© 2025. The Trustees of Indiana University
Copyright Complaints
1229 East Seventh Street, Bloomington, Indiana 47405
News, Arts and Culture from WFIU Public Radio and WTIU Public Television
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Some web content from Indiana Public Media is unavailable during our transition to a new web publishing platform. We apologize for the inconvenience.

Republican lawmakers push for, plan override vote on trans athlete bill following Holcomb veto

Gov. Eric Holcomb vetoed a bill Monday that would ban transgender girls from girls school sports, but the debate about rules for transgender athletes is far from over.

Indiana’s governor is facing criticism from fellow Republicans and calls for an override of his  veto on legislation banning transgender females from competing in girls school sports, a decision that put him at odds with a conservative cause that has led to similar state laws across the country.

The bill passed by  wide margins in the GOP-dominated Indiana Legislature,and the House speaker announced plans Tuesday for a May 24 meeting during which it could override Gov. Eric Holcomb’s veto with simple majorities in the House and Senate.

Holcomb  signaled support for the bill last month but said in his  veto letter Monday that the legislation “falls short” of providing a consistent statewide policy for what he called “fairness in K-12 sports.”

Republican sponsors of  the bill said it was needed to protect the integrity of female sports and opportunities for girls to gain college athletic scholarship but pointed out no instances in the state of girls being outperformed by transgender athletes.

Following the news of Holcomb's veto, several Indiana Republicans took to social media urging the General Assembly to override it.

One of them is U.S. Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.) who said in a call with reporters Tuesday that Holcomb's veto letter isn't a good "direct" response, and that the bill is important to Hoosiers.

Girls’ sports should be for girls, and allowing biological males to compete with them robs female athletes of a chance to compete and win. I’m disappointed Governor Holcomb vetoed a bill to make this law in Indiana, and I support a veto override to protect women’s athletics. — Senator Mike Braun (@SenatorBraun) March 22, 2022

"I thought the response maybe was a way to kind of side wind around the essence of the discussion," he said.

Eleven other Republican-led states have adopted such laws, which political observers describe as a  classic “wedge issue” to motivate conservative supporters, after governors in Iowa and South Dakota signed bans in recent weeks.

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem’s hopes for a  2024 Republican presidential run took a hit last year when she killed a bill banning transgender girls and women from competing in school sports that match their gender identity. Noem pushed a ban through the Legislature this year, promoting her proposal with a barrage of TV ads on Fox News that claimed she “never backed down” on the issue.

Republican Indiana House Speaker Todd Huston said GOP lawmakers will vote to override Holcomb’s veto and put the ban into law.

“This issue continues to be in the national spotlight and for good reason as women have worked hard for equal opportunities on the playing field — and that’s exactly what they deserve,” Huston said.

Holcomb’s office didn’t immediately reply Tuesday to requests for additional comment, leaving it unclear whether he would work to convince legislators to uphold his decision.

Other prominent Indiana Republicans called for an override vote, including state Attorney General Todd Rokita, who had a top deputy testify at legislative hearings in support of the bill while Holcomb stayed out of the debate that saw hundreds of opponents attending Statehouse rallies.

“We stand by the law and will vigorously defend it in court if and hopefully when the General Assembly overrides the veto,” Rokita said on Twitter.

The bill’s opponents argued it was a bigoted response to a problem that doesn’t exist, with the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana saying it planned a lawsuit against what it called “hateful legislation.”

Indiana lawmakers heard overwhelming opposition to the bill as it made its way through the Statehouse. Holcomb's veto letter outlined issues opponents described during public testimony – from concerns about lawsuits, to whether there's a problem for it to address at all.

Federal judges have halted enforcement of such laws in Idaho and West Virginia, while the U.S. Justice Department has challenged bans in other states as violations of federal law.

Holcomb pointed in his veto letter to the Indiana High School Athletic Association, which has a policy covering transgender students wanting to play sports that match their gender identity and has said it has had no transgender girls finalize a request to play on a girls team.

But Holcomb isn’t alone among GOP governors in his veto decision.

North Dakota lawmakers  failed last year to override Gov. Doug Burgum’s veto in which he argued that the state had no instances of transgender athletes trying to play on girls teams.

Utah Gov. Spencer Cox said March 5 that he would  veto a similar ban approved by that state’s legislature after he had been working to broker a compromise between LGBTQ advocates and social conservatives.

Cox said then that transgender athletes had found themselves the subject of political debate through no fault of their own.

“I just want them to know that it’s gonna be OK,” Cox said. “We’re gonna work through this.”

Holcomb’s veto comes seven years after Indiana faced a  national uproar over a religious objections law signed by then-Gov. Mike Pence that opponents maintained could be used to discriminate against gays and lesbians. The Republican-dominated Legislature quickly made revisions blocking its use as a legal defense for refusing to provide services and preventing the law from overriding local ordinances with LGBT protections.

Conservative Republicans, however, lined up against Holcomb.

House Speaker Todd Huston (R-Fishers) said in a statement Tuesday the House will take up a veto override vote May 24.