Democratic lawmakers in the Colorado Senate are poised to pass a
controversial piece of legislation that would grossly undermine parental rights and compel speech.
House Bill 1312 would, specifically, classify “misgendering” and “deadnaming” as child abuse; define both perceived offenses as discriminatory acts under state law; force schools to honor students’ “chosen names” for any reason; and prohibit educational institutions from enforcing sex-based dress codes.
Democrats in the state legislature not only invoked
House Rule 16 to kill debate before passing HB 1312 in a party-line vote on April 6 but smeared parental rights organizations critical of the legislation as hate groups on par with the Ku Klux Klan, indicating they were undeserving of consultation by virtue of their opposition.
Leftist lawmakers’ latest attack on parental rights in the Centennial State might have largely gone under the radar had they not also viciously attacked those parents who expressed concern. The rhetorical attack has, however, helped draw attention to the legislative attack.
Blaze News reached out to some of those parental groups that Democrats have smeared as hateful and apparently want to ignore as well as to other critics of the “unlawful” legislation.
It appears that what leftists regard as “hatred” is actually an admixture of Americans’ fidelity to the U.S. Constitution and their concern over further encroachments on parental rights.
As for the legislation, critics made clear that it will be challenged in the courts if ratified — although Focus on the Family culture and policy analyst
Jeff Johnson indicated there was hope yet as of Thursday that the bill could die before reaching Democratic Gov. Jared Polis’ desk.
Hatred, redefined
When Republican state Rep. Jarvis Caldwell raised the matter last week of whether non-LGBT parent groups were consulted ahead of the bill’s passage in the state House, Rep. Yara Zokaie
stated, “A well-stakeholdered bill does not need to be discussed with hate groups,” adding, “We don’t ask someone passing civil rights legislation to go ask the KKK their opinion.”
‘Colorado parents should be concerned.’
State Rep. Javier Mabrey later noted, “There’s no reason to go to the table with people who are echoing the hateful rhetoric going around about the trans community.”
Caldwell told Blaze News in a statement that “equating caring and concerned parents to ‘hate groups’ and the KKK is typical Democrat propaganda.”
“Colorado parents should be concerned,” continued Caldwell. “It’s not hateful to be outraged by their agenda. We have crossed the Rubicon for parental rights in this state.”
Blaze News reached out to Zokaie and Mabrey as well to Colorado House Speaker Julie McCluskie (D), the office of Gov. Jared Polis (D), and the Colorado House Democratic Caucus about the Democratic smear of parents across the state. They did not respond by deadline.
The El Paso County chapter of Moms for Liberty is among the groups critical of the legislation that were not consulted and then smeared as hateful by the Democratic lawmakers.
Chapter chair Kristy Davis clarified to Blaze News that Moms for Liberty’s opposition to HB 1312 isn’t rooted in hatred but rather in the U.S. Constitution. After all, the Democratic bill “infringes on parental rights and compels speech.”
“Our advocacy for parental rights is rooted in the U.S. Constitution and should never be labeled as ‘hate,'” wrote Davis. “We strive to ensure that all parents’ rights are protected, and we oppose HB25-1312, which seeks to use legislation to separate parents from their children.”
“Sections 2 and 3 [of HB 1312] represent government overreach by mandating the judicial system to apply transgender ideology in custody cases, while Sections 4, 5, and 6 force policies that limit parental authority over their children’s names and gender expression,” wrote Davis. “This legislation appears to be anti-family, pushing an agenda that appeals to only a fraction of Colorado taxpayers. It is harmful to both parents and children, creating unnecessary stress, fear, and separation and negatively impacting their mental health.”
Davis, who has
faced apparent threats online in recent months, noted that “parents have every right to be concerned about policies that affect their children’s well-being and their ability to make decisions for their families.”
‘We hate that children are getting sterilized and mutilated.’
Corey DeAngelis, senior fellow at the American Culture Project and executive director at the Educational Freedom Institute, told Blaze News that Zokaie “let the mask slip.”
“She detests parents who disagree with her so much that she doubled down on comparing them to the KKK,” said DeAngelis. “Colorado Democrats are control freaks trying to force their insane ideology onto the rest of society. Colorado Democrats want to punish parents who don’t accept the delusions of a small child.”
“They’re stomping on the rights of parents and hoping no one notices,” added DeAngelis.
Alvin Lui is the president of the parental rights advocacy group Courage Is a Habit — a group that has furnished some parents in the state and elsewhere with
tools to tackle gender ideology and has, along with Moms for Liberty and Parents Defending Education, been designated an “extremist group” by the leftist Southern Poverty Law Center. Lui told Blaze News that his group has neutralized the “hate group” label in part by adopting it.
“I say, ‘Absolutely we are a hate group.
100%. We hate what’s happening to children. We hate the people that pass transgender trafficking bills, which is what this HB 1312 is, essentially. We hate that children are getting sterilized and mutilated before they can even get their driver’s license,'” said Lui. “‘We hate everything that you stand for. We want to run you out of schools. We want to run you out of any political office.'”
‘Colorado Democrats just told Virginia’s Terry McAuliffe “hold my beer.”‘
Regardless of what parent groups do with Democrats’ “hate” label, its use in the first place is telling.
“What these assertions reveal is a troubling disconnect between some Democrats and the real, everyday concerns of parents,” said Davis. “It feels as though they’re dismissing the legitimate worries of moms and dads who simply want to have a say in their children’s well-being. Parents are the ones who know their children best, and when they speak up, they should be heard — not labeled as radicals or adversaries.”
Battle lost, war undecided
“Colorado Democrats just told Virginia’s Terry McAuliffe ‘hold my beer,'” DeAngelis told Blaze News. “Mr. McAuliffe, a Democrat, lost his race for governor after revealing he didn’t want parents to have a say in their children’s education.”
McAuliffe was governor of Virginia from 2014 until 2018. He ran again for governor in 2021. Whereas his opponent, Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R), championed parental rights — particularly parents’ prime authority over their children’s education — the former Democratic governor signaled a desire for a difference balance of power.
During a gubernatorial debate in September 2021, McAuliffe stated, “I’m not going to let parents come into schools and actually take books out and make their own decision.”
At the time, the battle over critical race theory and LGBT propaganda in the classroom was a hot-button issue for Virginia parents.
“I don’t think parents should be telling schools what they should teach,” added McAuliffe.
Youngkin handily beat the critic of parental authority and remains governor of the state.
With McAuliffe’s defeat in mind, DeAngelis told Blaze News, “Colorado Republicans should follow Glenn Youngkin’s playbook and capitalize on this issue. They need to fight back to rescue parents from socialist takeover.”
Numerous Republican lawmakers in the state Senate — where they are outnumbered 23-12 — have indicated they will oppose the legislation, which as of April 9 had not been assigned to a committee.
In a statement shared with Blaze News, Colorado Senate Minority Leader Paul Lundeen (R) noted that “HB25-1312 undermines one of the most sacred and time-honored principles of our society: the right of parents to raise their children in accordance with their values, beliefs, and faith.”
“When government policies attempt to substitute the judgment of bureaucrats for that of parents, we risk eroding a foundational pillar of liberty and personal responsibility,” added Lundeen.
‘Colorado used to be very red.’
Lundeen insinuated that the legislation would not only undermine the “sacred right of parents to direct the upbringing of their children without unjust interference,” but “pave the way for future intrusions into how families educate, discipline, or spiritually guide their children.”
Lundeen vowed to “stand firmly” against the bill and comparable legislation.
While Republicans could, as DeAngelis suggested, capitalize on this issue, it will take time to gain ground in the state legislature.
Both Brittany Vessely, executive director of the
Colorado Catholic Conference, and Jeff Johnson of Focus on the Family separately told Blaze News that Colorado’s political capture by leftists was decades in the making, orchestrated in part by a cabal of billionaires who poured billions of dollars into the state to strategically flip local districts.
“Colorado used to be very red,” Vessely told Blaze News. “It was more of a libertarian state — very rancher-dominated.”
“But [entrepreneur] Tim Gill, Jared Polis, and a couple others poured money into the state and flipped these districts,” said Johnson. “Once Democrats had control, they passed legislation that appealed to the left, to radicals.”
The legalization of marijuana, the promise of other forms of social deregulation, and the state’s general leftward shift apparently drew multitudes of radicals to the state, especially from California.
“So there’s just been, in the last 10 years specifically, a huge move from Colorado being very red to purple for a while to now being dominated with majorities of progressive Democrats in both chambers and an LGBTQ progressive governor and very progressive courts,” said Vessely. “So we have a trifecta in Colorado in the legislation where parental rights are being completely violated.”
‘HB 1312 is going to end up in litigation.’
The disconnect between leftist lawmakers and traditional Coloradans has been enough to
drive majorities in numerous counties to vote either to break away and form their own state, “North Colorado,” or to become part of Wyoming.
For the time being, they are stuck with lawmakers who are keen to undermine parental rights; to
force them to fund abortion; to bar health benefit insurance plans from denying or limiting coverage for sex-change mutilations; and to keep up the lies about transvestites’ sexes even after death.
From Polis’ desk to the courts
Opponents of HB 1312 do not presently have sufficient time to change the state of play politically; hence the ongoing discussions of legal action.
Colorado state Rep. Brandi Bradley (R), for instance,
vowed to sue and “keep suing” if the bill succeeds, stating, “I’ve birthed five children” and “will protect them to the Nth degree.”
Brittany Vessely told Blaze News that “HB 1312 is going to end up in litigation because it directly impedes upon the religious freedom of conscience and expression for all Coloradans across the state but especially for the faith-based community.”
Vessely explained that the public accommodation section of HB 1312 requiring compliance with gender ideology-based speech codes refers to the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act — the law
at issue in the case 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis decided by the Supreme Court in 2023 — which was amended in 2021 to add the terms “gender expression” and “gender identity” to statutes prohibiting discrimination against members of a protected class.
While there is a religious exemption in the state anti-discrimination law, Vessely indicated it really protects only places like parishes and church halls — not diocesan offices, not Catholic schools, hospitals, homeless shelters, or cemeteries.
“These are areas where a lot of our Catholic ministries are going to be directly impacted by the effects of this bill,” said Vessely, adding that Christian publications could similarly be impacted.
Jeff Johnson suggested to Blaze News that HB 1312 is clearly unconstitutional and fit for a challenge, adding that he has never seen a piece of legislation “try to do so many things at once.”
“So you have the attack on parents’ rights, which is unconstitutional,” said Johnson. “The Supreme Court has said over and over again that parents have the right to raise their children — they’re the ones in charge of their nurture and care and education — and this bill basically usurps that and says, ‘No, it’s abusive if a parent doesn’t go along with the child’s sexual identity confusion.'”
Johnson noted that while the bill presently targets court decisions in custody cases, once so-called “deadnaming and misgendering” have been “defined as abusive in this realm, it would be pretty easy for regulations to follow along saying, ‘Hey, if you’re not affirming your child’s sexual identity confusion, that’s abusive in any case. And [Child Protective Services] could step in and start taking children away.”
In addition to standing on shaky ground because of the abuse classification, Johnson said that HB 1312 is vulnerable to legal challenges both because it tells the court to ignore other states’ court mandates regarding parenting and because “it also coerces speech, requiring schools and businesses and employees to agree to the idea that a man can become a woman or a woman can become a man, and it forces people to use a person’s ‘chosen name’ and pronouns rather than going by the biological sex.”
‘They’re waking up to the agenda, and they’re saying, “No.”‘
Courage Is a Habit’s Lui suggested that besides legal challenges, Coloradans also have the choice of civil disobedience.
“They can arrest one or two people” for reality-affirming language, said Lui. “They’re not going to arrest 1,000 people. They’re not going to arrest 5,000 people for calling a man a man.”
“It’s not an easy answer once you get to this point,” continued the parental rights advocate. “Once you make fear a habit, they keep pushing you until they’ve got you over a barrel. And that’s why we always remind people: You got to make courage a habit.”
Vesseley noted that while the pro-life cause is presently facing neglect, especially at the federal level, there is a “tremendous amount of momentum right now for the parents in those organizations that are fighting back against the LGBTQ narrative that’s happening, especially in schools. We’re seeing that across the nation.”
Johnson suggested that Democrats have unwittingly awoken the sleeping giant by “trying to get every area of society in Colorado to comply with this agenda.”
“I don’t know if the pushback is from [the transgender agenda] or if it’s the parental rights issue, but I think people are starting to wake up and say, ‘A man can’t become a woman, a boy can’t become a girl, and vice versa.’ They’re waking up to the agenda, and they’re saying, ‘No, this is harmful to children and adults, and you can’t force me to go along with this,'” said Johnson.
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