Doj Backs Maine Lawmaker Censored Over Translock Athlet Post

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EXCLUSIVE: The US Department of Justice (DOJ) and court lawyer Pam Bondi have come out to support the Maine State Rep. Laurel Libby as she seeks to get her distrust in the state legislator overturned.

Libby has been censored since February, after the State Democrat majority voted to remove her voting rights and speak rights of a social media post that identified a transgender high school athlete who won a girls’ pole welfare contest earlier that month.

Libby filed a lawsuit in response and is now looking for US Supreme Court Intervention after a district judge and the appeal court sentenced her.

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DOJ has now submitted an Amicus card that supports Libby in his trial, and Bondi has personally spoken in support of the Embated Republican State Representative.

“The Ministry of Justice is proud to fight for girls in Maine and stand with Rep. Libby, who is being attacked simply to defend girls in her home state. As our lawsuit against the state Maine illustrates, we will always protect girls ‘sports and girls’ space from radical gender ideology,” Bondi told Pakinomist Digital.

Amicus Brief claims that Libby’s censorship violates straight protective clause’s “one-person, one-voice” guarantee as state legislator withdrew her voting rights and spoke rights to a private act and offered to remove mistrust if Libby apologizes.

“The Stripping District 90’s voters of their house representation and votes because their elected representative will not apologize for fulfilling this obligation is far beyond the limits of an appropriate sanction,” the document reads.

DOJ Assistant Civil Rights Lawyer also has Armeet Dhillon in support of Libby.

“The Maine House speaker muted Rep. Laurel Libby to refuse to apologize for her attitude against male athletes in girls’ sports. This is not leadership, it is constitutional. Civil Rights Division is ready to defend the rule of law,” Dhillon told Pakinomist Digital.

Maine teens fight against state democrats about girls’ sports bills after enduring trans athlete -kaos in high school

Libby herself has insisted that she will not apologize for the social media post and previously told Pakinomist Digital that no one from the Trans -Athlet’s family or high school reached out to her about the post. She has also claimed that the athlete was already published in other media. The Portland Press Herald published a submission of the event and mentioned the athlete before Libby got his post.

Libby’s lawsuit name Maine House -speaker Ryan Fecteau and house office Robert Hunt as the defendants, and they are represented by Maine Attorney General Aaron Frey.

Fecteau, Hunt and Frey all defended the decision to censor Libby for the February post in their response last week.

“Like other Censures of Maine House members, the censorship resolution rep. Libby demanded to apologize for her behavior – not repeating her views. Rep. Libby has steadfastly refused to comply with this modest punishment designed to restore the body’s integrity and reputation,” the answer reads.

“Her rejection places her in violation of a centuries-old rule of Maine-House, Rule 401 (11), which Rep. Libby previously agreed, along with all her house colleagues, would control the house’s procedures. Rule 401 (11) determines that a member found by the body to be in accordance with their rules, cannot participate in floor debates or voting on the full house before they have made it to be satisfied to be satisfied to be satisfied with In violation of their, sorry for their bride.

Maines Democrats, led by Government Manager Janet Mills, have struggled unobstructed to prevent President Donald Trump from enforcing his “to keep men out of women’s sports” in the state.

Bondi and DOJ are currently involved in a lawsuit against the state directly over the issue, and Libby was present at the press conference where the trial was announced back in April.

ONE Examination of The coalition of the American parents found that out of approx. 600 registered Maine voters, 63% said school sports participation should be based on biological sex, and 66% agreed that it is “only fair to limit women’s sports to biological women.”

The survey also found that 60% of residents would support a ballot limiting participation in Women’s and girls’ sports to Biological Women. This included 64% of the independent and 66% of parents with children under the age of 18.

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