Republicans, who have a supermajority in the legislature, could override DeWine’s veto and might push back.
“This bill would impact a very small number of Ohio’s children. But for those children who face gender dysphoria, the consequences of this bill could not be more profound. Ultimately I believe this is about protecting human life,” DeWine said Friday during a news conference announcing the decision. “Many parents have told me that their child would not have survived, would be dead today, if they had not received the treatment they received from one of Ohio’s children’s hospitals.”
“These are gut-wrenching decisions that should be made by parents and should be informed by teams of doctors who are advising them,” DeWine continued. “Were I to sign House Bill 68, or were House Bill 68 to become law, Ohio would be saying that the state, that the government knows better what is medically best for a child than the two people who love that child the most: The parents.”
Hundreds of anti-trans bills have wound their way through dozens of state legislatures across the country. Almost half the states in the nation have passed laws targeting transgender people — including states that border Ohio. Many of these bills ban gender-affirming care for minors and restrict trans girls’ participation in school athletics; DeWine said he did not consider that provision in Ohio’s bill.
Ohio’s Saving Adolescents From Experimentation Act, or SAFE Act, would have prohibited hormone therapy, puberty blockers and gender reassignment surgery for people under 18. The measure also would have prohibited transgender girls from playing on sports teams designated for girls and women in high school and college, known as the Save Women’s Sports Act. Its sponsor, state Rep. Gary Click (R), has said that the measure was not about “culture wars” but about “medical ethics.”
Click’s office had told The Washington Post that if vetoed, he would call for the legislature to override the veto.
DeWine said that while he is vetoing the bill, he is directing his administration to begin work on administrative rules “to establish important protections for Ohio children and Ohio adults” on the issue. This will hopefully avoid a veto override, he said.
Ohio legislators sent the bill to DeWine this month after heated debates among lawmakers. Proponents argued that the measure focused on the well-being of children; opponents argued that the bill was not supported by science and, in turn, could cause more harm than good.
Hundreds of people testified in hearings on the legislation this year, with 87 people testifying during a state Senate committee hearing in early December that stretched past 11 p.m. A majority of them testified against the bill, and many of those who supported the ban flew in from out of state to testify.
The bill passed the Ohio Senate 24-8 and the House 61-27, largely along party lines in the Republican-controlled chambers, joining more than 20 states that have passed similar restrictions in the past two years.
Ohio resident Rick Colby broke party lines in May to testify against the bill as a Republican. His adult son is transgender, and has received gender-affirming care in the state, Colby told The Post this week, referring to the bill as a “horror” and adding that it suggests a disparity among Ohioans’ ability to care for their trans children.
While minors who are already receiving gender-affirming care would’ve been allowed to continue, other parents “would be criminals, if they seek care for their child after the bill becomes effective. It’s crazy,” Colby said, suggesting that the governor consider creating a commission to study the issue instead. “This is not like some partisan issue here. This is an issue that transcends politics. … Get all the right people together, parents and even supporters of the bill, get them all together. Then have public meetings.”
Through new administrative rules, DeWine said he seeks to ban surgeries for gender-affirming care for minors and levy restrictions to prevent “pop-up clinics” or “fly-by-night operations” that would provide poor care. He said that the relevant agencies will begin collecting data.
DeWine had declined to take a position on the bill until it arrived at his desk. Over the course of about two weeks, the governor consulted with various factions, including families with trans youths.
Ohio resident Kelli Marie, an opponent of the bill who has a trans daughter, met with DeWine this week, she said.
“Christmas Eve day, Gov. DeWine contacted me and asked if we would meet with him. He invited our family to come to his home in Cedarville. He wanted to meet Allison and hear about our journey,” Marie posted on Facebook. “Allison shared her story as she always does — from the heart. Not hesitating to share the darkest times. Mike and I spoke about our fears, our lack of understanding and of the process of coming to understand that this was Allison’s truth.”
“We thanked him for his leadership during the pandemic. For turning to medicine and science to save lives. And we’re asking him to do that again,” Marie continued.
Across the country, states are embroiled in battles over such laws.
Nick Zingarelli moved his family from Missouri to Ohio in part because of the laws targeting gender-affirming care in Missouri. Zingarelli’s 14-year-old daughter is transgender, and is now receiving care in Ohio.
Zingarelli hopes that the Republican governor’s veto moves some of the party’s lawmakers to change their vote, hindering the bill proponents’ ability to override DeWine.
“We are very grateful for the grandfather clause which protects [my daughter’s] right to access care. But what about all the other kids that are in different stages of their journey?” he said.
“What about the kid that’s been diagnosed with gender dysphoria, but is not yet at the point that medical intervention is appropriate? That [would have been] eliminated as an option for them. What about the children that have sought medical care here because there’s no opportunity to receive that medical care where they live?”
This summer, despite a ruling by a Travis County District Court judge, a Texas law preventing young people from medically transitioning genders took effect, prohibiting health providers from providing treatments such as puberty blockers and hormones to youths. Many states with Republican supermajorities — such as Missouri — have taken aim at transgender related-issues in their chambers.
The matter may end up in the country’s highest court. Last month, transgender youths, their families and their medical providers asked the Supreme Court to block a Tennessee law that bans gender-affirming care for minors. If the high court takes the case, it would be the first opportunity the justices have had to weigh in on such restrictions, The Post reported.
Casey Parks contributed to this report.