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  • Kevin Hendricks is a local news editor with nm.news. He is a two-decade veteran of local news as a sportswriter and assistant editor with the ABQ Journal and Rio Rancho Observer.

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By Source NM

A committee tabled legislation Feb. 13 from New Mexico Republicans that sought to ban transgender athletes from womenโ€™s sports teams and echoed an executive orderย signed by President Donald Trump earlier this month.

The state House Consumer and Public Affairs Committee voted 4-2 on party lines to table House Bill 185, following an incendiary argument over the committeeโ€™s rules.

The bill also echoes legislation the U.S. House of Representatives passed last month; 25 states have limited or banned transgender womenโ€™s participation in womenโ€™s sports.

Three of HB 185โ€™s sponsors, Republican Reps. Rod Montoya from Farmington, Andrea Reeb of Clovis and Rebecca Dow of Truth or Consequences, argued it protects scholarships and opportunities for women who are โ€œdisplaced by male athletes.โ€

LGBTQ+ groups, former athletes, youth coaches and transgender people objected to the bill in public comment, while other athletes, former coaches and lobbyists advocated their support.

Zoรซ Unruh, a nurse and former collegiate basketball player for Washington University in St. Louis, said the legislationโ€™s assumptions about trans athletes are not based on data.

โ€œThis bill takes away the opportunity for trans youth to compete in sports and thatโ€™s really not OK,โ€ Unruh said. โ€œA ban on trans women athletes does not protect anyone; instead it endangers all women and girls in the category, especially those who are already marginalized.โ€

Tensions erupted after Rep. Andrea Romero (D-Santa Fe) condemned the bill.

โ€œTogether, we can create a world, a state where everyone regardless of their gender identity has the opportunity to play, compete, and belong in New Mexico,โ€ Romero said in the conclusion of her statement. โ€œTrans people belong in New Mexico.โ€

Montoya asked Romero if she had a question about the bill. Romero responded that she only had a statement.

 Rep. Joanne Ferrary (D-Las Cruces) who chairs the House Consumer and Public Affairs committee called for order after an argument with Rep. Stefani Lord (R-Sandia Park) in a Thursday Feb. 13, 2025 hearing. (Danielle Prokop / Source NM)

This prompted objections from State Rep. Stefanie Lord (R-Sandia Park) who said Chair Rep. Joanne Ferrary (D-Las Cruces) had unfairly limited her from making statements and had requested Lord only ask questions.

In the 33-minute portion of the hearing for committee questions and vote, Lord and Rep. John Block (R-Alamogordo) asked questions and received answers for 23 minutes.

โ€œExcuse me,โ€ Ferrary said. โ€œYou had plenty of time to make plenty of statements.โ€

Lord and Ferrary then proceeded to have a back-and-forth on the topic.

Subsequently, following the 4-2 roll call vote to table the bill, Lord and Block requested time to explain their votes, and Ferrary set one-minute limits on their comments.

Lord said she was โ€œbeing shut down every time just because I am a Republican; I have no equality, no equity as a woman and my voice is being silenced.โ€

Kevin Hendricks is a local news editor with nm.news. He is a two-decade veteran of local news as a sportswriter and assistant editor with the ABQ Journal and Rio Rancho Observer.

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