Trans News In Kansas From Kansas

Doesn’t make it better news, just local. I want to add:

This came about because there is a Republican supermajority in Kansas’s legislature. And that came about because the Republicans, who were in trouble in KS because of things they tried to pull (think Missouri/abortion, etc.) that voters don’t want, were worried that they could lose their majority in the Houses. They told Republican voters that if they didn’t keep a solid majority, there would never be a Republican elected ever again because Dems would redistrict Republicans to that place in Egypt. (But they weren’t that funny about it.) So, Republican voters, yet again, voted Republican even though they had strong misgivings, gave us a supermajority, and now the SOB legislators are doing what they, and only what they, want to do. And here we are on the trans issue, and it’s not the only issue they’re going to force.

I strongly, so strongly advise everyone reading to please please please pay attention to the down ticket elections, who is running, and what they’ve done and what they’re saying they’ll do. You have to elect people who understand they work for you, not vice versa. And now, on with the story.

Trans Kansans struggle with reality of Legislature’s ‘cruelty’ as driver’s licenses are invalidated

By:Sherman Smith and Morgan Chilson-February 26, 20266:52 pm

Jaelynn Abegg, a trans rights activist from Wichita, leads a group of around 50 people who used bathrooms Feb. 6, 2026, throughout the Statehouse to demonstrate what she called the absurdity of a state bathroom ban. The same law that includes the bathroom ban also invalidates driver’s licenses for transgender people. (Photo by Sherman Smith/Kansas Reflector)


TOPEKA — Transgender rights activist Jaelynn Abegg was furious Thursday morning when she received a letter from the state informing her that her driver’s license had been invalidated because of a new state law.

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Abegg, a Wichita resident, said she would only get a new driver’s license if she needs one before fleeing the state, which she plans to do as soon as she can afford it. In the meantime, she figures her U.S. passport will be “ID enough.”

“When things like this happen, I honestly get a little bit of a demon of rebellion in me, and I’m not sure exactly how I’m going to manifest that, if at all right now, but I can tell you that I’m very angry,” Abegg said. “I’m heartbroken. “This is my home state. I’ve lived here all but two years of my life, and yet, every year since I’ve been living as a woman and having come out as transgender, this state has done nothing but break my heart. If this state was a romantic partner, I would definitely call this an abusive relationship at this point.”

The Kansas Department of Revenue this week sent a letter to Kansans affected by a new law, which took effect Thursday, that requires the gender marker on a driver’s license to match a person’s sex at birth.

The letter informs trans Kansans that because the Legislature didn’t include a grace period for updating credentials, they are “invalid immediately, and you may be subject to additional penalties if you are operating a vehicle without a valid credential.” A spokesman for the agency told Kansas Reflector the law invalidated about 1,700 licenses.

The letter directed trans Kansans to surrender their driver’s license to the state before they can receive a new one, which will cost them $8.

“We apologize for the inconvenience this causes you,” the unsigned letter said.

Republicans in the Legislature placed transgender Kansans in their crosshairs at the start of this year’s session. The House Judiciary Committee scheduled a hearing with less than 24 hours notice on the second day of the session for a bill that would invalidate their driver’s licenses. The bill was a response to a Kansas Court of Appeals ruling last year that determined there was no harm in letting people change their gender markers, which Kansans have done since at least 2002 with no complaints.

A week after the rushed hearing, in a flurry of procedural maneuvers, the committee took action on the bill without warning. Republicans added language that would make it illegal for someone to use a public building bathroom, or similar space, like a locker room, that conflicts with their sex at birth. They then inserted the contents of the House bill into an unrelated Senate bill that passed the year before. That allowed the House and Senate to pass Senate Bill 244 the next day without ever holding a public hearing on the bathroom provision.

Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly vetoed the bill on Feb. 13. The House and Senate subsequently overrode her veto with all but one Republican, Rep. Mark Schreiber of Emporia, voting in favor of the bill.

Abegg, who organized a Feb. 6 “pee-in” protest, in which trans people and their allies filled a bathroom at the Statehouse, said lawmakers were “blatantly subverting the democratic process … because they know they’re going to get blowback.”

“This is a hallmark of a Legislature and of a government that has a deep, deep sickness in it, and it really saddens me that we’re living to see days like this, where there’s that sort of situation going on, and there’s not a greater public outcry about it,” Abegg said. “This should be a concern to everyone who values democracy and who values Kansas as a free state.”

Trans Liberty, a political action committee that fights for trans rights, issued its first-ever statewide evacuation order Thursday, when it urged transgender Kansans to flee.

Samantha Boucher, founder of Trans Liberty PAC, said in a statement there is “something deeply wrong with a government that erases its own citizens’ legal identities.”

Abegg said the warning to leave is “absolutely the right approach.”

“I don’t think that legislators in Kansas are done harassing trans people,” Abegg said. “I think that transgender health care for adults is coming next. It would not shock me within the next two to five years to see them come after name changes for transgender people. The cruelty has always been the point, and the objective has always been the complete erasure of transgender people from public life.”

Trans people and their supporters rally Feb. 6, 2026, at the Statehouse in opposition to Senate Bill 244. (Photo by Sherman Smith/Kansas Reflector)

Jessie Lawson, a trans woman from Wichita, initially planned to go to the DMV and refuse to pay for a new license, then decided against it.

“I can work from home and, for the moment, minimize the risk of getting pulled over,” Lawson said.

She said her first thought when she read the letter from the state was to wonder “how conservatives can live with so much fear and hate in their hearts.”

“Even at my most angry, I’ve never wanted to see an entire demographic of people wiped off the planet the way they do. It’s unreal,” she said. “The second thought is how I’m going to survive now that bigotry has been officially sanctioned by the state of Kansas.”

Lawson said she has wrestled with whether she should leave the state where she has lived her entire life.

“I have a great job and own my own home,” Lawson said. “All of my friends are here. Leaving would be very difficult for me. At the same time, this place is becoming increasingly hard for me to exist safely as bigotry takes more and more control of the state government.”

She added: “Please publish whatever you get from us. There needs to be a record that we existed and strove for peace and joy as long as we could.”

Rep. Brooklynne Mosley, D-Lawrence, posted on her Facebook page that she would be available Friday to drive people to the DMV to replace their birth certificates. She said she was willing to personally pay for up to five individuals’ fees if they have financial constraints.

The new law also affects birth certificates.

Jill Bronaugh, spokeswoman for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, said individuals will be responsible for contacting the Office of Vital Statistics to replace their invalidated birth certificates, and a $20 fee will apply.

The agency identified 1,849 birth certificates on which the sex has been changed, which can be attributed to correcting data entry errors or recognizing gender changes, she said.

“Each amended birth certificate will be reviewed manually by staff to determine if the birth certificate must be invalidated and amended,” Bronaugh said. “This process is expected to take several months to complete.”

10 thoughts on “Trans News In Kansas From Kansas

  1. Hi Ali. Thank you for posting this. It does have much more information than what I posted. I wonder why the republicans have such a hate for trans people and a desire to wipe them from the public square. Is it that they are the low hanging fruit they are going after first as they are the most vulnerable, before they come aber the rest of the LGBTQ+ community? Is it a Christian nationalist thing? What is the desperate driving force behind this? And is the public really behind the republicans on this? It has to be more than just keeping their elected office so they are playing to hates of those different. I just don’t understand the need to force everyone to be straight and cis and be like the legislators claim they are.

    Oh and Ali I love the preface you did. I try to do then also. But may I suggest you put it in a different color and or put a line between your opening thoughts and the story? That will make it easier for people to see it is you speaking and sharing your thoughts rather than the authors of the article. As you have noticed, I choose my favorite color blue to represent me. Just a thought as Belle of the Ranch says. Hugs

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’ll try to remember to color my comments differently. I try to either keep them out of the article, or italicize my own stuff if I have to intersperse. Color occurs to me after I’m finished, then I’m like, well, not goin’ back. But I’ll try to remember.

      As to the people, no. They are not behind this. They may also not care for the idea of trans people, but it doesn’t occupy every minute of their thinking; they’d prefer not to bother others about how they pee. Or live. Really, most Republican voters here are more libertarian; as long as they don’t see an actual man peeing in a women’s room, they don’t care. That’s why we stopped this last time. But this time, the Republicans are unstoppable. It’s also unfortunate that, while we had candidates running last time, the Republican misinfo took the vote, causing the supermajority.

      This time, I don’t know if anyone’s got enough money to run, so we’ll just have to see what happens. Typically, people in KS vote Republican until the money, roads, schools, etc. are such an underfunded mess that they vote in Democrats to clean it up. Not a majority; only enough to take care of business. Then they go back to Republicans again. They like to say KS is a Republican state. But the Republicans they mean, and who most are, don’t exist in today’s governments.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Hi Ali. I love it when you post your thoughts with the articles. I think people like it when I do it as those posts get more hits and responses. People want to see we are not just passing stuff on but reading and have thoughts on the subjects. Thanks for explaining the population to me and how they feel. Seems like Texas where the population is more blue and less republican but due to gerrymandering the state stays red with a republican majority. But that is about to change due to their hubris of even more gerrymandering. People are tired of the regressive ideas of the republicans. As Beau used to say elected republicans do not want to represent the voters they want to rule over them. They don’t want to listen to the people but tell them how they must live. Hugs

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    2. Oh, yeah. Specifically, this law is to punish all of us who didn’t want this law last time around, when it was vetoed, and we managed to keep enough Republicans to let the veto stand. Sort of like how Missouri legislators punished Missourians on the abortion issue; voters wanted their medical privacy and voted as such. So legislators went in and bollixed it all up in an end run. KS’s legislators are working to make abortion yet more difficult, as well, since we put the right to medical privacy in regard to women’s health in our constitution. They’re also, even though their own supporting voters are heavily invested, making hemp close to illegal again. Lots of money’s gonna get lost there! Investments and building and hiring are already in place. I don’t don’t if that’ll make a voting difference, or not.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Hi Ali. Thanks for the information, it is important as it helps me understand the issues and people’s feelings in places I am not. How do the regular republicans feel about the extreme ones doing these acts, will they vote the extreme ones out or just go along with the party? And I still don’t understand what makes these elected republicans so extreme. Are they Christian nationalists? What motivates them to do what they are doing to a population that clearly doesn’t want it? As for hemp and cannabis the pharmaceutical companies and the alcohol brewers donate largely to keep these products illegal as they cut into these companies profits. Moscow Mitch McConnell put a rider in a bill that passed to cut the legs out of the legal cannabis companies because it was seriously hurting the bourbon industries in his state. I posted how one of the big name brands sidelined brewing new products for two years due to lack of sales. Again thanks for explaining to me what is going on in your state. Hugs

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The extreme ones are simply mean people. They enjoy what they think is their power, and using it as they choose for whatever. Sometimes it’s to make people miserable.

          I know from experience that very few Republicans will ever vote Dem, except as I said, when they need people to clean up the Republican mess. If there is a primary, they’ll vote against the incumbent if they’re bad, but otherwise, they just don’t vote in those races where it’s a choice between Republican and another party. As I said, a very few will vote Dem. Very few.

          Liked by 1 person

          1. Thank you Ali. Off-topic. Even though I have no hunger I made a promise to eat. So I took a can of my favorite chili out and will heat it up with a couple hotdogs in buns and try to eat it. I wish Ron were here because he could coax me into eating and I have to force my self into it. But my plan is to post this, heat up the chili and two hot dogs, and put them in top sliced buns and slather them with the chili. I hope I can still eat it. Hugs

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