Supporters of two citizen initiatives, one focused on parental rights and another on barring transgender athletes from girlsā sports, moved closer Friday to getting those measures before the Washington state Legislature, and potentially voters.
The political committee Letās Go Washington turned in signatures in support of the initiatives on Friday at the secretary of stateās office in Tumwater.
Letās Go Washington said supporters collected 416,201 signatures on petitions forĀ IL26-001. This initiative would repeal changes that legislators made this year to an earlier Letās Go Washington initiative that codified rights for parents of public school children.
The other initiative,Ā IL26-638, seeks to block transgender girls from competing in girlsā sports. Backers gathered 445,187 signatures for that measure, Letās Go Washington said.
Initiative sponsors were advised to turn in at least 386,000 signatures. Friday was the deadline for gathering the signatures.
Both measures are initiatives to the Legislature, meaning they would go before lawmakers for consideration in the session that begins Jan. 12. The secretary of stateās office will now verify the submitted signatures to confirm the initiatives can move forward.
āThis is not a partisan issue, this is a common sense issue,ā said Brian Heywood, the hedge fund manager who leads Letās Go Washington. He said that about half of those whoād signed the initiative petitions were independents or Democrats. āThis has broad support.ā
Critics of the latest Letās Go Washington initiatives say they pose safety risks for vulnerable students, including LGBTQ+ students and those seeking mental health support at school.
āLetās Go Washington is playing political games with the lives of vulnerable trans and queer kids,ā said Sophia Lee, a board member with the Gender Justice League.
āWhile most parents are loving and supportive, the reality is not all kids are safe at home, and need to turn to a trusted teacher or school counselor for help,ā Lee added.
Leeās statement was issued by WA Families for Freedom, a group opposed to the initiatives that has support from Service Employees International Union 775, the American Civil Liberties Union of Washington and the Washington Education Association, which is the stateās largest union representing public school employees.
Lawmakers have three paths they can take if the submitted signatures are verified.
They can approve the initiatives, making them law. They can reject the initiatives, sending them to the ballot for voters to decide in Novemberās election. Or they could pass an alternative to the proposed initiatives, and both versions would go to the ballot.
Also on Friday, Washington state Rep. Jim Walsh, R-Aberdeen, canceled an appointment that heād made to turn in signatures forĀ an initiativeĀ to the Legislature that called for proof of citizenship to be required for voter registration in Washington state.
Walsh said he planned to refile the measure as an initiative to the people and would attempt to get it qualified for the November ballot.
The secretary of stateās office said Friday it would likely take three to four weeks to review the signatures for the Letās Go Washington initiatives. In the meantime, the office will provide the Legislature with a āprovisional certificationā to make lawmakers aware of the initiatives.
Assuming that the signatures in support of the initiatives are verified, it will mark the third consecutive year that the Legislature will grapple with issues surrounding parental rights, transgender students and diversity, equity and inclusion in schools.
IL26-001, the initiative focused on parental rights, would roll back changes to state law made during the 2025 legislative sessionĀ by House Bill 1296.
That bill made revisions to Initiative 2081, the so-called parentsā bill of rights, which lawmakersĀ approved in 2024. Initiative 2081, backed by Letās Go Washington, established certain rights for the parents of public school students under age 18.
Among the changes in House Bill 1296 was to remove a guarantee for parents to be able to access student medical records. Republicans criticized the Democratic-backed rewrite of Initiative 2081 as undermining the initiative.
Rep. Monica Stonier, D-Vancouver, the lead sponsor of House Bill 1296, said her understanding is thatĀ IL26-001 would not affect key aspects of the law, such asĀ guaranteeing students a school environment free of discrimination, harassment and bullying.
She said it was still too early to say how Democrats, who hold majorities in the House and Senate, might handle the initiative if it does end up before the Legislature.
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