The Maine’s legislator reacts to the decision of the Supreme Court in the midst of the Trans Combat Trans

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The representative of the state of Maine, Laurel Libby, is authorized to vote for his voters after three months of censored, thanks to a decision of the Supreme Court 7-2 on Tuesday.

After the State Democrat majority voted to strip Libby of its voting rights in February for having made a publication on social networks which called a biologically trans athlete who won a pole jump competition for girls, she fought a legal battle to overthrow him to the Supreme Court. And that borne fruit with Tuesday’s decision.

Libby described the battle a case of “civil rights” in an interview with PK Press Club Digital.

“I certainly believe that it is a question of civil rights for the girls and girls of Maine through the country who are on the sidelines by biological men,” said Libby, adding later that censorship “was political reprisals from start to finish”, “on his vocal position on the inclusion of trans athletes.

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Libby believes that the decision is essential to protect Americans who want to denounce the authorization of trans athletes in the sports of girls and women while the country is in a central dead end on the issue.

The main accused of the Libby trial, the president of the Maine Chamber, Ryan Fecteau, who adopted censorship against Libby on February 15, promised to restore Libby’s voting rights to comply with the Supreme Court’s decision.

“In accordance with the call for the Supreme Court’s injunction, the Libby representative’s ability to vote on the room prosecution was restored until the current call process has followed its course,” Foxteau to PK Press Club Digital told. “The Chamber’s clerk, against which the injunction is against, has already respected this court decision. We are impatient to continue with the important work that the people of Maine expect us.”

President Donald Trump has signed an executive decree that requires states only allow women to compete, but several states managed by Democrat, including the Maine, have challenged order and continued to allow trans inclusion.

The United States Ministry of Justice and Prosecutor General Pam Bondi even put their own legal action against the state of Maine for continuing to challenge the order.

The Maine shaken by the domination of trans athletes during the meeting on the track of the girls in the midst of a continuous legal conflict with Trump

Libby was a central figure in the conservative decline against democratic policies that allow trans inclusion in girls’ sports in Maine. In addition to his trial against Fecteau, Libby has repeatedly criticized Mills for his refusal to comply with Trump.

“Ryan Fecteau and Janet Mills govern our state for six years with an iron fist, whatever the will of the Maine,” said Libby. “This sends a message that they cannot continue to operate outside the Constitution and ignore the will of the people of Maine.”

A survey on The American Parents Coalition noted that out of approximately 600 registered voters from Maine, 63% said that the participation of school sports should be based on organic sex, and 66% agreed that it was “fair to restrict the sports of women to organic women”.

Many Maine residents even have entire school districts clashed against Mills’ policies alongside Libby. The school districts of Maine RSU n ° 24 and MSAD n ° 70 have each succeeded in their own localized resolutions to keep places for girls only. There have also been three large -scale demonstrations against current policies of the Augusta state capital since February.

Maine’s teenagers fight against the Democrats of the State on the girl’s sports bill after having endured the chaos of the Trans athlete at the Lycée

And Libby received support from the federal government along the way.

A few days before the decision, the Doj filed a memory of Amicus on the name of Libby at the Supreme Court, and Bondi spoke to support the legislator in difficulty at PK Press Club Digital.

“I am so grateful for the response of the Attorney General Pam Bondi,” said Libby.

However, the Libby Legal Battle is not yet over.

The decision of the Supreme Court granted her his right to vote on the soil of the State House, but she still has the right to speak. The Libby case will now return to the first circuit court of appeal for oral arguments on June 5, while it will seek to return to its voting rights.

REP. Laurel Libby, R-Auburn, speaks with a colleague on February 14, 2023, at the State House in Augusta, Maine. (AP photo / Robert F. Bukaty, file)

In addition, Libby could not vote on several bills of the state legislature in the last three months during its censorship. These included the state-of-the-art bi-year budget vote and a bill to codify the maine’s human rights law, which protects trans inclusion in the sports of girls, in the constitution of the State.

Libby said that she thought that the files should be reflected to also include her vote on these bills, but does not yet know if she will actively seek to legally change these files legally.

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