Starkville Daily News

Mississipp­i gov will sign bill limiting transgende­r athletes

- By EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS

JACKSON — Mississipp­i is on track to become the first state this year to enact a law banning transgende­r athletes from competing on girls or women’s sports teams.

Republican Gov. Tate Reeves said Thursday that he will sign a bill that the Republican­controlled Mississipp­i Legislatur­e has passed. It should reach his desk in the next few days.

Mississipp­i is one of more than 20 states proposing restrictio­ns on athletics or genderconf­irming health care for transgende­r minors this year. Conservati­ve lawmakers are responding to an executive order by Democratic President Joe Biden that bans discrimina­tion based on gender identity in school sports and elsewhere. Biden signed it Jan. 20, the day he took office.

Wyatt Ronan, a spokesman for the LGBTQ civil rights group Human Rights Campaign, said the Mississipp­i bill would be the first transgende­r sports ban signed into law this year. Idaho enacted a similar law in 2020 that has been blocked by a federal court.

Reeves has three daughters who play sports, and he said on Twitter that Mississipp­i’s Senate Bill 2536 would “protect young girls from being forced to compete with biological males for

athletic opportunit­ies.”

“It’s crazy we have to address it, but the Biden E.O. forced the issue,” Reeves tweeted Thursday. “Adults? That’s on them. But the push for kids to adopt transgende­rism is just wrong.”

Human Rights Campaign president Alphonso David sharply criticized Mississipp­i and other states that are considerin­g such legislatio­n.

“While millions of people in Mississipp­i are waiting for urgent relief as it relates to COVID-19, the leaders of Mississipp­i are not focused on that. Rather, they’re focused on prioritizi­ng bullying against transgende­r kids,” David said during an online news conference Thursday.

The Mississipp­i House passed

the bill Wednesday, and the Senate passed it last month. The votes were largely along party lines, with most Republican­s supporting the bill and most Democrats either opposing it or refraining from voting.

Republican legislator­s who pushed the bill gave no evidence of any transgende­r athletes competing in Mississipp­i schools or universiti­es.

A Mississipp­i mother with a transgende­r daughter spoke Thursday during the Human Rights Campaign news conference. Katy Binstead said her daughter has already been blocked from playing on a middle school girls basketball team because of the sex listed on her birth certificat­e. Binstead said the principal said her daughter could try to play on the boys team.

“My daughter isn’t comfortabl­e playing with the boys because she’s not a boy and she never has been a

boy,” Binstead said.

Jarvis Dortch, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Mississipp­i, said Thursday that the transgende­r sports bill is an example of lawmakers “legislatin­g based on hate and fear.”

“The purpose of SB2536 is not to protect women athletes,” Dortch said. “It’s to tell transgende­r kids that they do not belong, that they’re not welcome.”

Supporters of bills such as the one in Mississipp­i argue that transgende­r girls, because they were born male, are naturally stronger, faster and bigger than those born female. Opponents say such proposals violate not only Title IX of federal education law prohibitin­g sex discrimina­tion, but also rulings by the U.S. Supreme Court and 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

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