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Protesters gather in Jefferson City to oppose bills targeting trans youth

Protesters against bills targeting transgender youth in Missouri hold up signs during a rally held Wednesday, March 29, 2023. Hundreds of people gathered at the Missouri Capitol to show support to transgender kids in the state.
Sarah Kellogg
/
St. Louis Public Radio
Protesters against bills targeting transgender youth in Missouri hold up signs during a rally held Wednesday, March 29, 2023. Hundreds of people gathered at the Missouri Capitol to show support to transgender kids in the state.

The rally comes after the Republican-led Senate passed two bills placing limitations on health care and sports participation for trans youth. Both bills still need to pass the House.

Over 300 people took over the south lawn of the Missouri Capitol for a couple of hours on Wednesday to protest a pair of bills targeting transgender youth in the state.

“We show up clearly today in love and in community, certainly, but we also show up in righteous anger and in rage,” said Katy Erker-Lynch, executive director of PROMO, an LGBTQ public policy and advocacy organization.

The demonstration cames less than a week after the Republican-led state Senate passed legislation barring transgender youth from receiving gender-affirming health care and participating on sports teams that align with their gender identity.

One of the bills targets transition-related health care like puberty blockers and hormone treatments. It prohibits those treatments for anyone under the age of 18, though transgender people who currently have a prescription for those treatments can continue them. Proponents said the bills are designed to protect children.

Erker-Lynch asked parents of cisgender kids to picture themselves as the parents of a trans child who has access to gender-affirming care.

“I want you to try to imagine having that care stripped from your child and denied not because your insurance denied it or because the standards of care have changed. But because certain politicians in the Missouri state legislature decided they know best and your child is forbidden from accessing that care,” Erker-Lynch said.

Both bills would partly or fully expire after four years, though lawmakers could extend that date.

Both bills next go to the House.

Sen. Greg Razer, D-Kansas City, the only openly gay man serving in the Senate, was one of many Democrats who filibustered the bill for hours before it passed.

Sen. Greg Razer, D-Kansas City, speaks at a podium during a rally against bills targeting transgender kids in Missouri. Over 300 people gathered in Jefferson City on Wednesday to hear from lawmakers and fellow activists, some of whom are members of the LGBTQ community themselves.
Sarah Kellogg
/
St. Louis Public Radio
Sen. Greg Razer, D-Kansas City, speaks at a podium during a rally against bills targeting transgender kids in Missouri. Over 300 people gathered in Jefferson City on Wednesday to hear from lawmakers and fellow activists, some of whom are members of the LGBTQ community themselves.

“I am devastated that we lost. But the final score was a whole hell of a lot closer than we thought it was going to be,” Razer said.

Razer also said he wanted to focus on the positive, that more people in the state are learning and talking about transgender Missourians.

“They're talking about you thanks to bigots,” Razer said. “They are talking about you and they are learning about you and they're accepting you.”

Speakers included other state lawmakers and members of LGBTQ advocacy and policy groups.

Rep. Ashley Bland Manlove, D-Kansas City, one of several LGBTQ members in the House, spoke on the importance of not only showing up to the Capitol to protest legislation, but also of being proactive regarding elections.

“If you don't bring five people to the election poll with you on Election Day, you're being counterintuitive to yourself. So, this is a moment of self-accountability,” Bland Manlove said.

Transgender Missourians also spoke to the crowd, including Ella Mauzey, who went through the same transition-related care, puberty blockers and hormone treatment that the Senate bill bans.

“I have no idea where I would be if I didn't get that medical care. I hurt every day thinking about the kids who will not have that as an option, this lifesaving care that I got,” Mauzey said.

One of the rally attendees, Lynn Staley, said she was there with her husband to support not only their gay children, but also other friends who are a part of the LGBTQ community. Staley said their family has already thought about leaving Missouri.

“We talked about it all the time, like do we want to live in a state that doesn't provide full rights to all of its citizens? It's a real problem,” Staley said.

Kay Beesley said they’ve been feeling really hopeless regarding not only what’s been happening in Missouri, but in other states as well. However, they said they were pleasantly surprised with just how many people came out to the rally.

“I feel so much hope seeing how many people want to support fellow trans people,” Beesley said. “I came out for that. And I got exactly that. It warms my heart.”

Copyright 2023 St. Louis Public Radio. To see more, visit St. Louis Public Radio.

Sarah Kellogg