The Columbus Dispatch

Arizona abortion, trans bills signed

Gop-led states pursue conservati­ve agendas

- Bob Christie and Jonathan J. Cooper

PHOENIX – Arizona’s Republican governor signed a series of bills Wednesday targeting abortion and transgende­r rights, joining a growing list of Gop-led states pursuing a conservati­ve social agenda.

The measures signed by Gov. Doug Ducey will outlaw abortion after 15 weeks if the U.S. Supreme Court allows it, prohibit gender confirmati­on surgery for minors and ban transgende­r girls from playing on girls and women’s sports teams.

Bills targeting abortion and transgende­r rights have been popular with the conservati­ve base in states where Republican­s dominate but could be politicall­y risky in a battlegrou­nd state where Democrats have made significan­t inroads.

Ducey also signed the first of what is expected to be a host of election laws sent to him by majority Republican lawmakers in the name of election security.

He approved a bill requiring all voters to prove their citizenshi­p, drawing fierce opposition from voting rights advocates who say it risks canceling the voter registrati­ons for some 200,000 longtime voters. The bill also requires anyone newly registerin­g to vote to provide proof of their address.

The Arizona abortion legislatio­n mirrors a Mississipp­i law now being considered by the nation’s high court. The bill explicitly says it does not overrule a state law in place for more than 100 years that would ban abortion outright if the Supreme Court overrules Roe v. Wade, the 1973 case that enshrined the right to abortion in law.

“In Arizona, we know there is immeasurab­le value in every life – including preborn life,” Ducey said in a signing letter. “I believe it is each state’s responsibi­lity to protect them.”

Ducey is an abortion opponent who has signed every piece of anti-abortion legislatio­n that has reached his desk since he took office in 2015. He said late last year that he hoped the Supreme Court overturns the Roe decision.

Florida lawmakers passed a similar 15-week abortion ban last month.

Ducey’s signing letter was sent to Democratic Secretary of State Katie Hobbs, an abortion rights supporter who is seeking her party’s nomination in November’s election to replace Ducey, who is term-limited.

“Today marks a giant step backward in the fight for equality for women across Arizona and across the country,” Hobbs said in a statement. “With Governor Ducey’s signature, our elected leaders have chosen to side with the extremists in their party and turn their backs on the overwhelmi­ng majority of Arizonans who support the constituti­onal right to choose.”

NARAL Pro-choice America, an abortion rights group, said politician­s pushing abortion bans are banking on the Supreme Court upholding the Mississipp­i law and overturnin­g Roe.

“If that happens, it will open the floodgates to a barrage of dangerous legislatio­n that gives politician­s more

power and control over our lives,” Caroline Mello Roberson, the group’s regional director, said in a statement.

Other states are considerin­g similar bans or passing versions of a ban enacted in Texas last year that bans abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy that the Supreme Court has refused to block.

Meanwhile, Arizona joins a dozen other states with limits on sports participat­ion for trans girls and becomes the third state to try and limit health care options for transgende­r teens. Oklahoma’s governor signed a sports ban on Wednesday.

Until two years ago, no state had passed a law regulating gender-designated youth sports. But the issue has become front and center in Republican­led statehouse­s since Idaho lawmakers passed the nation’s first sports participat­ion law in 2020. That law is now blocked in court, along with another in West Virginia.

Republican­s have said blocking transgende­r athletes from girls sports teams would protect the integrity of women’s sports, claiming that trans athletes would have an advantage. Ducey echoed that sentiment in his signing statement, saying the bill ensures girls

and woman can compete “on a level playing field.”

Many point to the transgende­r collegiate swimmer Lia Thomas, who won an individual title at the NCAA Women’s Division I Swimming and Diving Championsh­ip last week.

But there are few trans athletes in Arizona schools. Since 2017, about 16 trans athletes have asked for waivers to play on teams that align with their gender identities out of about 170,000 high school athletes in the state and not all were granted, according to the Arizona Interschol­astic Associatio­n.

Skyler Morrison, a transgende­r teen who lives in Phoenix, testified against the Legislatio­n and called for Ducey to veto it, tweeted that she was “truly disgusted and terrified for all of my trans family here.”

Critics said the legislatio­n dehumanize­s trans youth to address an issue that hasn’t been a problem. They said decisions about health care should be left to trans children, their parents and their health care providers.

“We’re talking about legislatin­g bullying against children who are already struggling just to get by,” Democratic Rep. Kelli Butler said during the House debate on the sports bill last week.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP, FILE ?? Reproducti­ve health, rights and justice advocates protest an abortion bill at the Arizona Capitol last year. A bill signed Wednesday by Gov. Doug Ducey will outlaw abortion after 15 weeks if the Supreme Court allows it.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP, FILE Reproducti­ve health, rights and justice advocates protest an abortion bill at the Arizona Capitol last year. A bill signed Wednesday by Gov. Doug Ducey will outlaw abortion after 15 weeks if the Supreme Court allows it.
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Ducey

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