Transgender Legislation Louisiana
Transgender Legislation Louisiana
Arielle Leighton, 13, reads on the Louisiana Capitol steps in Baton Rouge, La., on Tuesday, April 16, 2024. The eighth grader, who is a transgender girl, visited the state building with her Dad to oppose bills targeting the state’s LGBTQ+ community. (AP Photo/Stephen Smith)
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Transgender Legislation Louisiana
Megan Proffer, left, walks with her wife, Amanda Hawthorne, right, up the Louisiana Capitol steps in Baton Rouge, La., on Tuesday, April 16, 2024. The couple attended a day of Louisiana’s ongoing legislative session to oppose bills targeting the state’s LGBTQ+ community. (AP Photo/Stephen Smith)
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Transgender Legislation Louisiana
SarahJane Guidry, executive director of Forum for Equality, sits in the Louisiana House chamber in Baton Rouge, La., on Tuesday, April 16, 2024. Guidry, an LGBTQ+ advocate, has testified in opposition to proposed bills in Louisiana that target transgender people. (AP Photo/Stephen Smith)
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Transgender Legislation Louisiana
FILE - Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry addresses members of the House and Senate on opening day of a legislative special session focusing on crime, Feb. 19, 2024, in the House Chamber of the state Capitol in Baton Rouge, La. Unlike recent years when there was an LGBTQ+ ally in the Louisiana governor's office, nothing stands in the way this year of legislation hostile to transgender people. Democratic former Gov. John Bel Edwards was able to block most such legislation in previous years through vetoes. Now conservative Republican Jeff Landry is in the governor's chair, and the legislation is advancing rapidly. (Hilary Scheinuk/The Advocate via AP, File)
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Transgender Legislation Louisiana
FILE - Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry addresses members of the House and Senate on opening day of a legislative special session focusing on crime, Feb. 19, 2024, in the House Chamber of the state Capitol in Baton Rouge, La. Unlike recent years when there was an LGBTQ+ ally in the Louisiana governor's office, nothing stands in the way this year of legislation hostile to transgender people. Democratic former Gov. John Bel Edwards was able to block most such legislation in previous years through vetoes. Now conservative Republican Landry is in the governor's chair, and the legislation is advancing rapidly. (Hilary Scheinuk/The Advocate via AP, File)
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Transgender Legislation Louisiana
FILE - Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards talks at the governor's mansion in Baton Rouge, La., Dec. 7, 2023. Unlike recent years when there was an LGBTQ+ ally in the Louisiana governor's office, nothing stands in the way this year of legislation hostile to transgender people. Edwards, the former Democratic governor, was able to block most such legislation in previous years through vetoes. Now conservative Republican Jeff Landry is in the governor's chair, and the legislation is advancing rapidly. (AP Photo/Matthew Hinton, File)
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Transgender Legislation Louisiana
FILE - Benjamin Franklin High playwriting class students hold hands as they perform their play "The Capitol Project" on the steps of the Louisiana Capitol in Baton Rouge, La., March 27, 2024. Unlike recent years when there was an LGBTQ+ ally in the Louisiana governor's office, nothing stands in the way this year of legislation hostile to transgender people. Democratic former Gov. John Bel Edwards was able to block most such legislation in previous years through vetoes. Now conservative Republican Jeff Landry is in the governor's chair, and the legislation is advancing rapidly. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File)
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Transgender Legislation Louisiana
FILE - Jude Armstrong and fellow Benjamin Franklin High playwriting class students perform their play "The Capitol Project" on the steps of the Louisiana Capitol in Baton Rouge, La., March 27, 2024. Unlike recent years when there was an LGBTQ+ ally in the Louisiana governor's office, nothing stands in the way this year of legislation hostile to transgender people. Democratic former Gov. John Bel Edwards was able to block most such legislation in previous years through vetoes. Now conservative Republican Jeff Landry is in the governor's chair, and the legislation is advancing rapidly. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File)
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Arielle Leighton, 13, reads on the Louisiana Capitol steps in Baton Rouge, La., on Tuesday, April 16, 2024. The eighth grader, who is a transgender girl, visited the state building with her Dad to oppose bills targeting the state’s LGBTQ+ community. (AP Photo/Stephen Smith)