Chattanooga Times Free Press

Ga. Republican­s target transgende­r issues over other culture wars

- BY GREG BLUESTEIN

ATLANTA — Georgia Republican­s are putting their energy behind a fresh debate on transgende­r policies — and leaving other attention-grabbing socially conservati­ve issues behind for now.

After emotional debate, the state Senate passed a measure Monday that bans health care profession­als from delivering surgical or hormonal transition treatments to transgende­r youth.

The 33-22 vote came despite opposition from Democrats who argued the restrictio­ns would threaten the mental health of transgende­r children. Republican state Sen. Carden Summers countered it would delay decisions that “will alter their lives forever” until adulthood.

The GOP-backed measure also served as a reminder that transgende­rrelated restrictio­ns have become a go-to for Republican­s even as they skirt other controvers­ial basepleasi­ng issues in a nonelectio­n year legislativ­e session.

Proposals to restrict abortions, expand gun rights, limit how sex and gender are taught in public schools, allow Buckhead to secede from Atlanta and resuscitat­e a “religious liberty” debate all failed to advance ahead of Monday’s Crossover Day deadline.

Meanwhile, Senate Bill 140 advanced on party-line vote with Republican­s rallying behind the measure. While it wouldn’t ban medication that slows or stops puberty, it restricts doctors from performing gender affirming surgery or giving hormones to children.

If the restrictio­ns pass the House, it will mark the second consecutiv­e year Georgia legislator­s took aim at transgende­r issues. Gov. Brian Kemp last year approved a law that allowed high schools to ban transgende­r girls from competing in women’s sports.

“We should be supporting these individual­s,” said Democratic state Sen. Jason Esteves, “not making it harder for them.”

It’s part of a raft of measures in Republican-led states that target genderaffi­rming treatments. At least four states — Mississipp­i, South Dakota, Tennessee and Utah — have adopted similar restrictio­ns. Federal judges in Alabama and Arkansas have temporaril­y blocked limits in those states. And legislativ­e proposals are advancing in a dozen other states.

Democrats warn that the rush comes at a devastatin­g price. State Sen. Kim Jackson, a Decatur pastor, said the new restrictio­ns only heighten the mental health anguish for those with gender dysphoria, a distress over the mismatch of their birth sex and gender identity.

“If it becomes law, we know that this bill actually may be deadly. Deadly,” said Jackson, the chamber’s first openly LGBTQ member.

To supporters who raised worries about the lasting effect of a surgical procedure, Jackson offered a question of her own.

“Do you know what the ultimate most irreversib­le thing is? Suicide. It’s death,” she said. “For me, this is about mental health care more than anything else.”

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