Florida joins U.S. states banning transgender girls from female sports
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[June 02, 2021]
By Daniel Trotta
(Reuters) -Florida on Tuesday became the
latest and largest U.S. state to ban transgender girls and women from
participating in female sports at schools, part of a campaign in
statehouses nationwide this year assailed as discriminatory by equal
rights activists.
Republican Governor Ron DeSantis, who is closely aligned with former
President Donald Trump, enacted the law on the first day of Pride Month,
which celebrates the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ)
community.
DeSantis signed the bill at an event at a Christian school in
Jacksonville where he was flanked by several teenage women athletes. He
said the law, which states participation rules for public high schools
and universities, was needed to ensure fairness for women participating
in sports across the state.
"I can tell you this: in Florida, girls are going to play girls’ sports
and boys are going to play boys’ sports," the governor said. "We are
going to go based off biology, not based off ideology when we are doing
sports."
Supporters of the sports bills say transgender female athletes have an
unfair advantage, having been designated male at birth but having since
transitioned. Florida's law defines an athlete's sex as that stated on
official documents at birth.
The law, rushed through the state legislature as an attachment to a
charter school bill, passed over the objection of Democrats and civil
rights advocates who call bans on transgender girls and women in female
sports unnecessary and discriminatory and accuse Republicans of
portraying them as a provocation to energize the right wing of their
party.
On Tuesday, U.S. President Joe Biden, a Democrat, issued a proclamation
to mark the start of Pride Month, urging Congress to LGBTQ people from
discrimination by passing the Equality Act and pointing to a lack of
protection of their rights in many states.
Trump, his Republican predecessor, did not officially recognize Pride
Month during his four years in office.
The Human Rights Campaign, an advocacy group, said it would challenge
the law in court as having been based on a "false, discriminatory
premise" that threatened the wellbeing of transgender children.
"Transgender kids are kids; transgender girls are girls. Like all
children, they deserve the opportunity to play sports with their friends
and be a part of a team," Human Rights Campaign President Alphonso David
said in a statement.
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Florida on Tuesday became the latest and largest U.S. state to ban
transgender girls and women from participating in female sports at
schools, part of a campaign in statehouses nationwide this year
assailed as discriminatory by equal rights activists. Gavino Garay
reports.
Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi, Montana, Tennessee
and West Virginia have passed similar legislation and South Dakota's
governor has signed an executive order supporting a sports ban. All
have Republican governors.
The Republican governor of North Dakota and the Democratic governor
of Kansas have vetoed similar bills that passed their statehouses.
Idaho passed the first such ban last year but a federal court has
blocked the law.
Arkansas passed one banning certain types of gender-affirming
healthcare treatment to transgender youth, after overriding the
Republican governor's veto.
Around 100 bills have been introduced in more than 20 states this
year that would limit transgender rights. Transgender advocates have
called on businesses to boycott states that pass such laws.
While corporate America has yet to respond as it has on the issue of
voting rights restrictions, the National Collegiate Athletic
Association (NCAA), which governs college sports, responded to
Florida's bill in April by saying it would only hold events in
states that are "free of discrimination."
DeSantis said he would not be swayed by the stances taken by the
NCAA or other organizations.
"We will stand up to groups like the NCAA who think they should be
able to dictate the policies in different states. Not here. Not
ever," DeSantis said.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta in Carlsbad, California and Nathan Layne
in Wilton, Connecticut; Editing by Howard Goller)
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