North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory on Monday dismissed criticism of a controversial new law curbing LGBT anti-discrimination protections as “political theater” that he says is concocted by left-wing activists, accusing them of a “calculated smear campaign” that included threatening local businesses to oppose the measure.
In an interview with NBC News, McCrory, a Republican who is running for re-election, said he would not back down from the measure, which blocks the city of Charlotte — and any other local government — from allowing transgender people to use bathrooms that match the gender they identify with.
He cast himself as a voice of reason, standing against an assault on “the norms and etiquette” that have existed for generations. And he said the law doesn’t discriminate against anyone.
“This political correctness has gone amok,” he said.
The battle has been raging since last Wednesday, when McCrory signed the law following a hastily convened special session of the state legislature aimed at heading off a Charlotte ordinance that extended LGBT anti-discrimination protections, including the bathroom provision.
McCrory said he was fighting for people’s privacy, and against any government entity telling businesses how they should implement bathroom policies.
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“Would you want a man to walk into your daughter’s shower and legally be able to do that because mentally they think they are of the other gender?” he said. “I happen to disagree with that, but I’ll allow business to make that decision themselves.”
At the same time, he acknowledged that the new law requires people at public schools and universities to use facilities that reflected their genders at birth.
McCrory called that exception “common sense.”
The governor spoke hours after a coalition of gay-rights and civil-rights groups filed a lawsuit against him in federal court, arguing that the new law violated constitutional freedoms of equal protection and due process — and a federal law against discrimination in educational institutions.
The North Carolina lawmakers not only blocked the bathroom provision, but prevented any local government from passing ordinances that prohibited discrimination in public places based on sexual orientation and gender identity.
The groups filed the lawsuit on behalf of two transgender people and one lesbian, all of whom are students or employees at public universities. They are named as plaintiffs.
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One of them, Joaquin Carcano, 27, who was born female but identifies as male — he sported light facial stubble on Monday — told NBC News he uses men’s bathrooms but under the new law will have to use women’s rooms. He said he worried about the reaction.









