The Sun (San Bernardino)

Rob Bonta’s bad-faith rebranding of ballot initiative

- By Emily Rae

For more than 100 years, California citizens have held an extraordin­ary power — the right to bypass their politician­s and vote directly on laws through ballot initiative­s. Recent actions by Attorney General Rob Bonta threaten to permanentl­y undermine that right.

In September, Protect Kids California submitted a proposed ballot initiative — presented as the “Protect Kids of California Act of 2024”— for voters to consider this November. The initiative would allow California voters to weigh in on important issues, including: whether parents should be notified if their children are transition­ing their gender in school; whether schools should ensure that the use of locker rooms and participat­ion on sports teams align with a student’s sex; whether sex-change surgeries and treatments should be available to minors; and whether the definition­s of “male” and “female” under state law should be based upon biology.

The proponents’ stated goals are to protect parental rights, ensure fairness in women’s sports and protect minor children questionin­g their gender identity from potentiall­y dangerous and irreversib­le medical treatments.

As required by California law, proponents submitted the measure to Bonta to receive a neutral official title and summary to use in petitions. Bonta then returned the measure with a new title with a negative and misleading slant: the “Restricts Rights of Transgende­r Youth Initiative.” And he gave it a summary that was not only completely prejudicia­l and designed to mislead the electorate — it also contained lies.

Bonta’s opposition to Protect Kids California was not a surprise. Bonta sued the Chino Valley Unified School District over its parental notificati­on policy last August, arguing that California schools are legally required to deceive parents when their children ask to secretly socially transition their gender at school. And Bonta has devoted taxpayer resources to numerous out-of-state lawsuits to advocate for policies that undermine parental rights, change traditiona­l policies concerning sex-separated sports teams and bathrooms and promote minors’ access to dangerous, untested and irreversib­le drugs and surgeries.

Still, Bonta’s effort to sabotage the Protect Kids California initiative is a new low. As the chief law enforcemen­t officer of the state, Bonta is required by law to prepare a “true and impartial statement of the purpose” for all proposed ballot initiative­s. That’s why the Liberty Jus

tice Center has partnered with attorneys Nicole Pearson and Erin Friday to sue Bonta and make him follow the law. The case, filed on behalf of Protect Kids California and one of its advocates, Roseville City School Board member Jonathan Zachreson, aims to hold Bonta accountabl­e for violating state law by giving the ballot measure a misleading, politicall­y biased and inaccurate title and summary instead of a neutral title and summary as the law requires.

For example, the initiative states that “female students should have fair and safe opportunit­ies to compete in athletic programs.” But Bonta’s biased summary does not include such language. Instead, Bonta describes the initiative as “prohibit[ing] transgende­r female students (grades 7+) from participat­ing in female sports.”

Similarly, the initiative states that “parents or legal guardians of a student have the legal right to be informed of any psychosoci­al or psychologi­cal treatments . . . conducted by or through the school” and that “schools must provide the opportunit­y for parents . . . to be involved with the child’s experience at school.” However, Bonta falsely claims that the initiative “requires schools to notify parents whenever a student under 18 asks to be treated as a gender differing from school records without exception for student safety,” ignoring the portions of the initiative that specifical­ly state that existing safeguards to protect children from parental abuse are unaffected by the initiative.

Bonta’s agenda is contrary to every facet of the measure, and he is wielding his power to eviscerate the rights of proponents by incorporat­ing lies into his biased summary. He is well aware of recent polling finding that California voters, regardless of political party, are largely against schools keeping secrets from parents, sex changes on children and biological males invading female sports and spaces. Therefore, he is using his office to mislead the public and do everything in his power to prevent the initiative from ever getting on the ballot. The attorney general is playing politics instead of doing his job as legally required.

Bonta’s title and summary for the initiative are biased and misleading from beginning to end; he is either unable or unwilling to exercise the neutrality that his job requires.

Government officials cannot use the power voters have entrusted them with to censor and shame those they disagree with. Every California­n, regardless of whether they agree with the initiative, should be concerned about an attorney general who ignores the law and uses his power to sabotage ballot initiative­s. Today Bonta is targeting Protect Kids California, but tomorrow he could be targeting you.

We plan to hold the attorney general accountabl­e for allowing his political agenda to get in the way of doing his job at trial, which is set to begin on April 19, 2024.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? California Attorney General Rob Bonta, shown in August, has devoted taxpayer resources to numerous out-of-state lawsuits to advocate for policies that undermine parental rights, change traditiona­l policies concerning sex-separated sports teams and bathrooms and promote minors’ access to dangerous, untested and irreversib­le drugs and surgeries.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS California Attorney General Rob Bonta, shown in August, has devoted taxpayer resources to numerous out-of-state lawsuits to advocate for policies that undermine parental rights, change traditiona­l policies concerning sex-separated sports teams and bathrooms and promote minors’ access to dangerous, untested and irreversib­le drugs and surgeries.

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