Governor bans use of 'conversion therapy' on LGBTQ+ minors in Kentucky
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[September 19, 2024]
By BRUCE SCHREINER
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear banned the use of
“conversion therapy” on minors in Kentucky on Wednesday, calling his
executive order a necessary step to protect children from a widely
discredited practice that tries to change a person’s sexual orientation
or gender identity through counseling.
The governor used his executive powers after Republicans who control the
state legislature repeatedly blocked efforts to enact a state law
banning the practice. Beshear said he would no longer wait for others to
"do what’s right.”
“My faith teaches me that all children are children of God," Beshear
said during the signing ceremony at the Kentucky Capitol. "And where
practices are endangering and even harming those children, we must act.
The practice of so-called ‘conversion therapy’ hurts our children.”
It was the latest action in a national debate over conversion therapy
and the rights of LGBTQ+ children and their families.
The Kentucky event stirred many emotions. Activists for mental health
and LGBTQ+ rights cheered the governor, but as he prepared to sign the
ban, someone nearby shouted, “This is a denial of affirmation therapy!”
Supporters drowned out the protest.
Among those in attendance was Zach Meiners, a 34-year-old filmmaker who
said he wants young people to be spared the anguish and harm he endured
during four years of therapy as a teenager, which caused him “anxiety
and depression in ways that I’m still unraveling.”
“I can speak firsthand to how devastating it can be to someone’s mental
health," Meiners said in an interview. "And I consider myself very lucky
to be a survivor.”
Republican state Rep. Killian Timoney shook Beshear's hand after the
signing, and expressed support for the ban. But another GOP lawmaker,
state Rep. Josh Calloway, said the governor had defied the will of the
legislature, which isn't scheduled to reconvene until January.
“We are the lawmaking body, and laws should be made by people’s
representatives,” Calloway said.
The Family Foundation, a socially conservative group in Kentucky, said
Beshear's order tramples on the rights of parents and suppresses
religious expression. It referred to the ban as an “unlawful action,”
perhaps signaling a legal challenge.
“This order, like previous failed legislative efforts, is designed to
promote false LGBTQ ideologies and muzzle Christian counselors,
therapists and pastors from helping children struggling with sexual
orientation or gender identity confusion,” David Walls, the group's
executive director, said in a statement.
The ban runs “roughshod over the First Amendment,” said Daniel Schmid, a
legal executive with Liberty Counsel, which describes itself as a
Christian ministry.
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Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, center, answers questions after signing
an executive order banning the use of “conversion therapy” on
minors, Wednesday, Sept. 18, 2024, in Frankfort, Ky. (AP
Photo/Timothy D. Easley)
Anticipating such attacks, Beshear said his action “does not force an
ideology on anybody” but "simply stops a so-called ‘therapy’ that the
medical community says is wrong and hurts our children.”
Democratic state Rep. Lisa Willner, who promoted a legislative ban,
called the order “a great step forward for the safety and mental health
of so many young Kentuckians.”
The order also makes it illegal to use state or federal funds to provide
the therapy on minors, and authorizes licensing boards to discipline
professionals found to have practiced conversion therapy on minors.
Such therapy has been discredited and is opposed by, among others, the
American Medical Association and the American Psychiatric Association,
citing research that shows it leads to increased risk of suicide and
depression.
Nearly half the states and the District of Columbia prohibit conversion
therapy on minors, Beshear's office said. In Kentucky, 21% of LGBTQ
young people reported being threatened with or subjected to conversion
therapy, according to the Trevor Project, a suicide prevention and
crisis intervention organization for LGBTQ+ young people.
Meanwhile, efforts are spreading across the country to curb the rights
of LGBTQ+ kids and impose restrictions on gender and sexuality in
classrooms, youth sports and medicine.
Chris Hartman, executive director of the Fairness Campaign, a
Kentucky-based LGBTQ+ advocacy group, referred to conversion therapy as
"not just snake oil but snake venom.”
Four years ago, Beshear became the first Kentucky governor to
participate in the annual gay-rights rally at the statehouse when the
legislature is in session. Last year, Republicans used transgender
issues to attack Beshear, pointing to his veto of legislation banning
transgender young people from having access to gender-affirming health
care. Beshear said the measure eroded parental rights to make medical
decisions for their children. GOP lawmakers overrode the veto, but
Beshear won re-election later that year by a comfortable margin.
On Wednesday, Beshear said he won't stop urging legislators to put the
ban on conversion therapy into state law.
“It is not about politics at all,” the governor said. "And to me, it’s
not even about gender or sexuality. It’s about protecting our youth from
an inhumane practice that hurts them.”
Hartman said the governor sent a clear message to Kentucky’s LGBTQ+
youth and their families: "You are perfect as you are.”
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