The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Many transgende­r health bills came from a handful of far-right interest groups, AP finds

- By Jeff McMillan, Kavish Harjai and Kimberlee Kruesi

Aaron and Lacey Jennen’s roots in Arkansas run deep. They’ve spent their entire lives there, attended the flagship state university, and are raising a family. So they’re heartbroke­n at the prospect of perhaps having to move to one of an everdwindl­ing number of states where gender-affirming health care for their transgende­r teenage daughter, Sabrina, is not threatened.

“We were like, ‘OK, if we can just get Sabrina to 18 ... we can put all this horrible stuff behind us,’” Aaron Jennen said, “and unfortunat­ely that’s not been the case, as you’ve seen a proliferat­ion of anti-trans legislatio­n here in Arkansas and across the country.”

At least 17 states have enacted laws restrictin­g or banning gender-affirming care for transgende­r minors, though judges have temporaril­y blocked their enforcemen­t in some, including Arkansas. An Associated Press analysis found that often those bills sprang not from grassroots or constituen­t demand, but from the pens of a handful of conservati­ve interest groups.

Many of the proposals, as introduced or passed, are identical or very similar to some model legislatio­n, the AP found. Those ready-made bills have been used in statehouse­s for decades, often with criticisms of carpetbagg­ing by out-ofstate interests. In the case of restrictio­ns on gender-affirming care for youths, they allow a handful of farright groups to spread a false narrative based on distorted science, critics say.

“These are solutions from outside our state looking to solve nonexisten­t problems inside our state,” said Aaron Jennen. “For whatever reason, they have the ear of legislatur­es in states like Arkansas, and the legislator­s will generally defer to and only listen to those individual­s.”

The AP obtained the texts of more than 130 bills in 40 state legislatur­es from Plural, a public policy software company, and analyzed them for similariti­es to model bills peddled by the conservati­ve groups Do No Harm, which also criticizes efforts to diversify staffing in medicine, and the Family Research Council, which has long been involved in abortion restrictio­ns.

One of the clearest examples is in Montana, where nearly all the language in at least one bill can be found in Do No Harm’s model. Publicly available emails from December show the Republican sponsor, Sen. John Fuller, tweaked the model before introducin­g it weeks later. Democrats criticized his efforts.

“This is not a Montana issue; it is an issue pushed by well-funded national groups,” Democratic Sen. Janet Ellis said during debate in February.

Republican­s pushed back.

“Someone mentioned this is not a Montana solution. And I can tell you that I won my election on this issue,” said Republican Sen. Barry Usher, who ran unopposed in the general election after winning his contested primary.

The Montana bill passed in March with much of Do No Harm’s model language intact and has been signed into law.

Do No Harm’s model and the 2021 Arkansas bill endorsed as a model by the Family Research Council also have many similariti­es, including the assertion — rebutted by major medical organizati­ons — that the risks of gender-affirming care outweigh its benefits.

Republican­s’ recent focus on legislatio­n to restrict aspects of transgende­r life is largely a strategy of using social “wedge issues” — in the past, abortion or samesex marriage — to motivate their voting base, political observers say. And it does appear to resonate; a Pew Research Center survey a year ago found broad support among Republican­s, but not Democrats, for restrictio­ns on medical care for gender transition­s.

“These organizati­ons are not introducin­g this model legislatio­n to make legislator­s’ jobs easier, to support kids in their constituen­cies. They’re introducin­g this model legislatio­n to gain wealth, to gain eyes, to gain power, and to gain access,” said Heron Greene smith, a senior research analyst who monitors anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric for Political Research Associates, a liberal think tank.

Such bills often distort valid science that supports gender-affirming care for youths, said Dr. Jack Drescher, a psychiatry professor at Columbia University who edited the section about gender dysphoria in the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n’s diagnostic manual. Do No Harm cites the manual in its model bill.

“These bills are not at all interested in patient care,” Drescher said. “These bills are designed to inflame.”

It’s problemati­c “any time policymake­rs are cherry-picking isolated studies or scientific research that arrives upon a different conclusion than the rest of the community or that relies upon studies without having that expertise,” said Marty P. Jordan, an assistant professor of political science at Michigan State University. “It’s problemati­c for the individual­s that the legislatio­n could impact. It’s problemati­c for the larger public, and problemati­c for democracy writ large.”

Kent Syler, a political science professor at Middle Tennessee State University, said: “If it’s a good bill, no one should be shy about where they got it because that’s the federal system working correctly.”

Do No Harm launched last year with an initial critical focus on the role of race in medical education and hiring, and the Virginia-based nonprofit has registered lobbyists in at least four states. People associated with it have testified in statehouse­s around the U.S.

When asked about Do No Harm’s legislativ­e activity, founder and chair Dr. Stanley Goldfarb responded in an email: “Do No Harm works to protect children from extreme gender ideology through original research, coalition-building, testimonia­ls from parents and patients who’ve lived through deeply troubling experience­s, and advocacy for the rigorous, apolitical study of gender dysphoria.”

The Family Research Council, an advocacy group that opposes abortion and LGBTQ+ rights, has been behind what it calls the Save Adolescent­s from Experiment­ation Act, or SAFE Act. Among other things, it falsely asserts that “‘gender transition’ is an experiment.”

A leader of the Family Research Council declined to directly answer several questions about its model bill, including where it had been used and which legislator­s it had worked with, but said, “What should be an issue debated in the scientific community now has to be dealt with through legislatio­n.”

“The SAFE Act gives minors a chance to experience developmen­t before imposing lifelong chemical and surgical procedures that increasing­ly show evidence of psychologi­cal and physiologi­cal harm and completed suicide after the transition,” Jennifer Bauwens, the organizati­on’s director of family studies, said in an email.

In Arkansas, Sabrina Jennen — who will turn 18 in July — continues to receive gender-affirming health care while her family’s suit winds through the courts.

“For these outside groups to carry more weight than the people these legislator­s were elected to represent is very upsetting,” Aaron Jennen said. “They didn’t listen to us before, but now they have to listen to us because we filed a lawsuit and went to court.”

 ?? HOLLY RAMER-ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Advocates for transgende­r youth rally outside the New Hampshire Statehouse, in Concord, N.H., Tuesday, March 7.
HOLLY RAMER-ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Advocates for transgende­r youth rally outside the New Hampshire Statehouse, in Concord, N.H., Tuesday, March 7.

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