

“This is a dark and frightening day for thousands of families in Texas who fear for the safety and future of their transgender children,” Rebecca Marques, Human Rights Campaign Texas state director, said in a statement. LGBTQ advocacy and human rights organizations such as the Trevor Project and the Human Rights Campaign have issued statements condemning Abbott’s actions. And in West Virginia, a federal judge issued a temporary injunction this summer stopping the law from being enforced. Governors in Kansas, North Dakota and South Dakota vetoed legislation in their states. The Texas legislature has introduced over 40 bills on the matter, more than any other state. And lawmakers in more than half of the states introduced bills that would require proof of an athlete’s sex, meaning some girls could be forced to undergo physical exams, including of their genitals, before being allowed to play. This year, governors in seven other states-Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Montana, Mississippi, Tennessee and West Virginia-have signed similar legislation. LGBTQ advocates point out that barring transgender youth from playing sports can pose risks to their mental and physical health. Lawmakers and supporters of the bills argued that allowing transgender girls to participate in sports threatens athletic opportunities for cisgender women and girls. The legislation, which failed to pass at least five times during the regular legislative session, advanced at a state Senate Health and Human Services Committee meeting earlier this month, where a 24-hour notice rule was suspended, according to The Texas Tribune. Greg Abbott this week became the latest governor to sign a bill to bar transgender youth from competing on high school sports team that don’t align with their biological gender at birth.
