“Christian White Nationalists are threatened by trans and nonbinary community members’ freedom to live as ourselves”
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (Jan. 30, 2025) — Eight anti-trans bills are scheduled for a public hearing in the Missouri House Emerging Issues Committee on Monday, February 3 at 4:30 p.m. Four bills attempt to remove the sunset clauses in the state’s current gender-affirming healthcare ban (HB 35, 1016, 1038, 1081), three to remove the sunset clauses in the state’s current transgender athlete ban (HB 36, 113, 624), and one would introduce restrictions on legal name and gender marker changes on state-issues IDs impacting transgender, nonbinary, intersex, and two-spirit Missouri residents (HB 135). PROMO, Missouri’s LGBTQ+ public policy and advocacy organization, anticipates a heavy showing through both written and in-person testimony against these bills.
“Christian White Nationalists are threatened by trans and nonbinary community members’ freedom to live as ourselves,” said Shira Berkowitz (they/them), senior policy director at PROMO. “They lack the imagination to even begin to understand the expansiveness of our community and therefore seek to eliminate and erase us from daily life.”
In the almost one-and-a-half years since the gender-affirming healthcare ban went into effect, families and trans youth across the state have dealt with the fallout. Missouri’s two major medical provider systems, Washington University Transgender Center and MU Health, ceased care for trans youth. One in three medical providers are considering or have already left the state and 40% of parents with LGBTQ+ children are considering the same thing while many have already left (Source: Saint Louis University). However, the results of PROMO’s deep canvassing efforts around transgender rights shows that voters in Springfield and St. Louis do not agree with state lawmakers interfering with medical decisions of transgender people.
“People are tired of Missouri’s state government injecting itself into their lives where they don’t want them or need them to be involved,” said Courtney Cook (she/her), field director at PROMO. “There are plenty of real issues affecting everyone’s daily life. We need solutions to those problems, not creations of new problems where none existed.”
Those interested in taking action to stand against these eight bills can find more information through PROMO’s website. Media interested in speaking to community members about these bills can reach out to PROMO or individual organizations in their respective areas. Some of those groups include BlaqOut, Our Spot KC, and Trans Women of Color Collective (Kansas City), Springfield Trans and Ally Resource Team and The GLO Center (Springfield), Metro Trans Umbrella Group and St. Louis Queer+ Support Helpline (St. Louis), and The Center Project (Columbia).