Business Insurance

Login  |  Register Subscribe



Gov Kay Ivey corrects ESPN reporting on new Alabama law in fiery Tweet: 'Let me fix that'

Republican Governor Kay Ivey changed the wording of ESPN's reporting on her new bill banning biological men competing in women's sports.

Gov. Kay Ivey, R-Ala., shared a fiery Tweet with ESPN to "fix" their wording of her new legislation that bans biological men from competing in women's sports.

ESPN originally reported on Tuesday that "Alabama Governor Kay Ivey signed legislation on Tuesday that will ban transgender women from playing on female sports teams in college."

The Republican governor quickly hit back at the sports outlet. "Let me fix that, @espn," she wrote in a post Tuesday, changing the wording from "transgender women" to "biological men."

ALABAMA BANS TRANSGENDER FEMALE ATHELETES FROM WOMEN'S COLLEGE SPORTS

"Alabama Governor Kay Ivey signed legislation on Tuesday that will ban biological MEN from playing on FEMALE sports teams in college," the governor wrote in a response.

SAN FRANCISCO PAPER SAYS ARGUMENTS AGAINST BIOLOGICAL MALES IN FEMALE SPORTS HAVE ‘LITTLE BASIS IN SCIENCE’

On Tuesday, Ivey signed a law prohibiting biological males from competing on female sports teams at Alabama colleges, after previously barring biological boys in K-12 schools from playing in girls sports in 2021.

"Look, if you are a biological male, you are not going to be competing in women’s and girls' sports in Alabama. It’s about fairness, plain and simple," Ivey said in a statement after signing the bill into law.

Aide from Alabama, twenty other states currently have restrictions in place on biological men competing women's sports.

Fox News' Ryan Morik contributed to this report.

Data & News supplied by www.cloudquote.io
Stock quotes supplied by Barchart
Quotes delayed at least 20 minutes.
By accessing this page, you agree to the following
Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions.

Business Insurance Webinars & Webcasts

August 12: "Get Retrofit: Insurance Savings from Property Upgrades"

August 7: "Friends & Foes: Best Practices for Social Media Risk Management"

August 17: "Supply Chain Crisis?Navigating Business Interruption Coverage and Claims After the Japanese Earthquakes"

September 8: "Dormant Dangers: Protecting Key Corporate Assets from Cyber Attacks"

View all webcasts & webinars


Business Insurance Upcoming Issues

Aug. 22/29: Industry Financials: First-Half Results
Health Care Reform: Impact on Firms

September 5: Special Report: Alternative Risks

September 12: Workers Comp & Safety Management

View editorial calendar
Subscribe to Business Insurance