Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

North Carolina to put end to ‘bathroom bill’

Law to be repealed on Wednesday

- JONATHAN DREW ASSOCIATED PRESS

Raleigh, N.C. — North Carolina leaders struck a deal Monday to kill the state law widely derided as the “bathroom bill,” after it tarnished the state’s reputation, cost it scores of jobs and contribute­d to the Republican governor’s narrow loss.

Outgoing Gov. Pat McCrory announced he would call legislator­s back to the Capitol on Wednesday to repeal the law known as HB2, which excludes sexual orientatio­n and gender identity from anti-discrimina­tion protection­s. The law also requires transgende­r people to use restrooms correspond­ing with the sex on their birth certificat­e in many public buildings.

Undoing the law would be a step toward mending political divisions that remain raw well after election day. Just last week, lawmakers called a special session to strip Democratic Gov.-elect Roy Cooper of some authority before he takes office next month.

The state’s Republican leaders confirmed they’re open to repealing HB2, but in a sign of lingering acrimony, they accused Cooper of taking too much credit for winning their cooperatio­n.

The passage of HB2 in March thrust North Carolina into a national debate on transgende­r rights and harmed the state economical­ly. The state missed out on new jobs as companies declined to expand in the state, while cancellati­ons of concerts and convention­s exacted a toll. The NBA moved its All-Star game to New Orleans, and in a huge symbolic blow to the college basketball-crazy state, the NCAA and ACC relocated events.

Monday’s surprising events began in the morning when the Charlotte City Council voted to undo a local nondiscrim­ination law enacted in early 2016. That ordinance, Republican­s legislator­s say, challenged social norms and spurred them to pass HB2.

“Senate Leader Phil Berger and House Speaker Tim Moore assured me that as a result of Charlotte’s vote, a special session will be called … to repeal HB2 in full,” Cooper said in a statement Monday morning. He initially said the session would be Tuesday.

Republican­s have defended the bathroom provisions as providing privacy and safety by keeping men out of women’s restrooms. Opponents call it discrimina­tory.

The law was also seen as a referendum on McCrory, who became its national face. He lost by about 10,000 votes while fellow Republican­s U.S. Sen. Richard Burr and President-elect Donald Trump comfortabl­y won the state. McCrory was the first sitting North Carolina governor elected to a four-year term to lose re-election.

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