LANSING, Mich. (Great Lakes News) – GOP gubernatorial candidate Tudor Dixon joined half a dozen Michigan lawmakers on the Capitol steps on Thursday afternoon to introduce a bill to ban drag presentations in public schools.

“Here is the big picture,” Dixon said. “This is about us stopping the sexualization of children. We should not be having these suggestive themes shown to young kids.”

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The upcoming House proposal would ban school districts from exposing students to a “drag show or draw presentation.” Districts that violate the policy could face lawsuits from parents for damages between $2,500 and $10,000.

Earlier this month at a civil rights conference in Lansing, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel said “Drag queens are fun” and “a drag queen for every school.” Later on Twitter, Nessel claimed she said she made those comments “in jest” and personally attacked Dixon on Twitter. Nessel has not responded to Dixon’s question regarding whether she, as the state’s top law enforcement official, would criminalize the sexualization of children.

 

 

Dixon’s campaign said Thursday’s move is proactive. So-called “Drag Queen Story Hours” have popped up at public libraries nationwide, and Dixon’s campaign said there will be a separate bill to address drag presentations there.

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Meanwhile, State Rep. Laurie Pohutsky (D-Livonia) did not respond to Michigan News Source’s questions regarding who “spewed hate and homophobia” at this press conference.

 

One person walked by the press conference and expressed his dislike of protecting children.

 

Dixon, a mother of four and one of five GOP gubernatorial candidates on the August primary ballot, said Nessel’s comments weren’t flippant.

“The left has brought this cultural war into our classrooms and they are trying to normalize this,” Dixon said. “I am going to work with our legislature which is major contrast to what we’ve seen in the past.”