Friday, May 10

Kansas lawmakers poised to override veto on trans athletes

TOPEKA, Kan. — Republican legislators in Kansas have been poised Wednesday to override Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s veto of a invoice that may ban transgender athletes from ladies’ and girls’s sports from kindergarten by way of faculty, a day after they pushed a broad rest room invoice to passage.

The state House voted 84-40 to override Kelly’s third veto of a measure on transgender athletes in three years, giving supporters precisely the two-thirds majority they wanted. A Senate vote was anticipated Wednesday afternoon, and the invoice initially handed there final month with greater than a two-thirds majority.

The measure would take impact July 1 and make Kansas the twentieth state to enact such a ban for both Okay-12 faculties or schools or each. It’s amongst a number of hundred proposals geared toward rolling again LGBTQ rights from Republican lawmakers in statehouses throughout the U.S.

The measure accepted by lawmakers Tuesday not solely would stop transgender folks from utilizing public restrooms, locker rooms and different services related to their gender identities but additionally bar them from altering their title or gender on their driver’s licenses. It is among the many most sweeping proposals of its variety within the nation, and Kelly is anticipated to veto it.

“It’s a scary time to be raising a trans child in Kansas,” stated Cat Poland, a lifelong Kansas resident and mom of three, together with a 13-year-old trans son, from a small city about 40 miles northwest of Wichita.

The Kansas measure would apply to lady’s and girls’s faculty and membership sports, and supporters pitched it as defending truthful competitors and preserving scholarships and different alternatives for cisgendered women and girls that took many years to win.


PHOTOS: Kansas lawmakers poised to override veto on trans athletes


“This is a victory not for me, but for all young women,” stated Rep. Barb Wasinger, a Republican from western Kansas who has pushed the measure for 3 years.

Copyright © 2023 The Washington Times, LLC.

Content Source: www.washingtontimes.com