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Maine’s state representative, Laurel Libby, became a national figure in the movement to keep trans athletes out of girls’ sports in February when he called a Trans athlete for Grelyly High School that won a girl pole jump competition.
The publication turned out that Libby was censored, who fought to the Supreme Court to annul. The Supreme Court granted him his voting rights on May 15.
On Tuesday, the trans athlete that Libby’s Post called did not appear to compete in the State Athletics Championship of Maine Class A, according to multiple witnesses.
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Maine Laurel Libby legislator
Libby reacted to the news in a statement to Pak Gazette Digital.
“Yesterday, a biological man who won the state championship of Girls in February decided not to participate in the women’s pole jump in the State Outdoor Track Championship of Maine B Class B, and a girl legitimately won the state championship,” Libby said.
“The opportunities of our girls and podium placements must decide for their hard work and performance, not because of the whims of others. All Maine girls must have the guarantee of a fair, safe and level playing field, which is not the case provided that our laws allow biological men to participate in the sports of girls.”
Pak Gazette Digital has communicated with Grelyly High School to comment.
Female athletes took all the main medals in the final events of Maine female athletics in the final events of the Tuesday field, after the competition was delayed since Saturday due to the weather.
It marked the end of a contentious athletics season for the State, since the Trans athlete of the Grelyy High School and another that represents North Yarmuth Academy competed in the context of the political conflict.
The current laws of Maine have resulted in girls throughout the State to express outrage, since at least two trans athletes have won competitions in athletics, Nordic skiing and Nordic skiing in recent years.
The isle’s presque student, Hailey Himes, previously told Pak Gazette Digital that he was at the February state meeting that Libby published on where the Trans athlete of the Greels high school won the first place in the girl pole jump of the girls.
“I saw this male pole jumper stand on the podium and we were all as if we were as’ we are quite sure that she is not a girl. There is no way to be a girl,” Himes said. “It was really discouraging, especially for girls on the podium not first. So that motivated me to fight for them.”
Maine’s adolescents fighting state democrats in the Girls Sports Law project after supporting trans athlete chaos in high school
HIMES, along with their Cassidy Carlisle, Lucy Cheney and Carrlyn Buck athletic teammates, marched on the state capital of Augusta in early May to meet with Republican leaders on the subject and press the state legislature to approve bills that prohibit biological men of girls’ sports.
Buck added: “It is not just about the points, it is also that our teammates will feel discouraged when they are placed in an event against them because they are already knowing that the result is determined, playing against a biological man who is biologically stronger than them, so they have no possibility.”
While Libby fights a legal battle that included the intervention of the Supreme Court so that his revocation censorship, the democratic leadership of the State is to fight a battle against the administration of President Donald Trump on the broadest issue of the inclusion of trans athletes in the sports of girls.
The United States Department of Justice has filed a lawsuit against the State in response to Governor Janet Milles openly challenging the executive order to “keep men out of women’s sports.”
A federal judge established on Tuesday a trial date of April 1, 2026, for that lawsuit.
The Trump administration has said that the Maine Department of Education is violating the Federal Law against Discrimination of Title IX by allowing transgender girls to participate in girls’ teams.
Meanwhile, Maine’s leaders have refused to accept a written amendment to keep biological men out of girls’ sports, citing the protections of Maine’s human rights law to gender identity.
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.