Tag: legislature

  • Florida Legislature votes to ban gender-affirming care for minors

    Florida Legislature votes to ban gender-affirming care for minors

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    The legislation the House approved on a 83-28 vote, SB 254, is less restrictive than previous versions of the measure. One of those versions sought to bar private insurance companies from covering gender-affirming care to minors and adults and forbid any changes to gender on birth certificates for transgender individuals.

    But the sponsor of the House bill, state Rep. Randy Fine (R-Palm Bay), said he’ll revisit those provisions during Florida’s next annual legislative session.

    “We cannot let perfect be the enemy of good,” Fine said. “There are certainly things we wanted in our bill and there’s always next year.”

    The measure marks the latest bill the Florida Legislature passed focusing on the transgender community. On Wednesday, GOP lawmakers approved a bill that ban school employees from asking students for their preferred pronouns and restricts school staff from sharing their pronouns with students if they “do not correspond” with their sex. They also passed a bill that makes it a misdemeanor trespassing offense for someone to use bathrooms in government buildings and schools that don’t align with their sex at birth.

    DeSantis, who is expected to announce a White House bid in the coming weeks, has publicly objected to gender-affirming care and said doctors who perform such related surgeries should be sued. His administration last year blocked state-subsidized health care from paying for treatments of transgender people while Florida medical boards also banned transgender minors from receiving gender-affirming care.

    The state actions banning Medicaid payments and minors for receiving gender-affirming care are currently facing separate lawsuits in federal court.

    The American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Medical Association support gender-affirming care for adults and adolescents. But medical experts said gender-affirming care for children rarely, if ever, includes surgery. Instead, doctors are more likely to recommend counseling, social transitioning and hormone replacement therapy.

    Democrats said Thursday that the bill banning minors from receiving gender-affirming care will hurt children diagnosed with gender dysphoria and will lead to transgender people being alienated in Florida.

    “Trans people are no different because they are humans too,” state Rep. Jennifer “Rita” Harris (D-Orlando) said. “Their existence is valid, and they’re no more likely to commit a crime or seek to hurt someone than anyone else.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Florida Legislature: We delivered for DeSantis this session

    Florida Legislature: We delivered for DeSantis this session

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    The fate of a “digital bill of rights” that was aimed at Big Tech companies is up in the air with just days left. And while the Senate and House have passed rival versions of a controversial bill to ban gender-affirming care to minors — another top priority that DeSantis highlighted in his state of the state speech — Republicans are at odds over some of the provisions in the bill, including a proposal to outlaw private insurance companies from covering treatments.

    The DeSantis administration did not respond to a request for comment on Sunday.

    DeSantis’ expected presidential bid has loomed over much of the legislative session, and Republicans for the most part fulfilled DeSantis’ agenda. The governor has already touted some of those policy wins both here and abroad, such as last week when, while on a visit to Israel, he signed into law a measure that cracks down on hate crimes.

    But Republican rivals and Democrats are already attacking some of these legislative achievements which are aimed at the conservative base but could turn off moderate Republicans. South Carolina GOP Rep. Nancy Mace, for example, publicly criticized DeSantis for signing a ban on abortion after six weeks of pregnancy, and billionaire GOP donor Thomas Peterffy told the Financial Times he was uncomfortable with the governor’s support for the abortion ban and wanted to wait before donating to him.

    But Florida Republicans still trumpeted the support they provided the governor.

    “Listen, I think we’ve delivered major, major victories on so many different fronts and the governor can rightly claim credit for having one of the biggest sessions certainly in Florida history,” Florida House Speaker Paul Renner said last week.

    Their support provides DeSantis a long-list of legislative victories to tout to GOP primary voters across the country as springboard into a likely presidential campaign in a few weeks.

    The list includes:

    — Making it easier to execute criminals in Florida

    — Banning abortion after six weeks of pregnancy

    — Imposing new rules on public sector unions aligned with Democrats, including banning the automatic deduction of union dues

    — Ending permit requirements to carry concealed weapons

    — Block children from attending adult-themed drag shows

    DeSantis has also highlighted, during recent out-of-state stops, Florida’s dramatic expansion of private school vouchers that lawmakers also approved this year. And on Friday, legislators sent a sweeping elections bill to him that would clear up Florida law to make sure he would not have to resign as governor if he becomes GOP nominee for president.

    Democrats, vastly outnumbered by the supermajority Republicans enjoy in the Legislature, have spent the entire session calling on Republicans to stand up to DeSantis instead of assisting his presumed bid for president.

    “This session was about the governor’s wish list,” said Rep. Fentrice Driskell, the House Democratic leader. “Effectively anything he wished for or dreamed for … the Legislature hustled to make it happen.”

    But Driskell contended that she’s not sure that the legislative wins will give DeSantis the “national boost’ he was aiming for. She said while some of the bills passed this year were “red meat” for the conservative base they have alienated some GOP donors and would be unpopular with general election voters in 2024.

    “We’re starting to see it backfire on him,” said Driskell.

    DeSantis’ success with the Legislature is also drawing the ire of former President Donald Trump, who is also vying for the GOP presidential nomination. Trump on Sunday sharply criticized the newly passed elections bill as a “total mess.”

    “I couldn’t care less if Ron DeSanctus runs, but the problem is the Bill he is about to sign, which allows him to run without resigning from being Governor, totally weakens Election Integrity in Florida,” Trump posted on his Truth Social platform. “Instead of getting tough, and doing what the people want (same day voting, Voter ID, proof of Citizenship, paper ballots, hand count, etc.) this Bill guts everything … ”

    Yet DeSantis hasn’t just fared well in getting bills passed, but in a year when Florida has a hefty budget surplus, he also been highly successful in getting most of his budget recommendations pushed through including tens of millions for environmental projects, teacher pay, and the expansion of the fledgling Florida State Guard.

    Legislators have also crafted a big tax cut package modeled largely on what DeSantis wanted, although a push by the governor to give Floridians a year-long tax break on certain household goods was not picked up.

    “I think the governor has done very well, I think the Senate has done very well, I think the House has done very well,” maintained Rep. Tom Leek (R-Ormond Beach) and House budget chief when asked about the governor’s budget priorities.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • DeSantis leans on GOP-controlled Legislature to thwart Disney

    DeSantis leans on GOP-controlled Legislature to thwart Disney

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    The threat came after Disney in February quietly, through a bureaucratic vote, wrestled back control of the Orlando-area park — though state officials didn’t learn of it until March. Disney’s maneuvering left DeSantis administration officials scrambling to respond and the governor ordered an investigation into the California-based corporation.

    During Monday’s press conference, DeSantis also suggested a newly-created state board that owns property in and around Disney World may convert that land into a state park, a rival amusement park or even a state prison. He also floated the idea that the board could look at whether to raise its tax rates, a move that would result in more costs for Disney.

    The governor said that other ideas — such as imposing tolls on roads serving the park — would not be considered. But the recommendations, taken in whole, are meant to push back on the criticism directed at DeSantis by former President Donald Trump and others that he had been outfoxed by Disney.

    During his remarks, DeSantis touted his decisive reelection victory as proof that Floridians backed his push to strip Disney — which is one of the state’s largest employers — of its long-held control over a special district that was initially created in the late ‘60s to spur the development of Walt Disney World.

    DeSantis also added in a statement that “their cheerleaders in the media thought that Disney ‘outsmarted’ the state, but the new control board uncovered their sloppy scheme, and the agreements will be nullified by new legislation that I intend to execute. Disney will operate on a level playing field with every other business in Florida.”

    Disney did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    The confrontation with Disney started over a year ago when the company opposed Florida’s parental rights in education bill, known by opponents as “Don’t Say Gay,” that banned classroom instruction about sexual orientation and gender identity in lower grades.

    After the company vowed to fight for the law’s repeal, DeSantis countered by having legislators pass a bill to dissolve Disney’s special district known as the Reedy Creek Improvement District. The governor and lawmakers followed that up during a February special Legislative session, however, by passing another measure that kept the district intact but with a new board appointed by the governor.

    However, before that new law took effect, Disney negotiated a deal with the old board during the winter that transferred control to the company. DeSantis and his board of appointees questioned the legality of this deal, though Disney has maintained in statements that it was perfectly legal and was approved in a public meeting.

    Florida currently exempts large theme parks from state inspections, which carves out not just Disney but competitors such as Universal. GOP Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson, whose agency oversees ride safety, said the legislative proposal would allow state inspectors to go in if there had been an accident. DeSantis, in clarifying remarks to reporters, added however this requirement would only apply to parks in special districts, which would mean the new requirement would apply to just Disney.

    State Rep. Anna Eskamani, a Democrat from central Florida, blasted DeSantis over his latest confrontation with Disney.

    “Gov. DeSantis once again demonstrates his latest attempt to target Walt Disney World that this has nothing to do with corporate accountability and everything to do with his own ego and attempt to get a ‘win” for his GOP base,” Eskamani said. “He needs to let go and move on.”

    State Sen. Linda Stewart, another Democrat from Central Florida, said DeSantis was interested in “retaliation, not good government. Turning corporations and properties over to government-control, as DeSantis proposes, just because the governor doesn’t like a position they’ve taken on gay rights, belongs in the playbooks of banana republics, not the state of Florida.”

    DeSantis had hinted at his latest actions earlier this month, but when asked about potential legislation, GOP Senate President Kathleen Passidomo said last Wednesday that if “somebody is working on it they haven’t shared it with me.”

    Katie Betta, a spokesperson for Passidomo, said in email that DeSantis’ staff began speaking to Passidomo’s late last week and over the weekend ahead of his Monday announcement. She also added: “As you are aware, issues can develop throughout the course of session.”

    The Disney legislation adds to a long line of priorities that DeSantis is pushing through in the weeks ahead of an expected presidential campaign. The Legislature has already passed measures on the death penalty, a ban on abortion after six weeks of pregnancy, and easing gun restrictions that had the backing of the governor.

    Legislators who joined DeSantis on Monday said they fully backed his latest efforts to go after Disney, including one whose district includes the theme park and railed at what she called Disney’s embrace of “radical gender ideologies.”

    “Here in the free state of Florida it is we the people not woke corporations,” said Rep. Carolina Amesty (R-Windermere). “We love Disney however you cannot indoctrinate our children.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • TikTok ban gets final approval by Montana’s GOP legislature

    TikTok ban gets final approval by Montana’s GOP legislature

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    Gianforte banned TikTok on state government devices last year, saying at the time that the app posed a “significant risk” to sensitive state data.

    TikTok spokesperson Brooke Oberwetter promised a legal challenge over the measure’s constitutionality, saying the bill’s supporters “have admitted that they have no feasible plan” to enforce “this attempt to censor American voices.”

    The company “will continue to fight for TikTok users and creators in Montana whose livelihoods and First Amendment rights are threatened by this egregious government overreach,” Oberwetter said.

    TikTok, which is owned by the Chinese tech company ByteDance, has been under intense scrutiny over worries it could hand over user data to the Chinese government or push pro-Beijing propaganda and misinformation on the platform. Leaders at the FBI and the CIA and numerous lawmakers, both Democrats and Republicans, have raised such concerns but have not presented any evidence that it has happened.

    Ban supporters point to two Chinese laws that compel companies in the country to cooperate with the government on state intelligence work. They also cite troubling episodes such as a disclosure by ByteDance in December that it fired four employees who accessed the IP addresses and other data of two journalists while attempting to uncover the source of a leaked report about the company.

    Congress is considering legislation that does not single out TikTok specifically but gives the Commerce Department the ability more broadly to restrict foreign threats on tech platforms. That bill is being backed by the White House, but it has received pushback from privacy advocates, right-wing commentators and others who say the language is too expansive.

    TikTok has said it has a plan to protect U.S. user data.

    Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen, whose office drafted the state’s legislation, said in a social media post Friday that the bill “is a critical step to ensuring we are protecting Montanans’ privacy,” even as he acknowledged that a court battle looms.

    The measure would prohibit downloads of TikTok in the state and would fine any “entity” — an app store or TikTok — $10,000 per day for each time someone “is offered the ability” to access or download the app. There would not be penalties for users.

    The ban would not take effect until January 2024 and would become void if Congress passes a national measure or if TikTok severs its connections with China.

    The bill was introduced in February, just weeks after a Chinese spy balloon drifted over Montana, but had been drafted prior to that.

    A representative from the tech trade group TechNet told state lawmakers that app stores do not have the ability to geofence apps on a state-by-state basis, so the Apple App Store and Google Play Store could not enforce the law.

    Ashley Sutton, TechNet’s executive director for Washington state and the northwest, said Thursday that the “responsibility should be on an app to determine where it can operate, not an app store.”

    Knudsen, the attorney general, has said that apps for online gambling can be disabled in states that do not allow it, so the same should be possible for TikTok.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • When a Legislature Goes to War With Its State’s Richest City

    When a Legislature Goes to War With Its State’s Richest City

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    ‘They’ve been stealing seats.’

    Tennessee was not ever thus. This is, after all, a state in which then-Senator Al Gore, a Democrat, carried every county in his 1990 re-election bid. “When I started in 1994, Democrats were in control of the House, the Senate, as well as the executive branch” statewide, said Larry Miller, a Memphis-area Democratic representative who is one of the longest-serving legislators in the Tennessee House. His tenure has overlapped with those of five governors — two Democrats and three Republicans. He was in his third term when Gore lost his home state in 2000. When Barack Obama started running for president, sometime in Miller’s seventh term, Miller noticed the rightward shift really accelerate. “The Republicans,” he said, “began every two years to gain more and more seats in the state.”

    In the decade or so since Republicans claimed a supermajority in both legislative chambers in 2012 — which effectively allows them to pass party-line laws without any votes from their handful of Democratic colleagues — the state has also grown, particularly the central zone that includes Nashville. Boosters have lately pitched the area to good effect as a kind of Silicon Valley of the South and, according to research from the Greater Nashville Technology Council, Middle Tennessee’s tech job growth exploded by more than 50 percent between 2015 and 2020, outpacing the national average. Amazon has set up shop there and Oracle has vowed to bring thousands more jobs to the area; other companies one wouldn’t think of as “tech” per se, such as Bridgestone and Nissan, have relocated their headquarters to Nashville and brought an army of tech jobs with them; and this being “Music City,” Apple, YouTube and Spotify all have a music tech presence here. The Wall Street Journal has dubbed Nashville 2022’s “hottest” job market, edging out Austin, Texas; another report found Tennessee leading the country in tech workers moving to the state since the pandemic. “Companies keep moving and opening new jobs. As soon as we fill them, we have more to fill,” said Elise Cambournac, the CEO of the Greater Nashville Technology Council.  

    This is one reason greater Nashville is the economic engine of the state, accounting for some 40 percent of the state’s GDP. (Another major one is tourism and, if there’s one bipartisan issue in the city, it’s annoyance with bachelorette parties.) And, though no one measures this directly, the city’s growing hordes of millennial tech workers may have contributed to its slight blue-ening over time — a Vanderbilt University poll shows an uptick of city residents calling themselves liberal or very liberal since it was first conducted in 2015, albeit from 26 percent to 30 percent. (They outnumber conservatives by six points, and self-described moderates handily prevail over both.) But metro-area residents do vote for Democrats: In the 2020 presidential election, Joe Biden notched nearly 65 percent in the county that includes Nashville, a five-point improvement over Hillary Clinton’s 2016 showing there. So the “Silicon Valley of the South” thing isn’t necessarily driving a huge cultural shift as much as showcasing a low-tax, quite affordable alternative to living in the actual Silicon Valley.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Utah Legislature passes resolution honouring Sikh community’s contributions

    Utah Legislature passes resolution honouring Sikh community’s contributions

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    Houston: The Legislature in the US state of Utah has unanimously passed a resolution honoring the Sikh community for their contributions and service to humanity despite facing “oppression and discrimination throughout the world”.

    The resolution was introduced by Representative Angela Romero and Senator Luz Escamilla and passed last week, Kutv reported.

    “The Senate unanimously passed H.J.R (House Joint Resolution) 4, a resolution highlighting the history and significant contributions of the Sikh community. We were joined by members of Utah’s Sikh community as well as those from India and other parts of the world,” a tweet from the Utah Senate read.

    The resolution appreciated the Sikh community for their humanitarian services despite facing “oppression and discrimination throughout the world”.

    “The state of Utah seeks to further the diversity of its community and afford all residents the opportunity to better understand, recognize, and appreciate the rich history and shared experiences of Sikhs to enforce laws for access to equal opportunity of humans, irrespective of their caste, creed, color, or appearance,” the resolution read.

    The senators gave the Sikh members in attendance a standing ovation before passing the resolution.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • AAP appoints Chaitar Vasava as Gujarat legislature party leader

    AAP appoints Chaitar Vasava as Gujarat legislature party leader

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    Ahmedabad: The Aam Aadmi Party on Saturday appointed tribal MLA Chaitar Vasava as its legislature party leader in Gujarat and Hemant Khava as the deputy leader, it said in a release.

    Vasava represents the reserved Dediapada assembly constituency in Narmada district, while Khavais is an MLA from Jamjodhpur in Jamnagar district.

    A legislature party comprises the members of a particular party in the House.

    The Arvind Kejriwal-led party had contested in 181 of Gujarat’s 182 constituencies in last year’s assembly elections but could win only five seats despite claiming to be the main contender to the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party.

    The BJP, on the other hand, registered a historic victory by winning a record 156 seats.

    Despite the defeat of its top leadership, the AAP polled 12.6 per cent votes. Four of its candidates won seats in the Saurashtra region, and one in a tribal seat of south Gujarat.

    Other than Vasava and Khava, the other winners were Umesh Makwana from Botad, Sudhir Vaghani from Gariadhar, and Bhupat Bhayani from Visavadar.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )