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Home » News » News » Maine Girl Dads Ballot Fight Heads to Hearing as Signature Challenge Threatens November Vote
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Maine Girl Dads Ballot Fight Heads to Hearing as Signature Challenge Threatens November Vote

Jon FetherstonBy Jon FetherstonMay 11, 2026Updated:May 11, 202612 Comments5 Mins Read1K Views
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Photo: Garrick Hoffman Photography
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AUGUSTA, Maine — The battle over girls’ sports, school bathrooms, locker rooms, and the meaning of sex under Maine law is headed back before state officials Tuesday, as opponents of the Maine Girl Dads ballot initiative seek to block the measure from reaching voters in November.

A hearing is scheduled for May 12, 2026, on challenges to the citizen initiative known as “An Act to Designate School Sports Participation and Facilities by Sex.” The proposal was advanced by Protect Girls Sports in Maine, the ballot committee associated with the Maine Girl Dads movement.

If approved by voters, the measure would require Maine public schools to designate competitive sports, bathrooms, locker rooms, and showers by sex, male, female, or co-ed, based on the sex listed on a child’s original birth certificate.

The initiative has become one of the most closely watched ballot fights in Maine, putting parents, lawmakers, school officials, civil rights advocates, and national political figures on a collision course over transgender student policies and whether Maine law should prioritize gender identity or biological sex in school athletics and private facilities.

The Secretary of State’s Office announced in March that the citizen initiative had been found valid after the campaign submitted 8,067 petition forms with 79,692 signatures, of which 71,033 were certified as valid. The petitions had been in circulation since Nov. 3, 2025.

But the measure is now facing a legal challenge over the validity of the signatures. Maine election officials are scheduled to consider that challenge at the May 12 hearing, after opponents filed objections seeking to keep the proposal off the November ballot.

At the heart of the proposal is a straightforward but politically explosive question: Should Maine schools be required to separate sports and private facilities by biological sex, or should the state continue its current approach allowing transgender students to participate and access facilities consistent with their gender identity?

The Secretary of State’s draft ballot question asks voters whether they want to change civil rights and education laws to require public schools to restrict access to bathrooms and sports based on the gender listed on a child’s original birth certificate and allow students to sue schools. The public comment period on that wording closed May 7.

Supporters say the measure is about fairness, privacy, and safety for girls. Opponents say it would roll back protections for transgender students and invite lawsuits against Maine schools.

Leyland Streiff, principal officer of the Protect Girls Sports in Maine Ballot Committee and a leader of Maine Girl Dads, told lawmakers in April that the proposal should not be dismissed as a political culture-war fight.

“Today isn’t about what so many call a culture war,” Streiff said in testimony submitted on April 14. “Today is about restoring and protecting the sex-based civil rights of all Maine’s children and ultimately ending the regressive, sexist, discrimination that is taking place today in our schools.”

Streiff said the bill would require competitive sports to be designated as male, female, or co-ed, and would require bathrooms, locker rooms, and showers to be designated by sex. He said the proposal defines sex as a person’s “biological status as male or female as recorded at birth.”

“Our bill is inclusive, fair, and safe,” Streiff said. “Everybody plays; nobody is banned. Sports and private spaces are simply designated by the innate, immutable trait — and protected class — that every human shares — our Sex.”

The issue became a ballot question after supporters concluded that Maine’s political and educational institutions would not change course on their own. The campaign gathered signatures through the citizen initiative process, forcing the Legislature to either adopt the proposal, reject it, or send it to voters.

A public hearing was held in April on the measure, listed as LD 2239, where lawmakers heard testimony from both supporters and opponents. The Legislature had the opportunity to enact the proposal directly, but barring legislative action, the question is set to go to voters if it survives the signature challenge.

The debate has also become part of a broader national fight over Title IX, girls’ sports, and transgender participation in school athletics. Maine has already been at the center of that dispute, with the Trump administration previously challenging the state over its policy allowing transgender athletes to compete on teams aligned with their gender identity.

For supporters of the Maine Girl Dads initiative, the ballot question represents a chance for parents and voters to override state officials and restore what they see as common-sense, sex-based protections in schools.

For opponents, it represents an attempt to write discrimination into law and target transgender students through a statewide referendum.

Either way, the May 12 hearing could determine whether the question ever reaches the ballot.

If it does, Maine voters will decide in November whether the state’s schools must designate sports teams and private facilities by biological sex, a decision that could reshape civil rights law, school policy, and one of the most emotional political debates in the state.

The hearing is open to the public and will be held at 10 a.m. Tuesday in Room 127 of the Maine State House in Augusta. For Mainers who cannot attend in person, the Secretary of State’s Office said the proceeding will be livestreamed on the department’s YouTube page.

https://www.youtube.com/@mesecofstate

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Jon Fetherston

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Gardiner Schneider
Gardiner Schneider
29 days ago

Might the law firm of Drummond Woodsum be deeply involved in this, on the side of Sheena Bellows?

8
Clout
Clout
29 days ago

All the girls should just walk out in protest and refuse to return till this nuttiness is ended. That would tell the wacko adults to shove it where the sun don’t shine. Would be quite a statement.

10
OncebigBob
OncebigBob
29 days ago

Totally amazing that this is an item we are fighting over, trans students are what? 3% of the total school population?, so we fight to give rights to the 3% while screwing over the 97% in the process! I have said this before, if every girl who is in sports just sat out a week and refused to be beaten by a boy, this BS would end.

10
OncebigBob
OncebigBob
29 days ago

Totally amazing that this is an item we are fighting over, trans students are what? 3% of the total school population?, so we fight to give rights to the 3% while screwing over the 97% in the process! I have said this before, if every girl who is in sports just sat out a week and refused to be beaten by a boy, this BS would end.

5
Bingo
Bingo
29 days ago

Come on girls, sit it out. The democrat parents, politicians, school boards, MPA are not going to help you. If you can walk out to protest a legal federal agency doing their job, then you can walk off the field/out of the gym etc.

9
Louisewoods
Louisewoods
29 days ago

Drummond Woodsum , Sheena Bellows , Trans Gender Advocates , all words and names I am sick of hearing .
When will Common Sense return to the people of Maine ?
Have we let these lunatics destroy our state ?

10
Jeff Woehrle
Jeff Woehrle
29 days ago

Should boys be allowed to play against girls in girl’s sports?

Why such a question is even up for debate shows how far the loony left has taken us.

7
Edmund Stubbs
Edmund Stubbs
28 days ago

If voters fail to maintain common sense and morality girls will be forced to not compete. Thats a shame.

Its a shame on Womens liberation allowing boys and men to take what they once worked hard to achieve. The movement once powerful has gone dumb over girls sports and privacy. And WL even allows men to be on the cover of Womens Magazine.
Burning their bras used to be symbolic of freedom and equality they fought for.
I guess now wome can use a jock strap and it would be normal.

What a fallen world.

1
cheshire cat
cheshire cat
28 days ago

Can’t understand normal thinking Bellows Tilting the question again. ” want to change civil rights and education laws to require public schools”. Now she gets a second bite at the signature apple. All for a bunch of LOSER boys without enough self-respect to admit that they weren’t as good as the next guy. From someone that was never as good as the next guy yet somehow managed to survive and thrive. For Unlawful Karnal Knowledge commie Bellows the loser boys, and their pos parents.

1
Clout
Clout
28 days ago

I said walk out in previous post. Maybe even better would be to suit up and then just sit on the bench silently in protest refusing to take the court/field. If they did it I’d love to be at that game. I’d give all the girls a medal.

0
Susan Mooers
Susan Mooers
28 days ago

The question of men in female sports saddens me! We all should know men and female hormones, strengths, body parts and bathroom habits are different! If you don’t then I suggest you seek help! The university systems in the State of Maine “ got the message” what is wrong with you who continue to force your views for a very small % of student population! Your students can’t afford to dip any lower in subject achievements with Maine being noted as one of the highest cost to educate your students and lowest subject achievement levels! Not much to be proud of is it!

0
Dogpiler
Dogpiler
25 days ago

How about private sports “clubs”..
Can’t force the agenda when there are no
government funds being used, right?
I’d support them just to make these weirdos
look even more ridiculous than they already do….

1
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