Veto of Kansas bill on trans athletes sets up override fight
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas bill banning transgender athletes from girls’ and women’s sports was vetoed by Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly for the third year in a row Friday, setting up a hotly contested fight in the Republican-controlled Legislature to override her.
Kelly’s action was expected because of her two previous vetoes. Kansas Republicans made Kelly’s vetoes a major issue in multiple television attack ads when she ran for reelection last year, winning narrowly.
Kelly said during the campaign that decisions about transgender athletes should be made by schools, doctors, families and local officials, and that the two bills she vetoed would have “created unnecessary new government mandates.” Kelly’s veto messages in 2021 and 2022 said the bills would have hurt the state’s business climate, and last year’s message added that such proposals came only from “politicians trying to score political points.”
When lawmakers gave final approval to the bill last week, Jenna Bellemere, a 19-year-old transgender University of Kansas student, said, “It’s about socially isolating people, especially socially isolating trans kids.”