On Wednesday Chloe’s Law passed the Wyoming House on third reading. The bill heads to the Governor’s desk for signature.
This is the closest we have come to ending “gender affirmation” abuses of children in Wyoming.
The people of Wyoming, through their elected representatives, have spoken— and they’ve spoken clearly. Senate File 99 passed the House 55-6 and the Senate 26-5.
A vast majority of the Wyoming Legislature agrees that the innocence of childhood must be protected and that very serious and very painful mental health difficulties should be treated with compassion, not chemicals or scalpels.
Contact Governor Gordon today and urge him to sign Chloe’s Law.
Also Headed to Gordon’s Desk…
Senate File 109 (Prohibit Red Flag Gun Seizure Act) passed the House on Wednesday after an onslaught of weakening amendments were repeatedly defeated. Because these amendments directly threatened your Second Amendment rights, the WYFC called for a recorded vote on each one.
During the debate, “Wyoming Caucus” member Representative Dan Zwonitzer (R-Laramie) decried the use of roll call votes, calling the accountability measure “threatening” and a “weaponization of the process.”House Bill 125 (Repeal gun free zones and preemption amendments) passed the Senate Thursday in the same form as it left the House.
ICYMI- Governor Gordon calls Parental Rights in Education “dangerous”
After the WYFC successfully proposed multiple strengthening amendments to what was Senate File 9 (Parental Rights in Education), the bill was sent to the Governor’s desk. In its final form, the bill requires schools to notify parents of changes in their kids’ mental wellbeing, prohibits schools from performing health screenings without parental consent, and bans instruction in radical gender ideology.
The Governor neither signed nor vetoed the bill, allowing it to be enacted without his signature. In a letter describing this decision, Gordon called the bill “dangerous” and claimed it erodes local control.
We strongly disagree. There is no more “local” control than that of parents, who are constitutionally vested with the fundamental right to direct the education and upbringing of their kids.
Stay tuned for more.