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Judge refuses to block enforcement of Kansas bathroom bill
The law invalidated IDs of over 1,000 transgender Kansans and imposes penalties for noncompliance while legal challenges continue, a judge ruled on March 10.
- On March 10, 2026, Douglas County District Judge James McCabria denied a request, so the law restricting transgender IDs and bathroom access remains in effect.
- Republican lawmakers pushed the measure through with a veto override, amending Senate Bill 244 in a way critics said bypassed public comment.
- When the law took effect on Feb. 26, it immediately invalidated IDs for more than 1,000 transgender Kansans, barred bathroom use aligned with gender identity, and imposed civil and criminal penalties.
- Penalties remain active while the lawsuit continues, a case management hearing is set for 9 a.m. March 18, and Kris Kobach, Kansas Attorney General, said his office will wait until March 26 to send an invalid-ID list.
- Representing attorneys told the court the law creates impossible circumstances for transgender Kansans, and Judge McCabria said most Kansans wouldn’t harass transgender people, rejecting assumptions of universal harm.
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Kansas judge denies temporary restraining order against state’s 'bathroom bill'
A Kansas judge has denied a request to temporarily block the state’s new law restricting which public bathrooms transgender people can use. The ruling allows the law to remain in effect while a broader legal challenge continues to move through the courts.
·Kansas City, United States
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Kansas Reflector
Judge rejects attempt to block law that restricts bathroom use, invalidates driver’s licenses
TOPEKA — Douglas County District Judge James McCabria declined Tuesday to pause enforcement of a new state law that invalidated driver’s licenses and criminalizes bathroom use for transgender residents, saying he doesn’t have enough information yet and that he believes…
·Georgia, United States
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Total News Sources11
Leaning Left3Leaning Right1Center4Last UpdatedBias Distribution50% Center
Bias Distribution
- 50% of the sources are Center
50% Center
L 38%
C 50%
12%
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