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Democrats took to the floor of the Texas House on Saturday to label a ban on clubs that support gay teens the work of âmonstersâ and to say the ban endangers children and strips them of their dignity.
The Democratic representatives grew emotional in opposition to a bill that would ban K-12 student clubs focused on sexuality and gender identity.
Senate Bill 12, authored by Sen. Brandon Creighton, won final legislative passage Saturday after lawmakers in both chambers adopted the conference committee reports that specifically clarified that schools will be banned from authorizing or sponsoring student clubs based on sexual orientation or gender identity.
Backers proclaimed that the bill enshrines a parentâs rights and puts the parent not just at the table, but at the head of the table where the childâs best interests are decided. They also targeted diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) policies, claiming that they project ideologies on students and put too much focus on race, sexuality and gender identity instead of the quality of education.
Rep. Gene Wu, D-Houston, emphasized that these clubs exist because of a long history of oppression against the LGBTQ+ community. He warned against demonizing students and teachers for discussing gender and sexuality.
âThe real monsters are not kids trying to figure out who they are,â Wu said during the House discussion. âThe monsters are not the teachers who love them and encourage them and support them. They are not the books that provide them with some amount of comfort and information. The real monsters are here.â
Lawmakers shared personal stories about LGBTQ+ youth. Rep. Rafael AnchĂa said his daughter was a vice president of a pride club at her school. He stressed that these clubs âare no more about sex than 4-H or ROTC or the basketball team.â
âIt wasn't a sex club,â AnchĂa said. âThey'd get together and they'd watch movies. They'd color. They'd go to musicals. It was about a kid who felt weird who found her people and everything about it was good. I don't know why grown-ups in this body are so triggered with my daughter getting together with her classmates in a school-sponsored activity.â
AnchĂa also told the Texas Tribune he âdidnât sign up for five anti-LGBT bills this session.â
Rep. Jolanda Jones, D-Houston, shared her experience as a Black woman and a lesbian, saying she didnât come out until the age of 50 because she knew âthe world wasn't safe.â She warned that banning LGBTQ+ clubs could worsen bullying.
âAnd we have the nerve to say that we care about mental health,â Jones said. âWe've passed bill after bill about access to care, about youth suicide, about prevention and treatment. But this bill makes kids sicker, sadder, more alone. This bill doesn't protect children. It endangers them. It doesn't give parents more rights. It strips children of their dignity.â
SB 12 is often referred to as the âParental Bill of Rightsâ because it claims to give parents more control over their childrenâs schools. But Rep. Erin Zwiener, D-Driftwood, addressed those who are âafraid that your kids or your grandkids might grow up queer,â warning that the bill could harm family relationships.
âGetting silence in schools from the LGBTQ community, which is what this bill is designed to do, will not stop your kids from being gay,â Zwiener said. âIt will just make them afraid to come out. It will make them afraid to live their lives as their full selves. It will make them afraid to tell you when they figure out that they're LGBTQ and it might damage your relationship with them forever.â
Rep. Nicole Collier, D-Fort Worth, argued that allowing religious organizations in schools but banning âclubs that allow students to be who they are, is a double standard that flies in the face of the principles you say you support.â
âAn LGBTQ person can't change who they are any more than the fact that I can't change that I'm Black,â Collier said. âWhat you're saying to students today is that you will be accepted as long as you are who we say you should be.â
If signed by the governor, the bill will become law on Sept. 1.
First round of TribFest speakers announced! Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Maureen Dowd; U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-San Antonio; Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker; U.S. Sen. Adam Schiff, D-California; and U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Dallas are taking the stage Nov. 13â15 in Austin. Get your tickets today!