North Carolina Lawmaker: 'Keep Our State Straight'

RALEIGH, N.C. (CBSNewYork/AP) -- Rhetorical skirmishes continued Tuesday in North Carolina over a law limiting protections for LGBT people, as Democrats criticized a Republican's plea to "keep our state straight."

The criticism came a day after dueling demonstrations drew thousands of protesters for and against the law, ending with the arrests of 54 people voicing their opposition to the law in the Legislative Building.

At a demonstration supporting the law earlier Monday, the state's Republican nominee for attorney general, state Sen. Buck Newton, urged the crowd to "tell your friends and family who had to work today what this is all about and how hard we must fight to keep our state straight."

The North Carolina Democratic Party issued a statement Tuesday calling the comments hateful and discriminatory toward lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people. They called for Newton, who shepherded the legislation through his chamber, to apologize.

Newton told reporters on Tuesday that the phrase "keep our state straight" had nothing to do with sexual orientation. "It means keep men out of the ladies' room," he said.

"I think the silly season is upon us and I think this whole effort by the Democratic Party is to be expected," Newton said, adding, "I never mentioned gays or anyone. So I'm not quite sure how they made that leap. Maybe they're being a little sensitive."

North Carolina's top elected Republican leaders have said they don't plan to repeal the law, a stance likely to stoke further protests.

The law also blocks local and state protections for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people at their jobs and in public accommodations. It takes away people's ability to use state law to sue over workplace discrimination.

"This bill is an anti-living wage bill," the state's NAACP President Rev. William Barber told CBS affiliate WNCN-TV. "It's an anti-worker bill. It's an anti-family bill. It's an anti-civil rights protection bill. It's an anti-gay bill."

The leader of a national advocacy group said Tuesday that transgender people used restrooms aligned with their gender identity on Monday during protests in the Legislative Building and weren't arrested for it, despite the law's provisions. The law directs transgender people to use restrooms in public buildings corresponding to the sex on their birth certificate, though it doesn't spell out an enforcement mechanism.

Mara Keisling, director of the National Center for Transgender Equality, said the stance of state Republican leaders toward transgender restroom access is "nonsense" considering that transgender people have often been able to go about their day without unwanted attention in recent years.

"Lots of times we aren't noticed, and other times we are noticed," she said by phone.

But now they face a greater risk of being confronted in restrooms because of the law -- and not just in North Carolina, she said.

On Monday night, Keisling was among demonstrators arrested for refusing to leave a legislative leader's office, but the arrests weren't related to restroom access. Eighteen entered a legislative leader's office and began chanting. The rest were arrested a couple of hours later in a corridor when officers sought to close the building.

Acting General Assembly Police Chief Martin Brock said all were charged with second-degree trespassing and cited for violating building rules or the fire code. One was also charged with resisting arrest.

Detention records show the protesters were released later that night or early Tuesday morning, and they have June court dates.

Keisling said she and 17 others in the first wave of arrests were seated in a holding area of the county jail and separated by gender. She sat with the women, while a transgender man sat with the men.

"Every officer I dealt with all day was businesslike and doing their job in exactly the way you'd expect them to do it," she said.

Several transgender people who came to wait for Keisling to be released used restrooms at the jail in line with their gender identity without any problem, she said.

North Carolina House Democrats filed legislation Monday to repeal the law, though a lack of Republican sponsors made its chances appear slim.

"We must act immediately to repeal this harmful legislation right now, before the push back nationally does real and long-term harm to our state," state Rep. Darren Jackson told WNCN.

Senate leader Phil Berger said Monday night that he wasn't swayed by the protesters: "I don't know that it'll change anybody's mind."

(TM and © Copyright 2016 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2016 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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