Home » If the state Senator Buck Newton has his way; North Carolina will be known as the “straight” state.

If the state Senator Buck Newton has his way; North Carolina will be known as the “straight” state.

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By Shola Akinyele

“Go home, tell your friends and family who had to work today what this is all about and how hard we must fight to keep our state straight,” Newton said at a rally last Monday.

Newton was speaking at a rally for supporters of a controversial state law that bars transgender people from using the bathroom that corresponds with their gender identity rather than with the gender assigned to them at birth. It also bans cities and localities from passing strong nondiscrimination protections that cover sexual orientation and gender identity.

Supporters of the new law say it’s needed to stop sexual predators from dressing up and entering women’s restrooms.Newton, the Republican nominee for attorney general in the state, said Monday that supporters of the law have to be vigilant and keep their “wives and our sisters and our children” from being exposed “to the sexual predators in the bathrooms.

But sexual assault — even in a women’s restroom — is still illegal, with or without strong gender identity protections. And states with such protections have not seen a rise in such crimes. Transgender people, however, are far more likely to be harassed in restrooms.

Since North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory signed the legislation, which was known as HB2, he and his state have faced intense national backlash. PayPal scrapped plans to expand its business to Charlotte, resulting in a loss of 400 jobs for the city and state. Bruce Springsteen, Pearl Jam, Ringo Starr and others have canceled planned concerts in the state in the wake of the law.

High-profile business leaders voiced their opposition to HB2, and now, the NBA says it may pull the 2017 All-Star game from the state unless the law is repealed. President Barack Obama called the law “wrong“Friday and said it “should be overturned.”

McCrory has tried to do damage control in the wake of the criticism, issuing an executive order that he said incorporated the feedback he’s received. The order expands the state’s employment policies to cover sexual orientation and gender identity, but otherwise keeps HB2 and its controversial provisions in place. The governor’s order has done little to stop the uproar, and on Monday, a group of state lawmakers introduced a bill to repeal the measure.

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