North Carolina's House of Representatives convenes as the legislature considers repealing the controversial HB2 law limiting bathroom access for transgender people in Raleigh, North Carolina, U.S. on December 21, 2016. REUTERS/Jonathan Drake
The storm over legislation
seen as targeting transgender people is set to intensify in 2017 with several
U.S. states proposing measures similar to a bathroom restriction statute in
North Carolina that has prompted protests, lawsuits and economic boycotts.
Four states have legislation
limiting transgender bathroom rights that will be on the agenda when lawmakers
convene next year, and Republican leaders in other states have said more such
bills will be filed soon.
North Carolina legislators, in
a one-day special session on Wednesday, had widely been expected to repeal
their law, which requires people to use the bathroom of their birth gender, but
the effort fell apart.
Bathroom legislation has
become a wedge issue for Republicans, pitting the party's pro-business branch
against social conservatives who have rallied around the measures and see them as
protecting common-sense values, political scientists have said.
"A Republican may want to
avoid it altogether," Mark Jones, a political science professor at Rice
University in Houston, said of the issue. "They may know that it can bad
for the state but they also know that voting against it can be bad for their
political career."
A Republican worried about a
primary election, where social conservative voters can be a decisive factor,
might favor such legislation. A Republican in a general election, where
moderates play a bigger role, knows the negative economic ramifications are too
great to ignore, he said.
Democrats have mostly been
united in opposition to the legislation, which opponents see as discriminatory
against the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community.
The four states where bathroom
access bills have been filed are Alabama, Missouri, South Carolina and
Washington, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures, which
tracks legislation at the state level.
BATHROOM BILL PRIORITY
In Texas, the most populous
Republican-controlled state, Republican Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick, a
Christian conservative who guides the legislative agenda in the state Senate,
has said a bathroom bill will be a priority.
"Legislation like this is
essential to protect the safety and privacy of women and girls and is simple
common sense and common decency," Patrick said in a statement on Thursday.
In March, North Carolina's law
made it the first state to bar transgender people from using public restrooms
that match their gender identity and put it at forefront in the U.S.
battleground over LGBT rights.
Fallout from the law hit the
state's economy and rankled its politics. In the nine months since it passed,
the law has been blamed by opponents for hundreds of millions of dollars in
economic losses and the relocation of conventions and major sports events.
While the total financial
impact is unknown, some estimates suggest the state has lost more than $600
million due to the legislation, Forbes reported last month.
Republican Governor Pat
McCrory narrowly lost a re-election bid in November, with many viewing the vote
as a referendum on the law.
A one-day special legislative session called by
McCrory to implement what appeared be a deal to repeal the law ended abruptly
on Wednesday with the state Senate voting against abolishing the measure.
Democratic Senator Jeff Jackson said Republicans had
reneged on a deal to bring the repeal to a floor vote with no strings attached.
North Carolina's bathroom law has hurt the state's
efforts to sell itself as a progressive beacon in the U.S. South, said Karl
Campbell, a historian at Appalachian State University in Boone, North Carolina.
Since the early 1990s, the state has spent heavily on
schools and infrastructure and sought investment from business, he said. Now,
its biggest city, Charlotte, is a U.S. banking hub and the state hosts many
multinational companies.
"This has been a jolt and it's beyond culture
wars," Campbell said. "It has to do with the state's image of itself.
There really is a deep divide now."
(Reporting and writing by Jon Herskovitz; Additional
reporting by David Ingram in New York and Letitia Stein in Tampa, Florida;
Editing by Bill Trott)
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