Ban on transgender girls in girls' sports sought in Georgia
ATLANTA (AP) — Advocates of a ban on a transgender girls playing girls' sports in Georgia have turned to the state Senate, having gained little traction for their proposal in the House.
The Senate Education and Youth Committee voted 5-3 on Wednesday to pass Senate Bill 266, a measure pushed by conservative groups that would ban people born as males from competing for public schools, or for private schools that play against public schools.
The measure moves to the Senate for more debate.
“It only applies to women’s sports. It goes by your biological sex at birth. A transgender could not participate in a women’s sport," said Sen. Marty Harbin, a Tyrone Republican sponsoring the bill.
Opponents said the bill would single out a group that’s already among society’s most marginalized, making them subject to even more harassment.
“Trans girls are girls and as such should be allowed to participate in girls sports, and the title of this bill being ‘Save Girls Sports’ is offensive and disgusting," said Caroline Holko, a Democrat who lost a state House race last year. "I can guarantee you that it will be litigated and it will end with legal discrimination against trans girls being allowed.”
Supporters of the ban had introduced bills in the House and won a hearing, but the House committee has taken no action with Monday's deadline approaching for bills to pass their original chamber and move on to the opposite chamber. Wednesday was the last day for most bills originating in the Senate to pass out of a Senate committee.
Wednesday's hearing featured testimony from Matt Sharp, a lawyer for Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative legal group that is quarterbacking the push for similar bans in a number of states. Sharp was repeatedly pressed by opponents on...