PHOENIX â Republican state senators are crafting legislation to make it a crime for parents to let a minor attend drag shows, saying that promotes âsexual perversion.â
This follows reports of a drag show last month at Tucson Magnet High School. A spokeswoman for Tucson Unified School District said the event, while on school property, was a club activity coordinated by students and not staff. But the senators, in proposing legislation, pointed out the effort was spearheaded by two school counselors who led the LGBTQ+ student club.
Sen. Vince Leach, R-Tucson, who is leading the effort, also complained of a pride night at the Heard Museum in Phoenix, which was billed as a âfamily friendlyââ event in which children were present.
âPerformers were seen dressed in scantily clad attire while carrying out provocative dance moves that left little to the imagination as youngsters watched,ââ according to the statement by five Republican senators.
Leach told Capitol Media Services the issue is not just local, and heâs simply proposing what is being considered elsewhere.
Florida Republican Gov. Ran DeSantis is supporting legislation there to make it a crime for a parent to take a minor to a drag show, complete with the risk of losing parental rights. And a Texas lawmaker is writing a measure to bar minors from attending drag shows.
Leach said Arizona needs to follow suit.
âIf you had been researching this, you would have seen videotape of mothers turning kidsâ heads to watch something when they turned away, something thatâs vile, disgusting and outside of a civil society,ââ he said.
âDo you believe that a young first grader or a kindergartner should be hauled into a show, stuffing dollars bills into G-strings of a drag queen?ââ Leach said. âDo you think thatâs good for our society?ââ
He said thereâs precedent for lawmakers to decide what is and is not appropriate for minors.
âWe donât allow kids into strip joints,ââ he said. âWe donât have kids going in bars by themselves. We have movie ratings.ââ
Nor, he said, does permission matter, any more than a parent could legally OK a child in a strip club or attending a movie with an NC-17 rating.
Leach said details are still being worked out for his proposal.
âI donât know where that line is,ââ he said. âBut Iâm sure as hell going to try to find it.ââ
He said the trick will be coming up with something that passes legal muster.
âThere are First Amendment rights that people have to do whatever it is they want to do,ââ Leach said.
But he said this should not be an issue subject to debate.
âThis is wrong for society to haul kids in and force themââ to look, he said.
Itâs also age inappropriate, he said.
âA first grader, a kindergarten kid, doesnât even know what thatâs all about,ââ Leach said. âThey still want to be Superman or Spider-Man. And now weâre going to teach them how to be drag queens?ââ
Bridget Sharpe, state director of the Human Rights Campaign, called the legislation âharmful propaganda.ââ
âThere is no place in our country for the blatant lies and false accusations being pushed today by Arizona Senate leaders,ââ she said.
âTheir statement is not at all about keeping kids safe,ââ Sharpe said. âItâs about riling up a small number of extremist base voters.ââ
She said Leach is off base in trying to compare taking children to a strip show with taking them to what she said was clearly designed as a âfamily friendly eventââ at the Heard Museum.
âWeâre talking about folks who want to show children who may be LGBTQ that they are affirmed and theyâre not bad people,ââ Sharpe said.
There are other questions yet to be answered as Leach is crafting his legislation.
One crucial one deals with what happens in public.
Many cities have gay pride parades with some participants dressed in drag. It remains unclear whether a parent could be charged with a crime for taking a child to see such an event.
Then thereâs the issue of at what age the line should be drawn. Leach said he does not yet have those details for the forthcoming legislation.
âIâm in the process of pulling everything together,ââ he said.
But he said this isnât just about young children.
âItâs going on at the University of Arizona,ââ he said. One event earlier this year from the schoolâs Institute for LGBT Studies advertised a âvirtual drag show.ââ
And thereâs the question of penalties.
Leach mentioned the plan in Florida, where Republican state Rep. Anthony Sabatini would not only charge parents with a felony but also terminate the parental rights âof any adult who brings a child to these perverted sex shows.ââ
Itâs not just Leach pushing for the change in Arizona.
âOne of the reasons why we were elected as lawmakers by our constituents was to protect family values,ââ said the joint statement attributed not only to Leach but also Senate President Karen Fann of Prescott, Majority Leader Rick Gray of Sun City, Majority Whip Sonny Borrelli of Lake Havasu City, and Sen. David Gowan of Sierra Vista.
The news release announcing the plan said policies of nondiscrimination on gender expression and sexual orientation âare sending a message to society that we should disregard morals and values just to normalize these unscientific, broad, ill-defined and subjective terms, which set a dangerous precedent for our children that are too young to be exposed to such concepts.ââ
The issue is not about adult behavior, the lawmakers said.
âIf men want to dress as women, and if adults want to participate in watching these hyper-sexualized performances, they have the freedom to do so,ââ they said. But they said it crosses the line when children are involved.
âThis ignorance by public and private sectors promoting this behavior sends a message of complete and utter perversion that can have detrimental impacts on the social and emotional development of our children,ââ the legislators said.
They also put a political spin on it.
âWe will be damned if we wonât fight like hell to protect the most innocent from these horrifying and disturbing trends that are spreading across the nation now that extremists Democrats are currently in control of our federal government,ââ they wrote.



