo: Shutterstock

Texas delegates Rene Diaz (L) and David Barton (R) chat while at the Republican National Convention at the Xcel Energy Center on September 3, 2008 in St Paul, Minnesota. Photo: Shutterstock

Texas state representative Bill Zedler (R-Arlington), is making his second attempt at legalizing discrimination against LGBTQ people in the Lone Star State.

This is the second time Representative Zedler has attempted to pass such a bill: he first introduced a “Free to Believe Act” in 2017, but it failed to pass. In the interim, Texas also failed to pass a hotly contested bathroom bill, leaving many less interested in such proposals.

In that fight, which led to a 30-day special session primarily to pass SB 6, the Texas senate adjourned without passing the bill.

“Rep. Zedler missed the message voters sent last fall, when they sent home the author of 2017’s notorious bathroom bill,” said Interim Executive Director of Equality Texas, Samantha Smoot, via a press release,

“Voters have had it with the hatefulness. They want lawmakers to focus on the economy and public education, not take aim at LGBTQ Texans’ rights.”

None of this has stopped lawmakers like Zedler from filing his latest version of the Free to Believe Act, now HB 1035.

Related: Why do Texas Republicans refuse to repeal a law that says gay sex is illegal?

HB 1035 would make it illegal for any number of “government entities” — including the state of Texas, its supreme court, or even a private citizen who sues in order to enforce a law enacted by the state — to take any “discriminatory action” against a religious organization or private citizens whose “sincerely held religious beliefs or moral convictions” cause them to discriminate against LGBTQ people.

The two “sincerely held religious beliefs or moral convictions” spelled out in the bill are that marriage should only be between one man and one woman, and that man and woman “refer to an individual’s immutable biological sex determined by anatomy and genetics at the time of birth.”

In short, the bill allows same-sex couples to be denied services over the course of their marriage, as well as cutting transgender people off entirely from goods and services appropriate to their gender.

This would create a loophole to discriminating against LGBTQ people throughout the state, in everything from healthcare to housing. The bill also introduces the same anti-bathroom regulations that SB 6 was seeking.

Zedler is widely seen as one of the most conservative of Texas legislators, and has served as a State Representative since 2003, save for 2009-2011 when Democrat Chris Turner held his seat.