Lawmakers in 14 states have proposed anti-LGBTQ bills, many of which target trans youth

A
group of LGBTQ advocates gathered outside the South Dakota Capitol in
Pierre to protest a bill that would have banned people from updating the
sex on their birth certificates.
(CNN)As is custom at the beginning of the legislative session, state lawmakers across the country have proposed a torrent of bills intended to boost local economies, constrain or expand spending or make much-needed infrastructure fixes.
But mixed in among the standard bureaucratic business are bills that take aim at LGBTQ+ residents of states -- bills that attempt to limit or dismantle their protections.
Just
weeks into 2021, lawmakers in at least 14 states have proposed a slew
of bills that would restrict the freedoms of LGBTQ residents. Most of
the bills would affect transgender young people, according to Freedom For All Americans, the LGBTQ advocacy group that tracks the proposals.
NBC News was the first to report about the spate of anti-LGBTQ bills.
In Alabama,
lawmakers proposed a bill that would ban physicians from prescribing
medication to trans children that would affirm their gender. In Oklahoma,
a proposed bill would lift a ban on conversion therapy and other
practices that aim to suppress a minor's sexual orientation or gender
identity. And in Montana, lawmakers in the state House have already
passed bills that restrict trans minors' access to health care and even school sports.
Most
of the bills won't ever pass. But even introducing the legislation is
damaging to LGBTQ people, especially youths, said Christy Mallory, legal
director of UCLA Law's Williams Institute, a research center that
centers on gender identity and sexual orientation law.
"Even
just the campaigns around the bills can be really stigmatizing and hurt
kids, even if the bills don't ultimately pass," she said. "Just the
fact that knowing that lawmakers are introducing these bills, people are
seeing it and reading it, can signal to kids that maybe they're not
supported by their states, that their government is not behind them."
Transgender
young people in particular are already at a higher risk of physical and
sexual violence and suicidal thoughts than their cisgender peers,
according to the Trevor Project,
a suicide prevention resource for LGBTQ youth. In this way, limiting
trans young people's rights by law and erasing their gender identities
can be incredibly harmful, Mallory said.
A growing trend of discriminatory bills
There's
been a troubling trend of bills aimed at limiting LGBTQ rights since
the mid-2010s, a "discriminatory response to the successful (same-sex)
marriage litigation," said Jenny Pizer, law and policy director of
Lambda Legal, a national legal organization that works to advance the
civil rights of LGBTQ people.
Lawmakers started to specifically target young trans people since 2016, when North Carolina passed its infamous "bathroom bill,"
which restricted transgender people from using the restroom that
corresponded with their gender identity in government-run buildings.
That bill was repealed in 2017,
though activists at the time said the political compromise still
allowed some discrimination against trans North Carolinians to persist,
Mallory said.
Even
though the bill was later repealed, North Carolina's bathroom bill
inspired a slew of "copycat bills" that took aim at transgender people's
access to bathrooms, school sports and, critically, gender-affirming
health care, Mallory said.
Though
the North Carolina bill passed before the 2016 presidential election,
some lawmakers who've introduced similar bills since have likely been
influenced by the Trump administration's often "hostile" policies toward
LGBTQ and trans Americans, Mallory said, like the former President's transgender military ban or his attempts to roll back protections against discrimination in health care.
It's
possible that some lawmakers are proposing new anti-LGBTQ laws as a
response to the new Biden administration, Pizer said, which already
lifted the trans military ban and enacted an executive order expanding
protections for transgender people on Inauguration Day.
"We
need to anticipate that some of those who prioritize creating licenses
to discriminate against us will return their attention to states they
perceive as welcoming their anti-LGBTQ agenda," Pizer said.
The bills that activists fear the most
Of
the bills proposed so far, Freedom For All Americans is most concerned
about two proposals in Montana -- one that bans trans students from
playing a school sport and another that would ban trans kids from
receiving gender-affirming health care. Both bills have passed in the
Montana House and will soon reach the state Senate, said Angela Dallara
of Freedom for All Americans.
States where anti-LGBTQ bills have been proposed, 2021
Alabama
Indiana
Iowa
Kentucky
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
New Hampshire
North Dakota
South Carolina
Tennessee
Texas
Virginia
Utah
source: Freedom For All Americans
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