Current:Home > NewsGOP lawmakers in Kansas are moving to override the veto of a ban on gender care for minors -AssetScope
GOP lawmakers in Kansas are moving to override the veto of a ban on gender care for minors
View
Date:2025-04-11 13:32:45
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Republican legislators moved Monday to enact a ban in Kansas on gender-affirming care for minors and bar state employees from advocating social transitioning for transgender youth, brushing aside criticism that they were hurting the state’s image.
The GOP-supermajority Kansas House expected to vote on overriding Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s veto only hours after the Senate did on a 27-13 vote, exactly the required two-thirds margin. The vote in the House was expected to be close after LGBTQ+ rights advocates raised questions about whether the provision against promoting social transitioning is written broadly enough to apply to public school teachers who show empathy for transgender students.
Under the bill, social transitioning includes “the changing of an individual’s preferred pronouns or manner of dress,” and the rule would apply to state workers who care for children. The measure doesn’t spell out what constitutes promoting it.
The bill is part of a broader push to roll back transgender rights from Republican lawmakers in statehouses across the U.S. Kansas would be the 25th state to restrict or ban such care for minors, and this week the South Carolina Senate expected to debate a similar measure that already has passed the state House.
“Unfortunately, in today’s society, the predator in particular is a woke health care system,” said Republican state Sen. Mark Steffen, a central Kansas anesthesiologist and pain management specialist.
Like other Republicans across the U.S., Steffen and other GOP lawmakers in Kansas argued that they’re protecting children struggling with their gender identities from being pushed into health care that the lawmakers see as experimental and potentially harmful. But that puts them at odds with the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics and other major U.S. medical groups.
LGBTQ+ rights groups such as Lambda Legal, the American Civil Liberties Union and Equality Kansas have stopped short of saying they would challenge the new law in court, but they’ve said they believe the provisions preventing state employees from advocating social transitioning violates their free speech rights. They’ve said that provision makes the Kansas law more sweeping than laws in other states.
Other critics argued that enacting such a ban sends a message that transgender residents aren’t welcome. When Kelly vetoed a similar ban last year, she suggested that it would hurt the state’s business climate.
“This is not the message we want to send to Americans about the welcoming opportunities that Kansas has,” said state Sen. Tom Holland, a northeastern Kansas Democrat.
About 300,000 youths ages 13 to 17 identify as transgender in the U.S., according to estimates by the Williams Institute, an LGBTQ+ research center at UCLA Law. It estimates that in Kansas, about 2,100 youths in that age group identify as transgender.
Republican lawmakers last year enacted laws barring transgender girls and women from female college and K-12 sports teams and ending legal recognition of transgender residents’ gender identities. Transgender residents no longer can change the listing for “sex” on their driver’s licenses or birth certificates to match their gender identities, something Kelly’s administration had allowed.
“I do feel like there’s a genuine fear about me and what my body means, when I’m very happy,” Issac Johnson, who is transgender and just finished a social work internship in Topeka’s public schools, said during a recent Statehouse news conference.
Transgender youth, parents of transgender children and dozens of medical and mental health providers all described gender-affirming care as life-saving and argued that it lessens severe depression and suicidal tendencies among transgender youth. At least 200 health care providers signed a letter to lawmakers opposing a veto override.
During the Senate’s debate Monday, Democratic Minority Leader Dinah Sykes’ voice wavered as she spoke against the bill and told transgender residents, “We accept you and we cherish you.”
“I urge my colleagues to show grace and kindness,” she said.
But supporters of the bill repeatedly cited the recent decision of the National Health Service of England to stop covering puberty blockers as a routine treatment for gender dysphoria in minors.
NHS England issued a nearly 400-page report from its review, concluding that there is not enough evidence about the long-term effects of gender-affirming care or how well it works. In a foreword, the review’s leader added, “This is an area of remarkably weak evidence.”
Kansas Senate Health Committee Chair Beverly Gossage, a Kansas City-area Republican, told her colleagues: “We’re on the right side of history on this.”
Supporters of the bill also said many of their constituents simply have strong misgivings about medical treatments for children struggling with their gender identities.
The proposed ban would require Kansas to revoke the medical license of any doctor who violates it. It would bar gender-affirming care from being provided on state property or by recipients of state tax dollars.
Kansas’ Medicaid program, providing health coverage for poor and disabled residents, also couldn’t cover gender-affirming care. On Monday, in a case likely headed to the U.S. Supreme Court, a federal appeals court ruled that West Virginia and North Carolina’s refusal to cover certain health care for transgender people with government-sponsored insurance is discriminatory.
“The language put in the bill is, in my opinion, is to try to prevent state entities, state employees, from promoting the use of different pronouns and, if you will, the search for gender change,” Republican state Rep. John Eplee, a northeastern Kansas family physician.
veryGood! (83712)
Related
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- 'The Final Level': Popular GameStop magazine Game Informer ends, abruptly lays off staff
- Gymnast MyKayla Skinner Asks Simone Biles to Help End Cyberbullying After Olympic Team Drama
- Baltimore city worker died from overheating, according to medical examiner findings
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- GOP Rep. Andy Ogles of Tennessee says FBI took his cellphone in campaign finance probe
- Serena Williams, a Paris restaurant and the danger of online reviews in 2024
- USA basketball players juggle motherhood and chasing 8th gold medal at Paris Olympics
- Small twin
- Billy Bean, second openly gay ex-MLB player who later worked in commissioner’s office, dies at 60
Ranking
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- 4 hotel employees charged with being party to felony murder in connection with Black man’s death
- Recreational weed: Marijuana sales begin in Ohio today. Here's what to expect.
- American Cole Hocker pulls Olympic shocker in men’s 1,500, leaving Kerr and Ingebrigtsen behind
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Marathon swimmer who crossed Lake Michigan in 1998 is trying it again
- Illinois Gov. Pritzker criticizes sheriff for hiring deputy who fatally shot Sonya Massey
- Bob Woodward’s next book, ‘War,’ will focus on conflict abroad and politics at home
Recommendation
A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
Wall Street hammered amid plunging global markets | The Excerpt
Disney+, ESPN+ and Hulu streaming subscription price hikes coming
2024 Olympics: Snoop Dogg Delivers Golden Performance for Team USA
Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
Amit Elor, 20, wins women's wrestling gold after dominant showing at Paris Olympics
Disney returns to profit in third quarter as streaming business starts making money for first time
Bob Woodward’s next book, ‘War,’ will focus on conflict abroad and politics at home