The Maine Wire
  • News
  • Commentary
  • The Blog
  • About
  • Investigations
  • Support the Maine Wire
  • Store
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending News
  • Skin-Deep Standards Signal Hypocrisy As Elizabeth Warren Set To Rally With Graham Platner In Portland
  • Embattled California Democrat U.S. Rep Accused Of Rape, Drummed Out Of Governor’s Race, Resigning
  • Maine Republican Lawmakers Rally Support for Referendum on Girls’ Sports, Criticize Ballot Language Ahead of Hearing
  • Police Raid Auburn Hotel and Arrest Two Lewiston Residents on Drug Charges
  • Bell-to-Bell Cell Phone Bans Coming Soon to All Maine School Districts
  • Massachusetts Greenwashes Government Overreach To Shrink Miles Traveled In Personal Vehicles
  • New York Fugitive Wanted In Connection with Gang Shootings Found in Waterville
  • Windham Woman Arrested After Trying to Conceal Drugs During Traffic Stop
Facebook Twitter Instagram
The Maine Wire
Tuesday, April 14
  • News
  • Commentary
  • The Blog
  • About
  • Investigations
  • Support the Maine Wire
  • Store
The Maine Wire
Home » News » News » ‘Maine Girls’ Dad’ Referendum Ballot Question Released as Bellows Opens Public Comment Period
News

‘Maine Girls’ Dad’ Referendum Ballot Question Released as Bellows Opens Public Comment Period

Jon FetherstonBy Jon FetherstonApril 7, 2026Updated:April 7, 20264 Comments3 Mins Read2K Views
Facebook Twitter Email LinkedIn Reddit
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

AUGUSTA, Maine – Secretary of State Shenna Bellows is now accepting public comment on the draft wording of a citizen initiative backed by a Maine father known publicly as the “Maine Girls’ Dad,” whose referendum aims to restrict school sports participation and access to certain school facilities based on a student’s original birth certificate.

The proposed question is tied to a referendum effort titled “An Act to Designate School Sports Participation and Facilities by Sex.” Unless the Maine Legislature enacts the bill as written, the measure will appear on the November 3, 2026 ballot.

The draft ballot question reads:
“Do you want to change civil rights and education laws to require public schools to restrict access to bathrooms and sports based on the gender on the child’s original birth certificate and allow students to sue the schools?”

Read more: https://t.co/RqH7lLYQW6

— Rep. Laurel Libby (@laurel_libby) April 7, 2026

Under Maine law, the secretary of state is required to present proposed legislation “concisely and intelligibly” as a ballot question. Bellows’ office announced Monday that the public comment period will run for 30 days, from April 7, 2026, through 5 p.m. on May 7, 2026. The final wording must be completed by May 28.

Mainers can submit comments through the Secretary of State’s online form, by email, or by mail. Written comments by email must be sent to [email protected] with the subject line “Public Comment – Referendum Question.” Mailed comments should be addressed to Secretary of State, Attn: Public Comment, 148 State House Station, Augusta, ME 04333-0148.

The referendum would require Maine schools to designate male and female sports teams based on birth certificates. It would also restrict access to bathrooms and sports teams based on that standard and allow students to sue schools.

The issue is expected to draw major public attention as Maine continues to wrestle with the broader political and legal fight over transgender participation in girls’ sports. Current state law, including the Maine Human Rights Act, prohibits discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity. Maine officials have so far refused to bar transgender athletes from participating in sports based on gender identity, putting the referendum on a collision course with the state’s existing legal framework.

MWTV – April 2, 2026: Co-leader of Maine Girl Dads Leyland Streiff joins us this afternoon to discuss the recent lawsuit around the signature-gathering process. https://t.co/PREzvWlZDV

— The Maine Wire (@TheMaineWire) April 2, 2026

The ballot wording itself is also likely to become a point of controversy.

Bellows has faced criticism in the past for ballot language that opponents argued was overly complicated, slanted, or written in a way that obscured the core issue before voters. That history is likely to fuel fresh concerns from referendum supporters who believe the wording should be straightforward and clearly describe what the initiative would actually do, rather than frame it through dense legal language.

@shennabellows released wording for the ballot question re: protecting girls' sports & spaces.

Naturally, it doesn't reference protecting girls' sports and spaces. 🧵

— Rep. Laurel Libby (@laurel_libby) April 7, 2026

Critics have long argued that complicated ballot wording can influence public perception before voters even reach the ballot box. With a politically charged issue like girls’ sports participation at stake, supporters of the referendum are expected to closely monitor the final language to ensure it reflects the intent of the proposal.

The initiative now heads to the Legislature, where lawmakers can either enact it as written or send it to voters statewide in November.

With the public comment period now underway, the focus is not only on the policy itself but also on whether the final ballot language will be written in a way that Maine voters can easily understand before making their decision.

Art
Previous ArticleSixty-two Years After USS Thresher Sank, Annual Ceremony To Honor Memories Of 129 Sailors
Next Article Republican Lawmakers Renew Scrutiny of DHHS Following Death of Milford Infant and Ongoing Custody Dispute
Jon Fetherston

Latest News

Skin-Deep Standards Signal Hypocrisy As Elizabeth Warren Set To Rally With Graham Platner In Portland

April 13, 2026

Embattled California Democrat U.S. Rep Accused Of Rape, Drummed Out Of Governor’s Race, Resigning

April 13, 2026

Maine Republican Lawmakers Rally Support for Referendum on Girls’ Sports, Criticize Ballot Language Ahead of Hearing

April 13, 2026
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Login
Notify of
guest

guest

4 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
AndyK
AndyK
6 days ago

She is blatantly lying and misleading in the question. Needs to be challenged in court. No civil rights or education laws are changing and children can’t sue. Who does this mental midget think she is?

22
Pamela Theobald
Pamela Theobald
5 days ago

Like so many well meaning movements, this program has been taken over by extreme progressives . Originally, to my understanding, restorative justice aimed to keep first offenders from jail, and hearing first hand the hurt they caused. Sort of like” break windows, you clean and take that person’s yard for a year! The victim would have a say in the reparation. The courts would be freed up for more serious crimes. This I can see, but it’s scary when the deviant judges use this for releasing harden criminals.

6
Sally M. Chetwynd
Sally M. Chetwynd
5 days ago

It’s frustrating to try to deal (with reason and logic) with those who deliberately foster and support misogyny. Misogyny is exactly what boys and men, pretending to be girls and women, exercise against real, biological females. It is a form of control and domination, to have power over females.

Do I remember correctly that separate men’s and women’s facilities were originally established for hygienic purposes (yes, turn on the “Way-Back” Machine), not political, social justice ones?

9
jph517
jph517
5 days ago

Bellows is already flexing her authority, because she knows she will be the next Governor. Nothing has been done to prevent this, and the cheating that will make it possible, so get used to it. You have no vote at all in Maine, the communist capitol of Amerika.

4
Recent News

Skin-Deep Standards Signal Hypocrisy As Elizabeth Warren Set To Rally With Graham Platner In Portland

April 13, 2026

Embattled California Democrat U.S. Rep Accused Of Rape, Drummed Out Of Governor’s Race, Resigning

April 13, 2026

Maine Republican Lawmakers Rally Support for Referendum on Girls’ Sports, Criticize Ballot Language Ahead of Hearing

April 13, 2026

Police Raid Auburn Hotel and Arrest Two Lewiston Residents on Drug Charges

April 13, 2026

Bell-to-Bell Cell Phone Bans Coming Soon to All Maine School Districts

April 13, 2026
Newsletter

News

  • News
  • Campaigns & Elections
  • Opinion & Commentary
  • Media Watch
  • Education
  • Media

Maine Wire

  • About the Maine Wire
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Commentary
  • Complaints
  • Maine Policy Institute

Resources

  • Maine Legislature
  • Legislation Finder
  • Get the Newsletter
  • Maine Wire TV

Facebook Twitter Instagram Steam RSS
  • Post Office Box 7829, Portland, Maine 04112

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

wpDiscuz