Pritzker says new sex education law ‘will help keep our children safe’ — but GOP rivals blast it as ‘obscene’
Gov. J.B. Pritzker on Friday signed a controversial piece of legislation that makes changes to the state’s sex education curriculum that a sponsor of the legislation said would ensure no student feels “stigmatized or excluded” in the classroom.
“Modernizing our sex education standards will help keep our children safe and ensure important lessons like consent and internet safety are taught in classrooms,” Pritzker said in a statement.
The new law ignited fireworks in the Senate when it was up for debate in May.
And the fireworks exploded all over again on Friday — with two GOP rivals blasting both the new law and the Democratic governor as “extreme.”
It was one of two pieces of legislation that Pritzker signed Friday addressing sex education standards for students in kindergarten through 12th grade.
One requires classes that teach sex education to include an age-appropriate discussion regarding sexting, including possible consequences for sharing or forwarding sexually explicit or suggestive messages.
The other adds personal health and safety education standards to curricula for students in grades K-5 and makes health education more inclusive for those in grades 6 through 12. Schools can choose whether they adopt the standards unless they already teach comprehensive sexual health education. Parents can choose to opt their child out. Course material and instruction will help students “learn about concepts like consent and will develop self-advocacy skills for effective communication with parents or guardians, health and social service professionals, other trusted adults, and peers about health and relationships,” according to a news release.
State Sen. Ram Villivalam, the Northwest Side Democrat who sponsored the bill, said in a statement “no student should feel stigmatized or excluded in the classroom.”
“This legislation puts forth guidelines for an inclusive, culturally competent curriculum to keep students safe and healthy,” Villivalam said.
During Senate debate in May, Villivalam told lawmakers that students would learn to define consent, gender identity, and different types of families, including cohabitating and same-sex couples, topics that will help students “understand a healthy relationship.”
But state Sen. Darren Bailey, a Republican from downstate Xenia who is running for governor, accused the bill’s Democratic sponsors of “pushing perversion in our schools.”
“Teachers who work hard to teach our kids about proper education have absolutely no reason in teaching this ... absolute nonsense,” Bailey said at the time.
State Sen. Mike Simmons, who is gay, called Bailey’s remark “deeply offensive” and asked that it be stricken from the record at the time.
In an interview with the Chicago SunTimes after the bill advanced out of the state’s upper legislative chamber, Simmons characterized Bailey’s remarks as an attack on the LGBTQ community.
“I took it as a dog whistle intended to dehumanize a whole spectrum of diverse families ... that includes LGBTQ people,” Simmons said.
At the time, Bailey denied his remark about “perversion” referred to teaching students about same-sex relationships.
On Friday, Bailey said he’s “disgusted and appalled, but not surprised a liberal and outof-touch Governor like JB signed a hyperpartisan and extreme piece of legislation requiring an all-or-nothing curriculum for sex education in schools.
“The bill is obscene and fails to align with most community standards,” Bailey said in a statement.
Also blasting Pritzker’s decision to sign the bill, GOP gubernatorial candidate Paul Schimpf said in a statement that Pritzker’s “misguided” decision “proves once again that he is too extreme to lead our state.”
“Gov. Pritzker has shown an unwillingness to listen to the commonsense views of parents who want schools to focus on teaching academics, rather than social engineering,” the former state senator for downstate Waterloo said.