Maine’s legislator’s speech rights were restored after the censorship of the trans athlete



NEWNow you can listen to Pak Gazette articles!

Maine’s state representative, Laurel Libby, their state legislators restored their state legislators on Wednesday, five months after she was censored for a position on social networks that identified a trans athlete.

The Supreme Court restored Libby’s voting rights on May 20 after she filed a lawsuit in response to censorship, but her speech rights have still been retained from it so far. Libby was still fighting his lawsuit against the president of the House of Representatives, Ryan Fecteau, so that the full annulment censorship.

Libby told Pak Gazette Digital that he entered the state capital on Wednesday without realizing that today his speech rights would be restored, and that he did not even find out about the end of the session when she and others were preparing to postpone.

CLICK HERE for more sports coverage at Foxnews.com

Just before the postponement, the leader of the assistant majority of the House of Representatives, Lori Gramlich, proposed a resolution that when the voting rights and speech of Libby would be restored. The resolution approved by a vote of 115-16.

“It was a surprise, it was our 33rd supplement of the day, and in a matter of minutes I was on the floor,” Libby said.

Libby censorship was initially approved on February 25 by a 75-70 vote. Libby said there was no reason for the surprise resolution of Wednesday that ended censorship. But she believes that it is due to the impulse she had in her demand and the growing public opposition against trans athletes in girls’ sports.

“The Democrats know that they are losing in this issue, that most of the main main ones, but the Americans, do not agree with their extreme position that allows biological men to participate in girls’ sports,” Libby said. “They know they are losing on that issue, they know they are losing in court regarding my lawsuit I filed … and thus they yield because they are losing and this is the best way to save their face.”

Maine’s adolescents fighting state democrats in the Girls Sports Law project after supporting trans athlete chaos in high school

President Donald Trump has signed an executive order that requires that states only allow women to compete, but multiple states administered by Democrats, including Maine, have challenged the order and continued allowing trans inclusion.

The Department of Justice and the Attorney General of the United States, Pam Bondi, have even filed their own separate lawsuit against the State of Maine for continuing to challenge the order.

Libby has been a central figure in conservative rejection against Democratic policies that allow trans inclusion in girls in Maine. In addition to his lawsuit against Fecteau, Libby has been repeatedly critical with Mills for his refusal to comply with Trump.

He began when he made a Facebook post that identified a Trans athlete who won a female pole jumping competition by Grelyly High School in February, which caused a setback from the Democrats in the state who criticized her for identifying a minor, which was the main premise of her censorship. However, she and her lawyers argued that the Trans athlete had already been publicized in other media.

The same Trans athlete then skipped the state championships of Spring Track and Field at the beginning of June.

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.”

Many Maine residents even have entire school districts have faced Mills’s policies along with Libby. The school districts of Maine RSU No. 24 and MSAD No. 70 have approved their own resolutions located to keep the places for girls only for students. There have also been three large -scale protests against current policies in the capital city of the State, Augusta, since February.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *