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Trans youth care ban vetoed by Kansas governor again

Trans youth care ban vetoed by Kansas governor again

Yahoo12-02-2025
Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly has vetoed Senate Bill 63, which would have restricted gender-affirming care for transgender youth.
'Right now, the legislature should be focused on ways to help Kansans cope with rising prices,' Kelly said in a statement emailed late Tuesday. 'That is the most important issue for Kansans. That is where my focus is.'
The bill would bar health care providers from administering gender-affirming medical care – including puberty suppressants and hormone therapies – for someone under the age of 18, only for the purposes of gender transitioning. The ban would also apply to gender-affirming surgeries.
'Infringing on parental rights is not appropriate, nor is it a Kansas value,' said Kelly in her veto message. 'As I've said before, it is not the job of politicians to stand between a parent and a child who needs medical care of any kind. This legislation will also drive families, businesses, and health care workers out of our state, stifling our economy and exacerbating our workforce shortage issue.'
This is the third time Kelly has vetoed similar transgender youth care bills, but the bill may now have the support to pass.
The bill passed the state legislature with flying colors – passing the House 83-35 and the Senate 32-8.
In 2023, the attempt to override a past trans care ban veto lost in the House 82-43.
MORE: Lawsuit filed by transgender young adults, teens against Trump executive order
State Republicans quickly denounced Kelly's veto.
'The governor's devotion to extreme left-wing ideology knows no bounds, vetoing a bipartisan bill that prevents the mutilation of minors,' said State Sen. Ty Masterson in an online statement. 'The Senate stands firmly on the side of protecting Kansas children and will swiftly override her veto before the ink from her pen is dry.'
Top national medical associations such as the American Medical Association, American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, and American Academy of Pediatrics and more than 20 others argue that gender-affirming care is safe, effective, beneficial, and medically necessary for transgender populations.
Kelly joins governors past and present in Ohio and Arkansas in vetoing bills that targeted gender-affirming youth care. However, both of their vetoes were overridden.
Across the country, trans youth care restrictions have faced legal hurdles in their enforcement.
The battle and debate has most recently made its way to the national stage, with the Supreme Court considering U.S. v. Skrmetti, which will decide if Tennessee's law banning some gender-affirming care for transgender minors violates the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution.
Trans youth care ban vetoed by Kansas governor again originally appeared on abcnews.go.com
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