Alex Gonzalez, Producer
Thursday, June 29, 2023
Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs vetoed a number of bills this past legislative session which targeted the LGBTQ+ community.
Jeanne Woodbury, interim executive director of Equality Arizona, said the sentiment behind the bills still causes harm even though they were not passed. She added nationwide, there were more than 500 "anti-LGBTQ+" bills introduced during legislative sessions, and a majority of them specifically targeted transgender people.
There were 20 such pieces of legislation targeting the Arizona LGBTQ+ community.
Woodbury acknowledged while the state is lucky to have Gov. Hobbs in office, the bills still take a toll on the people who are affected.
"Especially if you're a kid. Especially if you're a parent of a young kid, and you're hearing these messages about where you belong ... where your family can live," Woodbury pointed out. "Getting the veto makes you feel safe, but it doesn't take away the danger."
Hobbs vetoed four different bills targeting drag shows as well as one bill which would have prohibited transgender students in public school from using restrooms or changing rooms matching their gender identity.
Woodbury emphasized the vetoes send a strong message to members of the LGBTQ+ community they do belong in Arizona, despite what she terms "threats and the harassment," being very real. Opponents of equality measures claim they threaten traditional family values.
Woodbury noted Arizona is home to some of the organizations behind what she called model legislation. She added when there are bills banning drag performances both in Arizona or in Tennessee, it is no coincidence the bills contain "similar language, regardless of what the relevant state statute is."
She pointed out in 2013, Arizona was the first state in the country to introduce a bathroom ban for transgender people, backed by Sen. John Kavanaugh, R-Fountain Hills, who is still serving and recently introduced a similar bill 10 years later. Woodbury said things start in Arizona.
"Even if they don't succeed here, they come up with the ideas here, they try them out, and then they spread them across the country," Woodbury observed. "So we're really uniquely situated to reframe the narrative in Arizona to make sure that we're protecting our community not just from potential laws but from this kind of organized 'anti-LGBT movement.'"
Woodbury added Hobbs is looking out for the community, but warns even when bills don't pass, the sentiment behind them is still alive, and they often take root at the hyper-local level, which is why she is calling for vigilance and action to restore integrity to local governance.
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