In a last-minute effort, Mississippi's Republican-dominated Legislature has resurrected a bill aimed at regulating transgender individuals' access to bathrooms, locker rooms, and dormitories in public schools. Lawmakers swiftly pushed the measure through both the House and Senate during the closing days of their four-month session after negotiations on an earlier version collapsed earlier in the week. Republicans asserted that they had been inundated with messages urging them to revive the bill.
Senate President Pro Tempore Dean Kirby, a Republican, emphasized the significance of the legislation to many constituents and legislators, describing it as one of the most important bills brought before the chamber. The proposed law mandates that all public education institutions must provide single-sex facilities for restrooms, changing areas, and dormitories. It dictates that individuals may only utilize facilities that correspond to the sex assigned to them at birth, regardless of their gender identity or appearance. Violators of this policy could face legal action, although schools, colleges, and universities would be shielded from liability.
Democrats voiced concerns about the bill, arguing that it would endanger transgender individuals and criticized Republicans for prioritizing this issue over other legislative matters. Representative Jeffrey Hulum III, a Democrat, expressed bewilderment at the focus on national politics rather than initiatives to improve conditions for all Mississippians.
Republicans defended the bill as a measure to protect female students on college campuses, citing the presence of Republican women in the Senate gallery wearing red in support of the legislation. Anja Baker, a member of the Mississippi Federation of Republican Women, voiced apprehensions about the potential overcrowding of women's facilities, stressing the need to safeguard resources for women.
Advocacy groups mobilized support for the bill, urging Republican women to attend the Capitol session. The bill's revival followed the failure of an earlier proposal mandating single-sex spaces, which prompted contentious exchanges between legislative leaders. The House eventually proposed a compromise allowing individuals to sue for monetary damages if someone uses a bathroom not corresponding to their birth gender. However, the Senate deemed this version unacceptable, leading to further negotiations and the eventual passage of a weaker bill without provisions for compensatory damages.
House Judiciary A Committee Chairman Joey Hood expressed disappointment with the weakened version of the bill, hoping for stronger penalties in future legislation. Another failed proposal sought to deny legal recognition of transgender individuals by asserting the binary classification of sexes. Governor Tate Reeves, a Republican, has previously signed bills targeting transgender individuals, including bans on transgender athletes competing in girls' or women's sports teams and restrictions on gender-affirming medical procedures for minors.
Mississippi's legislative actions are part of a broader trend among Republican-led states seeking to limit transgender individuals' rights in various areas, including healthcare, restroom access, and sports participation.