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Wolf vetoes bills on poll watchers, transgender athletes

Wolf struck down the effort to ban transgender athletes from competing in sports that align with their gender identity.
Credit: AP
FILE—Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf speaks during a news conference in Philadelphia, in this file photo from Jan. 14, 2022. Wolf will pitch his eighth and last budget proposal to lawmakers Tuesday, Feb. 8, as the Democrat pushes Republican lawmakers to spend more federal pandemic relief aid now and Wolf looks to cement his public school legacy by securing a big boost in state aid. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

HARRISBURG, Pa. — Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf on Friday rejected three bills passed by the Republican majority Legislature, vetoing measures regarding transgender athletes in school sports and poll watchers.

He also struck down the Human Services Code, blowing a hole in the state budget as lawmakers were trying to finish the annual flurry of votes that accompany the annual spending plan.

Wolf had previously warned he would strike down the bill to prohibit transgender athletes from playing sports that align with their gender identity. In his veto message, he said the bill would have “a devastating impact on a vulnerable population already at greater risk of bullying and depression.”

He also vetoed a bill — sponsored by Franklin County Sen. Doug Mastriano, the GOP’s nominee for governor — to let all registered voters of Pennsylvania serve as poll watchers in any precinct in the state.

“This bill does nothing to increase access to voting,” he wrote. “Instead, this bill undermines the integrity of our election process and encourages voter intimidation.”

Wolf’s third veto was based on a provision in the Human Service Code that would have prohibited a state agency from contracting with a vendor of financial management services.

“These self-directed services allow participants to make choices about their own care, with this model supporting both participants and direct care workers,” he wrote in his veto message.

Vetoing the legislation created a $1.8 billion gap in the budget, Wolf said, but after the veto lawmakers put language from the Human Services Code into a different bill and passed it.

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