Trans Trans athletes Battle of Maine: Democrats respond to Laurel Libby Scotus appeal



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Maine Laurel Libby’s state representative is looking for an intervention by the United States Supreme Court in his demand to annul his censorship for a social networks position that identified a minor trans athlete. Now, the defendants of Democrats have presented their response to the Superior Court.

The defendants, the president of Maine House, Ryan Fecteau, and the secretary of the House of Representatives, Robert Hunt, represented by Maine Aaron Frey attorney, defended the decision to censor Libby for the February position in his response on Thursday afternoon.

“Like other censorships of the members of Maine’s house, the resolution of censorship required that the Libby representative apologize for their behavior, not retract from their views. The Libby representative has firmly refused to fulfill this modest punishment, which is designed to restore the integrity and reputation of the body,” the answer said.

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“Its refusal places it in breach of a centenary rule of the house of Maine, rule 401 (11), that the Libby representative previously agreed, together with all his colleagues in the Chamber, would govern the procedures of the Chamber. Rule 401 (11) establishes that a member found by the body to be in breach of his rules cannot participate in the debates or vote in things before the chamber of representatives before the chamber of representatives before the chamber They have been satisfied with the satisfaction of the body, which take over their rules, cannot participate in the debates or votes in things before the House of Representatives until satisfaction has been made by the body, which cannot participate in its plant.

When the Democratic majority in Maine’s House of Representatives voted to censor Libby on February 25, he originally offered to restore his voting rights and speak if he apologized for the position. But Libby told them not to apologize.

Libby previously told Pak Gazette Digital that Fecteau called her the day after she made the publication on social networks, which identified a Trans athlete who won a female pole jumping competition, on February 18.

“He found it objectable and asked me to take it. At the same time, I asked him if I would support Maine’s girls and the support policy that stopped discrimination against young women in Maine in sports, and refused to answer,” Libby said.

“The main criticism of the Democrats is that it was an image of a minor.”

Libby added that no one from the family or high school of the Trans athlete approached it on the position. He has also argued that the athlete was already publicized in other media. Portland Press Herald published a summary of the event, mentioning the athlete.

Maine’s girl involved in the battle of Trans athletes reveals how state policies hurt her children’s and sports career

Libby filed its lawsuit against Fecteau for censorship to revoke on March 11.

But the judge of the District Court of Rhode Island, Melissa Dubose against Libby In your case on April 22. Dubose, appointed by former President Joe Biden in January, ended up presiding over the case after each district judge in Maine refused to take it.

Judges John C. Nivison, John A. Woodcock, Lance E. Walker, Karen F. Wolf, Stacey D. Neumann and Nancy Torresen signed challenge orders shortly after the case was initially presented. No reason was given.

Dubose ended with the case and ruled in favor of Fecteau. Then, the First Court of Appeals of the Circuit also failed against Libby.

So now Libby is looking for intervention by the United States Supreme Court.

Meanwhile, the United States Department of Justice announced a lawsuit against the State of Maine for its continuous challenge to Trump’s Executive order to keep biological men out of girls and women’s sports and for violations of title IX. Libby attended the press conference together with Attorney General Pam Bondi and the secretary of the Department of Education, Linda McMahon.

Two school districts in Maine, the Regional School Unit of Maine No. 24 and MSAD No. 70, have taken the matter in their own hands and modified their local sports gender eligibility policies to prohibit transgender athletes from girls’ competitions, aligning with Libby and Trump.

Attention to the problem was extended last week after an athlete Trans won multiple events at a girl athletics meeting.

A transdidentifying athlete who competed for the North Yarmouth Academy in Yarmouth, Maine, at the Poland-Nya-Yarmouth-Seacaast meeting, won the 1600-meter race with a time of 5: 57.27, flying to the corridor of the second place that ended with a time of 6: 16.32. In the 800 -meter event, the Trans athlete had a closer first place with a time of 2: 43.31, a little better than the finalist of the second place with a time of 2: 44.87.

TO survey The coalition of American parents discovered that about 600 registered voters of Maine, 63% said that school sports participation should be based on biological sex, and 66% agreed that it is “just restricting women’s sports to biological women.”

The survey also found that 60% of residents would admit a voting measure that limits participation in Women and girls sports for biological females. This included 64% of independents and 66% of parents with children under 18.

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