Mississippi governor to join suit against
Obama transgender policy
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[May 27, 2016]
(Reuters) - Mississippi's Republican
governor said on Thursday he planned to join a lawsuit by officials from
11 states to overturn an Obama administration directive that tells
schools to let transgender students use bathrooms matching their gender
identity.
The lawsuit led by Texas, the most significant legal challenge to
this month's directive, said the federal government and Obama
administration officials overreached their authority by taking
actions that should be left to Congress or individual states.
"Our office has talked to the Texas attorney general's office and I
intend, as soon as possible, to join the lawsuit against this latest
example of federal overreach," Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant said
in a statement.
As with some of the other states, Mississippi's governor and
attorney general disagree on the suit, which challenges the
administration's interpretation that federal civil rights laws
against sex discrimination should apply to transgender people.
Mississippi's attorney general, Democrat Jim Hood, declined to
participate in the lawsuit, according to Clay Chandler, a spokesman
for the governor. Chandler said Bryant will work with an attorney in
the governor's office in joining the lawsuit.
Hood's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Amid a national debate on transgender rights, President Barack
Obama's administration on May 13 told U.S. public schools that
transgender students should be allowed to use the bathroom of their
choice, upsetting Republicans and paving the way for fights over
federal funding and legal authority.
Texas was joined by Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Oklahoma,
Tennessee, Utah, West Virginia and Wisconsin, plus Arizona's
Department of Education and Maine's governor.
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Mississippi, Governor Phil Bryant arrives to attend B.B. King's
funeral in Indianola, Mississippi May 30, 2015. REUTERS/Mike Blake
The lawsuit said the administration "conspired to turn workplace and
educational settings across the country into laboratories for a
massive social experiment, flouting the democratic process, and
running roughshod over commonsense policies protecting children and
basic privacy rights."
Transgender rights advocates criticized the suit as a malicious
attack, saying there have never been public safety incidents or
invasions of privacy related to protections for transgender people.
"While the department will review the complaint, the federal
government has strong legal foundations to uphold the civil rights
of transgender Americans," the Justice Department said in a
statement on Wednesday.
(Reporting by Letitia Stein; Writing by Daniel Trotta; Editing by
Will Dunham)
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