Arkansas governor calls for changes to religious freedom bill – CBS News

Last Updated Apr 1, 2015 2:05 PM EDT

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson said Wednesday he would not sign a religious freedom bill passed by the legislature unless it makes changes to the legislation.

“This is a bill that in ordinary times would not be controversial,” Hutchinson said. “But these are not ordinary times.”

“We just didn’t quite get it perfect through that legislative process,” he said later.

Hutchinson’s request for modifications comes one day after Indiana Gov. Mike Pence promised to clarify Indiana’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act to make it clear that it does not give businesses a license to deny service to gay and lesbian citizens.

The Arkansas bill would bar state and local governments from infringing on a person’s religious beliefs unless they had a “compelling” reason to so. As in Indiana, opponents of the Arkansas legislation said it would give legal support to discrimination against gays and lesbians, especially since sexual orientation does not have special protection from discrimination in either state.

Hutchison said the state legislature should recall or amend the measure to make it more closely mirror the federal version of the bill, the 1993 Religious Freedom Restoration Act that had broad bipartisan support and was signed by former President Bill Clinton.

He also said he would consider issuing an executive order that would make the state “a place of tolerance,” and that there would be a debate whether the civil rights law in Arkansas needs to be changed.

Local leaders and businesses including Little Rock Mayor Mark Stodola, the Little Rock Chamber of Commerce, and Walmart all released statements urging Hutchinson to veto the bill. His own son, Seth, signed a petition saying he should veto the bill.

So did Hillary Clinton, former Secretary of State and onetime first lady of Arkansas.