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The representative of the state of Maine, Laurel Libby, has become a national figure of the movement to keep the trans athletes outside the sports of girls in February when she called a Trans athlete for Greely High School who won a pole jump competition for girls.
The post led to the censored Libby, which she fought to the Supreme Court to overthrow. It was granted to him voting rights by the Supreme Court on May 15.
On Tuesday, the Trans athlete that the Libby post called was not presented to participate in the class A athletics championships of Maine A, according to several witnesses.
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Maine Laurel Libby’s legislator
Libby reacted to news in a statement to PK Press Club Digital.
“Yesterday, a biological man who won the female state championship in February chose not to participate in the leaps to the pole of the girls in the outdoor class B championship of Maine, and a girl rightly won the State Championship,” said Libby.
“The opportunities of our daughters and our internships on the podium should be decided by their hard work and their performance, not the whims of others. All the girls of Maine should have the guarantee of a fair, safe and level playground, which is not the case as long as our laws allow biological men to participate in the sports of girls.”
PK Press Club Digital contacted Greely High School to comment.
The female athletes won all the major medals of the events of the athletics finals of the Maine girls on Tuesday, after the delay in the competition on Saturday due to the weather.
He marked the end of a controversial athletic season for the State, while the Greely High School’s trans trans trans athlete and another representing North Yarmouth Academy competed in the context of political conflicts.
The current laws of Maine have led girls through the state expressing indignation, because at least two trans athletes have won athletics, cross-country and Nordic ski competitions in recent years.
The student of almost Isle, Hailey Himes, previously told PK Press Club Digital that she was at the February Meeting of the State that Libby had published on the place where the Trans athlete of Greely High School won first place in the pole jump for girls.
“I looked at this male vaulter stand on the podium and we were all like watching, we were like” we are almost sure that she is not a girl. There is no way that it is a “” said Himes. “It was really discouraging, especially for girls on the podium not in the first place. So it motivated me to fight for them.”
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 LycĂ©e
Himes, as well as his athletics teammates Cassidy Carlisle, Lucy Cheney and Carrlyn Buck, walked in the capital of Augusta’s state in early May to meet the GOP leaders on the issue and put pressure on the state legislature to adopt invoices prohibiting the biological men of the girls.
Buck added: “These are not only the points, it is also that our teammates will feel discouraged when they are placed in an event against them, because they will already know that the result is decided, by playing against a biological man who is biologically stronger than them, so they have no chance.”
While Libby is fighting a legal battle which included an intervention by the Supreme Court for his censorship to overturn, the democratic leadership of the State is fighting against a battle against the administration of President Donald Trump on the broader issue of the inclusion of trans athletes in the sports of girls.
The United States Ministry of Justice has brought legal action against the state in response to the administration of Governor Janet Mils openly defying Trump’s decree “Hels outside of Women’s Sports”.
A federal judge set a date of trial on April 1, 2026 on Tuesday for this trial.
The Trump administration said the Maine’s Ministry of Education violated the Federal Anti-Discrimination Act on Title IX by allowing transgender girls to participate in women’s teams.
Meanwhile, Maine’s leaders refused to accept a written amendment to keep biological men outside the sports of girls, citing the protections of the Maine Human Rights Act on gender identity.
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”.
The survey also revealed that 60% of residents would support a voting measure limiting participation In Sports of women and girls at Biological women. This included 64% of the self -employed and 66% of parents with children under the age of 18.