OPINION OF THE COURT
Asch, J.Three actions were brought challenging the validity of Executive Order No. 50 issued by New York City Mayor Edward I. Koch on April 25, 1980, which, inter alia, forbids those who secure contracts with New York City from refusing to hire people simply on the basis of “sexual orientation or affectional preference” even if they can perform the job in a satisfactory manner.
The legal issues raised in all three are virtually the same, and Special Term treated the actions identically in disposing of the various motions then pending before it. The court agreed with the plaintiffs’ position that Executive Order No. 50 violated the New York State Constitution.
Invoking the recent opinion of the Court of Appeals in Subcontractors Trade Assn. v Koch (62 NY2d 422) the court, at nisi prius, stated that in issuing the executive order the Mayor had “usurped the power of the City Council” and “create[d] new social policy absent a proper legislative basis”. It then concluded that Executive Order No. 50 was “unconstitutional as being ultra vires and an unlawful usurpation of legislative power.”
The dissent, as did Special Term, also depends on the argument that the Mayor has encroached on the legislative prerogative. In our judgment, the validity of Executive Order No. 50 *252rests on a fundamental constitutional foundation. The Mayor does not, under the circumstances here presented, exercise legislative authority. Indeed, the rights of the individuals affected should be enforced as a matter of constitutional entitlement. Their rights, which the Mayor chose to reaffirm explicitly, are those which he is obligated to enforce under his oath of office.
It is quite easy to succumb to the strong emotions which are frequently evoked by the issue of homosexuality. But it is not necessary to vindicate homosexuality as a way of life for this court to uphold Executive Order No. 50.
It is agreed by all the parties that the executive order does not make it compulsory for the agency to hire a person whose sexual orientation conflicts with the specific job description for which he or she is to be employed. The order does not mandate an affirmative act. It simply prohibits job discrimination on the basis of a nonfunctional factor. All the parties agree that under Executive Order No. 50, a contracting agency is not in violation if it refuses to hire in those instances where sexual orientation or affectional preference is a bona fide occupational qualification. Where sexual proclivity does not relate to job function, it seems clearly unconstitutional to penalize an individual in one of the most imperative of life’s endeavors, the right to earn one’s daily bread.
These requirements of the executive order have been acquiesced in and presumably satisfied by plaintiffs for a number of years, apparently without dire consequences. Organizations operating under the same moral imperatives do not seem to find conflict between signing these contracts and furnishing secular services on behalf of New York City.
Executive Order No. 50 does not prohibit the exercise of religious belief. This order does not attempt to infringe on the right of any religious organization to maintain its religious tenets. Nor is it a restriction on a private group using its own funds for its own purposes. However, when any organization contracts to perform secular services for the city, the Mayor has the power and the authority, and the constitutional obligation, to require nondiscriminatory hiring policies based exclusively upon fitness for job performance.
Agreeing with the plaintiffs’ position that Executive Order No. 50 exceeds the Mayor’s authority under the New York State Constitution, the court below essentially relied on four Court of Appeals decisions: Matter of Broidrick v Lindsay (39 NY2d 641), Rapp v Carey (44 NY2d 157), Matter of Fullilove v Beame (48 NY2d 376), and especially Subcontractors Trade Assn. v Koch *253(62 NY2d 422, supra). Each of these cases examined the permissible scope of executive power. All four, together, constitute a body of legal precedent marking when an executive act enters improperly into the legislative domain.
I agree with Special Term, and essentially with the dissent, that the most recent of the four Court of Appeals decisions, Subcontractors (supra), recapitulates the principles applicable to the matter before us, but I disagree as to its application to the present controversy.
Subcontractors (supra) concerned the constitutionality of Mayor Koch’s Executive Order No. 53, which required the City of New York to award 10% of all construction contracts to businesses either operating in poor neighborhoods or employing many poor people. In analyzing the order, the court expressed its approach for determining the constitutionality of antidiscrimination measures adopted by executive officers: the “remedial plan” test. An executive may not, said the court (p 428), create “a remedial plan for which the executive never received a grant of legislative power.” It then invalidated Executive Order No. 53 as just such a “remedial plan”. “Where, as here, the executive adopts a plan specifying that a certain percentage of city construction contracts are to be allotted to a particular group or category of business enterprise, he has gone beyond his function of implementing general Charter-conferred powers. Such action constitutes an exercise of legislative power” (supra, at p 429; emphasis added).
If the court below had applied the Subcontractors test to Executive Order No. 50, that case would have been distinguished on its facts and the order would have almost certainly been upheld. Executive Order No. 50 is not a “remedial plan” as that term is used in Subcontractors (supra).
In the other cases alluded to, the “remedial plans” which were invalidated established rigid numerical preferential quotas which favored some groups at the expense of others. In all three, the plans sought to make amends for past community discrimination by a restitution of current government benefits.
Executive Order No. 50 establishes no preferential treatment for any group. It merely requires would-be contractors to pledge not to discriminate against certain groups, provided the member can do his or her job. There are no quotas, no preferences and no affirmative acts which are sought to be imposed.
Executive Order No. 50 is grounded in the constitutional equal protection principles which bar arbitrary and invidious discrimination. Thus, under US Constitution 14th Amendment *254and the NY Constitution, article I, § 11, the City of New York is already prohibited from engaging in discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or affectional preference. Section 1 of the 14th Amendment reads in pertinent part: “No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”
This amendment contains no recitation of protective categories but protects everyone. Although the Supreme Court through case law has emphasized certain distinctions, i.e., race, national origin and alienage, presumptively “suspect” or invidious under the 14th Amendment (see, Loving v Virginia, 388 US 1), it has repeatedly emphasized the fundamental, all-encompassing scope of the 14th Amendment. Thus, in 1982, the court said: “The Equal Protection Clause was intended to work nothing less than the abolition of all caste-based and invidious class-based legislation” (Plyler v Doe, 457 US 202, 213). In 1983, the court noted: “The concept of equal justice under law requires the State to govern impartially * * * A sovereign may not draw distinctions between individuals based solely on differences that are irrelevant to a legitimate governmental objective” (Lehr v Robertson, 463 US 248, 265).
In promulgating Executive Order No. 50, the Mayor, as chief executive officer of the City of New York, sworn to upheld the Constitution of the United States and of New York State, had authority to assure that the city did not discriminate against any of its citizens. Not only does he have authority, he is obligated to enforce the fundamental constitutional principles. Thus, the executive order represents a valid exercise of his charter powers in fulfillment of his responsibility to prevent invidious discrimination in employment by the city and those who contract to perform city services.
Equal protection principles bar State officials from engaging in unconstitutional discrimination (see, Norwood v Harrison, 413 US 455). Also, the 14th Amendment limits not only direct action of the city, but indirect action as well. Thus, in Norwood v Harrison (supra, p 466), the United States Supreme Court held that the State of Mississippi could not lend textbooks to private schools that traditionally excluded black students, stating that “[a] State may not grant the type of tangible financial aid here involved if that aid has a significant tendency to facilitate, reinforce, and support private discrimination.” Here, assistance *255furnished, by the city to the plaintiffs is essential to the furnishing of the social services provided by plaintiffs and thus falls within the parameters of Norwood. Norwood would therefore clearly prevent the city from financing and supporting contractors who would receive city funds and then freely engage in invidious discrimination. Thus, fundamental equal protection principles prohibit the city in its allocation of city funds or city contracting from engaging in or otherwise supporting invidious discrimination of any kind against any citizen.
In Norton v Macy (417 F2d 1161, 1167), the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia in a case involving a homosexual appellant asserted that an employee may be fired only if there is “some reasonably foreseeable, specific connection between an employee’s potentially embarrassing conduct and the efficiency of the service”.
In Gay Law Students Assn. v Pacific Tel. & Tel. Co. (24 Cal 3d 458, 595 P2d 592) the Supreme Court of California held, inter alia, that an arbitrary exclusion of qualified individuals from employment opportunities by a State-protected public utility is violative of State constitutional rights of those individuals and that protection against the arbitrary foreclosing of employment opportunities lies close to the heart of the protection against “second class citizenship” which the equal protection clause was intended to guarantee. Thus, the California Supreme Court noted (p 467) that “past decisions of this court establish that this general constitutional principle applies to homosexuals as well as to all other members of our polity; under California law, the state may not exclude homosexuals as a class from employment opportunities without a showing that an individual’s homosexuality renders him unfit for the job from which he has been excluded.”
It also asserted that courts in other jurisdictions reached similar conclusions, citing Matter of Kimball (33 NY2d 586). In that case an attorney who had been convicted of sodomy in Florida and had been denied admission to the Bar by the Appellate Division, appealed to the Court of Appeals, which reversed the Appellate Division and remitted to the Appellate Division for reconsideration of the application. Thus, the dissenting opinion of the Appellate Division in Matter of Kimball (40 NY2d 252, 258, supra) said: “While the majority avoids the issue of homosexuality and homosexual acts as a purported badge of unfitness to practice law, we prefer to meet that issue squarely. To us it seems clear that the social and moral climate in New York (and probably throughout the Western World) has *256in recent years changed dramatically with respect to homosexuality and consensual homosexual acts. Today they are generally viewed as no more indicative of bad character than heterosexuality and consensual heterosexual acts”.
On November 18, 1983, Governor Cuomo issued an executive order specifically forbidding discrimination by State agencies on the basis of “sexual orientation” (Executive Order No. 28, State of New York, Nov. 18, 1983). In the preamble to the order, Governor Cuomo stated that in issuing it he was merely “reiterating the law set down by the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of the State of New York” (9 NYCRR 4.28).
The New York State Attorney-General has noted in a formal opinion: that the Human Rights Law may be silent on sexual orientation “does not mean that such discrimination is ‘permitted’ as a matter of State policy” (1978 Opns Atty Gen 115, 117; emphasis added).
In People v Onofre (51 NY2d 476), the Court of Appeals held that the Penal Law violated defendant’s constitutional rights to privacy and equal protection of the law when it prohibited noncommercial, cloistered personal sexual conduct between consenting adults. In that case, in footnote 3 on page 488, the court noted: “We express no view as to any theological, moral or psychological evaluation of consensual sodomy * * * That is not the issue before us. The issue before us is whether, assuming that at least at present it is the will of the community (as expressed in legislative enactment) to prohibit consensual sodomy, the Federal Constitution permits recourse to the sanctions of the criminal law for the achievement of that objective. The community and its members are entirely free to employ theological teaching, moral suasion, parental advise, psychological and psychiatric counseling and other noncoercive means to condemn the practice of consensual sodomy. The narrow question before us is whether the Federal Constitution permits the use of the criminal law for that purpose.”
A fortiori, mere homosexual preference or orientation, which has never been a crime, cannot be used as the basis for denying “any person” the equal protection of the law.
The precise problem with which we are presented is simple in outline. The Supreme Court of the United States has not as yet come to grips with it, although various aspects of the problem have “swirled nationwide for many years.” (See, e.g., Texas A&M v Gay Student Servs.,_US_[Apr. 1, 1985]; Board of Educ. v National Gay Task Force, 470 US_, 53 USLW 4408 *257[Mar. 26,1985]; Rowland v Mad Riv. Local School Dist., Feb. 25, 1985.) However, Justice Brennan, dissenting, with Justice Marshall, from the denial of certiorari, in Rowland (supra), expressed, most cogently, the constitutional predicate upon which we rest.
“Apart from the First Amendment, we have held that ‘[a] State cannot exclude a person from * * * any * * * occupation * * * for reasons that contravene the Due Process or Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.’ Schware v. Board of Bar Examiners, 353 U.S. 232-239 (1975). And in applying the Equal Protection Clause, ‘we have treated as presumptively invidious those classifications that disadvantage a “suspect class,” or that impinge upon the exercise of a “fundamental right.” ’ Plyler v. Doe, 457 U.S. 202, 216-217 (1982); see also id., at 245 (Burger, C.J. dissenting) (The Equal Protection Clause protects against arbitrary and irrational classifications, and against invidious discrimination stemming from prejudice and hostility’). Under this rubric, discrimination against homosexuals or bisexuals based on their sexual preference raises significant constitutional questions under both prongs of our settled equal protection analysis.
“First, homosexuals constitute a significant and insular minority of this country’s population. Because of the immediate and severe opprobrium often manifested against homosexuals once so identified publicly, members of this group are particularly powerless to pursue their rights openly in the political arena. Moreover, homosexuals have historically been the object of pernicious and sustained hostility, and it is fair to say that discrimination against homosexuals is ‘likely * * * to reflect deep-seated prejudice rather than * * * rationality.’ Id., at 216. State action taken against members of such groups based simply on their status as members of the group traditionally has been subjected to strict, or at least heightened, scrutiny by this Court.
“Second, discrimination based on sexual preference has been found by many courts to infringe various fundamental constitutional rights, such as the rights to privacy or freedom of expression. Infringement of such rigid rights found to be ‘explicitly or implicitly guaranteed by the Constitution,’ San Antonio School District v. Rodriguez, 411 U.S. 1, 33-34 (1973), likewise requires the State to demonstrate some compelling interest to survive strict judicial scrutiny. Plyler, supra, at 217.1 have previously noted that a multitude of our precedents supports the view that public employees maintain, no less than all other citizens, a fundamental constitutional right to make ‘private choices involving family life and personal autonomy.’ Whisenhunt v. *258Spradlin, 464 U.S. 965, 971 (1973) (Brennan, J., dissenting from denial of certiorari). Whether constitutional rights are infringed in sexual preference cases, and whether some compelling state interest can be advanced to permit their infringement, are important questions that this Court has never addressed, and which have left the lower courts in some disarray. Cf. Carey v. Population Services International, 431 U.S. 678, 688, n. 5, 694, n. 17 (1977).”
The essential argument urged by respondents and most forcefully presented by our dissenting colleague is that Executive Order No. 50 usurps the authority of the Legislature. But this argument missed the point that appellants’ position is predicated on a constitutional right. The dissent states: “The question which we are called upon to decide is one of executive power.” With this evaluation, I heartily agree. But the source of the Mayor’s authority in this instance, in fact, his obligation, rests in constitutional due process and equal protection rather than an assertion of legislative authority. The Mayor is not seeking to create a new human right, nor to broaden the panoply of rights expressed in the Human Rights Laws or the Equal Employment Opportunity Act or other enactments. He is simply affirming what is a bare-bone right under the Federal and New York State Constitutions, namely, that agencies, standing in the shoes of the State, cannot prohibit the employment of individuals on the basis of personal proclivities which have nothing to do with whether they can perform the job adequately.
For judicial support, the dissenting Justice resurrects Youngstown Co. v Sawyer (343 US 579), which, with typical candor, he describes as “the once famous but now almost forgotten steel seizure case”. That case, as well as “separation of powers”, have been virtually discarded, in the Federal catalogue of authority, as vestigial relics of the great constitutional battles involving the serious challenges hurled against private property during the thirties and forties of this century. And the idea of separation of powers has been relied upon for State court holdings in fewer and fewer desultory cases.
If the Legislature passed a law which permitted projects funded by public moneys to discriminate on the basis of sexual preference rather than job qualification, it is doubtful whether such statute could meet even a minimal rationality standard under the Constitution. Obviously, then, the issue is not whether there is an encroachment on the authority of the Legislature.
*259The injection of “separation of powers” in this case, where there is no invasion of legislative prerogative but rather an assertion of the constitutional right of those affected, is inappropriate. “In the late-twentieth century, it is commonplace that a strict doctrine of separation of powers is not only a theoretical absurdity and a practical impossibility” (see, Friedmann, Law in a Changing Society, at 382-383 [2d ed 1972], and material there cited).
The Mayor, in promulgating Executive Order No. 50, did no more than make express the policies and principles already firmly embedded in our State and Federal Constitutions.
Accordingly, the orders and judgments (each one paper) of the Supreme Court, New York County (Klein, J.), entered on October 5, 1984, and the order and judgment (one paper) of the Supreme Court, New York County (Klein, J.), entered October 4, 1984, which granted each plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment invalidating elements of Mayoral Executive Order No. 50 and regulations promulgated thereunder, should be modified, on the law, without costs, the motions for summary judgment denied, and upon search of the record (CPLR 3212 [b]), summary judgment granted to defendants declaring that Mayoral Executive Order No. 50 and regulations promulgated thereunder are constitutional and valid, and otherwise affirmed.