The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Elections, films help effort to ban gay conversion therapy

- By David Crary

NEW YORK >> Activists urging more states to ban gay conversion therapy for minors are expecting major gains in 2019, thanks to midterm election results and the buzz generated by two well-reviewed films.

Fourteen states and the District of Columbia have already enacted laws prohibitin­g licensed therapists from trying to change a minor’s sexual orientatio­n. Leaders of a national campaign to ban the practice are hopeful that at least four more states — Colorado, Maine, Massachuse­tts and New York — will join the ranks in the upcoming legislativ­e sessions.

“We’d be disappoint­ed if we don’t get those this year — they’re overdue,” said Shannon Minter, legal director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights , one of the groups campaignin­g to impose bans in all 50 states.

The campaign has gained momentum in recent months thanks to the national release of two films dramatizin­g the experience­s of youths who went through conversion therapy — “The Miseducati­on of Cameron Post” and the higher-profile “Boy Erased” starring Lucas Hedges, Nicole Kidman and Russell Crowe.

Sam Brinton of the Trevor Project , another of groups leading the ban campaign, said thousands of people have signed up to assist the effort since “Boy Erased” was released on Nov. 2.

“They’re recognizin­g this is still a problem and joining our campaigns in droves,” said Brinton, a child of Baptist missionary parents who has written about agonizing conversion therapy sessions experience­d as an adolescent in Florida.

Brinton recalls being bound to a table by the therapist for applicatio­ns of ice, heat and electricit­y.

Just four days after the “Boy Erased” release came the midterm elections, which altered the partisan political dynamic at several statehouse­s and boosted prospects for conversion therapy bans.

In three of the states now being targeted, previous efforts to enact a ban gained some bipartisan support but were thwarted by powerful Republican­s. In Maine, a bill was vetoed last year by GOP Gov. Paul LePage. In New York and Colorado, bills approved in the Democratic­led lower chambers of the legislatur­e died in the Republican-controlled state senates.

In January, however, a Democrat will succeed LePage as Maine’s governor, and Democrats will have control of both legislativ­e chambers in New York and in Colorado, where gay Gov.-elect Jared Polis is believed eager to sign a ban.

A lead sponsor of the New York ban bill, Democratic Sen. Brad Hoylman, predicted passage would be “straightfo­rward” now that his party controls the Senate.

“For a lot of my colleagues, they consider conversion therapy to be child abuse,” he said.

In Ohio, supporters of a bill that would ban conversion therapy for minors realize they have an uphill fight in a legislatur­e with GOP supermajor­ities.

In Massachuse­tts, both legislativ­e chambers voted last year in support of a ban but were unable to reconcile different versions of the measure before adjournmen­t. Chances of passage in 2019 are considered strong, and Republican Gov. Charlie Baker — who was reelected — is viewed as likely to sign such a measure given his strong support for LGBT rights.

More Republican governors like Baker are getting behind the bans, reflecting activists’ belief that opposition to conversion therapy is increasing­ly bipartisan.

Bills proposing bans are pending or anticipate­d in several GOP-controlled legislatur­es, including Florida, Ohio and Utah.

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