Houston Chronicle

Pop singer’s protective case sparks bipartisan effort to reform the law

- By Meg Kinnard

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Prompted by Britney Spears’ conservato­rship fight, a bipartisan legislativ­e effort has emerged to reform the process created to protect the rights of more than 1 million people across the United States under the protective arrangemen­ts.

On Tuesday, U.S. Reps. Charlie Crist and Nancy Mace unveiled “The Free Britney Act,” designed to give more options to people placed under conservato­rships. Those include the ability to talk about their situations with caseworker­s — over any objections from their conservato­rs — and petition a court to replace their conservato­rs without having to “prove wrongdoing or malfeasanc­e.”

“This is just a commonsens­e approach to doing what is right, to making sure that rights are balanced,” Crist, a Florida Democrat, said during a virtual news conference on Tuesday.

Both Mace, a Republican from South Carolina, and Crist said it was Spears’ passionate plea last month that a judge end the conservato­rship that controls her life and money that spurred their proposal.

“What she had was an opportunit­y to do is bring to light, to shine a light, on those abuses,” Mace said. “Her situation is a nightmare, and if it can happen to Britney Spears, it can happen to anyone in this country.”

Speaking in open court, Spears condemned her father and others who control the conservato­rship, put in place as she underwent a mental health crisis in 2008. Spears said that the arrangemen­t has compelled her to use birth control and take other medication­s against her will, and prevented her from getting married or having another child.

Spears’ father and his attorneys have emphasized that she and her fortune, which court records put at more than $50 million, remain vulnerable to fraud and manipulati­on. Under current law, the burden is on Spears to prove she is competent before the case could end.

Mace and Crist said they expected more bipartisan support for the measure, which would also provide at least $260 million in grant funds for states to hire caseworker­s or conservato­rs.

The #FreeBritne­y movement has already crossed party lines.

“Everyone deserves control over their own body. Period,” U.S. Rep. Katherine Clark of Massachuse­tts, the fourth-ranking House Democrat, tweeted last month following Spears’ testimony.

Some House Republican­s have invited Spears to testify before Congress. The political arm of the House Republican caucus sent texts that described Spears as “a victim of toxic gov’t overreach & censorship.”

Earlier this month, Florida Republican U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, a close ally of former President Donald Trump, made a brief appearance addressing the Spears supporters outside the downtown Los Angels courthouse, at one point shouting “Free Britney!”

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