Montana transgender legislator silenced after 'blood on your hands'
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[April 27, 2023]
By Daniel Trotta
(Reuters) - Montana statehouse Republicans on Wednesday silenced
Democratic transgender legislator Zooey Zephyr from floor debates for
breaking decorum after she said lawmakers who backed a ban on
gender-affirming healthcare for minors would have "blood on your hands."
Under the motion that passed with a vote of 68-32, Zephyr will be
allowed to vote but is barred from the House floor, anteroom or gallery
for the remainder of the legislative session, scheduled to end on May
10.
The discord in Montana - which has garnered national attention amid an
escalating culture war in the U.S. over issues like transgender rights -
has brewed since an April 18 debate over Senate Bill 99. The state
measure seeks to ban transgender healthcare treatments for minors,
including puberty blockers and hormones.
Zephyr, a first-term representative from Missoula, said in the debate
that denying such care was "tantamount to torture," and that a ban would
lead to more suicides.
"If you vote yes on this bill and yes on these amendments, I hope the
next time there's an invocation when you bow your heads in prayer, you
see the blood on your hands," Zephyr said.
In response, the Republican supermajority silenced her within the
chamber until she apologized, prompting a large protest by Zephyr
supporters at the statehouse on Monday.
When protesters in the gallery disrupted that session by chanting "Let
her speak!," the House speaker ordered representatives to abandon the
floor, but Zephyr stayed in place, pointing a microphone toward her
supporters.
Seven demonstrators were arrested, and Republicans increased their
attention on Zephyr, with the ultraconservative Montana Freedom Caucus
on Monday urging she be punished.
Majority Leader Sue Vinton, who presented the motion, stressed the need
for decorum so that the rights of all representatives were protected.
"Monday, this body witnessed one of its members participating in conduct
that disrupted and disturbed the orderly proceedings," Vinton said.
"This member (Zephyr) did not accede to the order of the speaker."
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Montana State Representative Zooey
Zephyr leaves the House chamber after a motion to bar her passed, at
the Montana State Capitol in Helena, Montana, U.S. April 26, 2023.
Rep. Zephyr will still be able to vote on bills remotely.
REUTERS/Mike Clark
Zephyr remained defiant on Wednesday, telling the chamber that her
"blood on your hands" comment was "not being hyperbolic."
"When the speaker asks me to apologize on behalf of decorum, what he
is really asking me to do is be silent when my community is facing
bills that get us killed," Zephyr said. "He is asking me to be
complicit in this legislature's eradication of our community. And I
refuse to do so."
The Democratic Party, the American Civil Liberties Union and LGBTQ
advocates criticized the censure as undemocratic.
Republican legislators across the country have sought to ban certain
healthcare for transgender youth. One tracker by a group of
independent journalists says more than 500 bills have been
introduced that they say would infringe on the rights of gender
non-conforming people.
Such bills were once mostly limited to regulating changing rooms and
women's sports but now also include limiting healthcare access for
transgender adults and in some cases seek to charge parents and
doctors with child abuse if they provide treatment.
Opponents of such treatment are skeptical of the major medical
associations that support gender-affirming care, raising concerns
that minors are too easily allowed to make such life-changing
decisions.
A similar break in decorum at a statehouse in Tennessee earlier this
month led the Republican supermajority to expel two Democratic
lawmakers who had protested in support of gun control, drawing
national attention. They were promptly reappointed to their seats by
their county legislatures and earned a trip to the White House.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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