After voters in every corner of this state cast absentee ballots at record rates in 2020, a few lawmakers are trying to take us backwards, creating barriers to voting for some of our most vulnerable communities and undoing the accessibility that made the previous election so successful. Our democracy works best when citizens participate in elections, and we must instead work to make sure every eligible voter in Wisconsin can cast a ballot.

A handful of Wisconsin lawmakers recently introduced a package of bills that, if enacted, would harm voters in numerous ways and increase barriers for Wisconsin voters throughout the state, targeting our most historically disenfranchised groups, including people of color and people with disabilities.

Tell your elected officials to oppose these bills.

Senate Bills 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 209, 210, 211 and 212 would destroy many of the mechanisms that have been implemented to make voting easier in Wisconsin. They would, for example, prevent election officials from proactively sending absentee ballot applications to voters, and instead require voters to request absentee ballots and transmit a copy of their identification with each request.

These bills would also require extra paperwork for voters with disabilities who are indefinitely confined, forcing them to get a doctor's note about their status. They would subject nursing-home workers who encourage residents to vote to criminal penalties! They would also prohibit people, including caregivers – in fact, anyone but immediate family members – from returning ballots for voters.

The proposed legislation also targets drop boxes, limiting them to just one per municipality and requiring them to be attached to the building where the clerk's office is located. This would undermine all of the work done over the past year to increase the number of drop boxes to make it easier for voters to cast their ballots. Limiting drop boxes would create special barriers for those with limited transportation options, and who were able, during the last election, to find a drop box closer to where they live.

None of these measures or the harsh penalties that accompany them make any sense – unless the goal is to make voting harder, not easier. That's the wrong way to go.

To preserve our democracy, the people of Wisconsin must take action and voice their opposition to this blatant attempt to disenfranchise voters. Send a message to your elected officials now and urge them to vote down these attempts to suppress the vote.

Thanks for sticking with us.

Date

Monday, March 29, 2021 - 11:30am

Featured image

Let People Vote

Show featured image

Hide banner image

Tweet Text

[node:title]

Show related content

Menu parent dynamic listing

22

Show PDF in viewer on page

Style

Standard with sidebar

By: Colonel (Ret) Sheri A. Swokowski, Ph.D., ACLU of Wisconsin board member

The rights of transgender people in America are, again, under siege. State lawmakers  across the country are waging a dis-information campaign to roll back trans rights as the 2021 legislative sessions get underway. In January, elected officials introduced anti-trans legislation in more than 20 states, in almost all cases without being able to cite a single instance in their state where a trans athlete won an event, or kept another athlete from obtaining a scholarship.

Some of these bills would prohibit medical professionals from providing gender-affirming medical treatment, and ban and even criminalize trans girls for participating in women’s sports. This all appears to be part of a coordinated attack on trans people, aiming to rob them of their freedoms and invalidate their identities. 

A few weeks ago, some members of the Wisconsin State Legislature chose to join this misguided effort, as two representatives unveiled a pair of bills that would deny trans students the opportunity to participate in women’s sports at any grade level and in college.

Falsely heralding the legislation as a policy to protect women, proponents have branded the bills as a victory for gender equality, parroting thoroughly debunked myths about how trans athletes possess an unfair competitive edge over cisgender students. 

Athletic success is based on many disparate factors that vary from sport to sport, and being transgender does not give girls who are trans an inherent advantage over girls who are not. Despite the fact that trans people of all ages have been participating in sports consistent with their gender at all levels for years, we simply have not seen any dominance by trans athletes at any level of competition. 

The invocation of unsubstantiated claims to support false narratives about trans athletes is reminiscent of the tactics used to push the “bathroom bills” of a few years ago. Back then, lawmakers relied on egregious lies and fearmongering to mislead the public about the supposed dangers of allowing trans people to use the restroom that matches their gender identity. And even though those discriminatory efforts didn’t get enshrined in Wisconsin law, we are seeing a similar pattern play out today in Wisconsin and elsewhere. 

The truth is that trans students participate in sports for the same reasons other young people do: to challenge themselves, improve fitness, and be part of a team. And depriving trans girls of the opportunity to enjoy playing sports in the way the rest of their peers do sets a dangerous precedent. By taking away their freedom to engage in women’s sports, we invalidate the identities of trans girls and young women, telling them at a very vulnerable time in their lives that who they are doesn’t matter. That’s a message no one should have to hear.

Allowing trans girls to compete in girls’ sports doesn’t hurt anyone, as advocates for women such as the National Women’s Law Center, the Women’s Sports Foundation, Women Leaders in College Sports, and others have said. Participation in sports generally has a positive impact on students across the gender spectrum, and any effort to limit such involvement should be swiftly rejected. Research has shown that when trans girls are excluded from sports, they can suffer mentally, emotionally, physically and academically. Lawmakers who call these discriminatory measures protections for women’s equality are really just putting the well being of trans women in greater jeopardy.

Although Gov. Evers may well veto these bills, the people of Wisconsin should not forget what’s going on here. A few misguided representatives — people who are supposed to serve all of us, not try to divide us — are attempting to pass policies which would legally discriminate against trans students. We must band together to forcefully oppose these proposals and counter their transphobic narrative with a message grounded in acceptance, love and solidarity with all Wisconsinites. Trans people belong in sports. They belong in schools. They belong everywhere.

 

Date

Tuesday, March 23, 2021 - 10:30am

Featured image

Trans Sports Blog

Show featured image

Hide banner image

Tweet Text

[node:title]

Related issues

LGBTQIA+ Rights

Show related content

Menu parent dynamic listing

22

Show PDF in viewer on page

Style

Standard with sidebar

Pages

Subscribe to ACLU of Wisconsin RSS