Librarians who feared fines for hosting drag queen story hours and Pride parade organizers who worried about citations for including drag performers can breathe easier now that a judge ruled that his injunction blocking Florida’s anti-drag law extends to all Florida venues, an attorney who is helping challenge the law said Thursday.
A pair of orders that U.S. District Judge Gregory Presnell issued in the past month makes clear that drag performances in themselves are not lewd or lascivious behavior, said Gary Israel, one of the attorneys for an Orlando restaurant that filed a lawsuit challenging the new Florida law championed by Gov. Ron DeSantis as unconstitutional.
“The state has a very weak hand in this litigation,” Israel said.
In his first order last month, the Orlando judge granted a preliminary injunction temporarily halting enforcement of the law until a trial is held to determine its constitutionality. He also denied a Florida licensing and regulatory agency’s request to dismiss the lawsuit. The agency appealed the decision and asked that during the appeal, the injunction only be applied to the restaurant that brought the suit.
Presnell rejected that argument on Wednesday, saying any harm to the state of Florida is minimal if the preliminary injunction remains in place and that all Floridians are potentially parties since free speech is at stake. He reiterated that the law is likely unconstitutional.
“Protecting the right to freedom of speech is the epitome of acting in the public interest,” Presnell wrote. “It is no accident that this freedom is enshrined in the First Amendment.”
The Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation, the state agency charged with enforcing the law, didn’t respond to an email seeking comment on Thursday.
The new law punishes venues for allowing children into “adult live performances.” Though it did not specify drag shows, the sponsor of the legislation said it was aimed at those performances. Venues that violated the law faced fines and the possibility of their liquor licenses being suspended or revoked. Individuals could be charged with a misdemeanor crime.
Before announcing his candidacy for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination, DeSantis made anti-LGBTQ+ legislation a large part of his agenda as governor. Other bills he signed would ban gender-affirming care for minors and restrict discussing personal pronouns in schools.
The lawsuit challenging the new law was brought by the owner of a Hamburger Mary’s restaurant and bar in Orlando, which regularly hosts drag shows, including family-friendly performances on Sundays that children were invited to attend. The restaurant owner said the law was overbroad, was written vaguely, and violated First Amendment rights by chilling speech.
The new law crimped some Pride celebrations in Florida in June, which is Pride month.
In St. Cloud, Florida, south of Orlando, organizers canceled their annual Pride celebration, saying hosting the celebration in the current political environment “would put our community at risk.”
In southwest Florida, organizers of Pride festivities in Naples moved the drag show portion of their celebration indoors. And on the other side of the state, in Port St. Lucie, the Pride Alliance of the Treasure Coast restricted its Pride festivities to people aged 21 and up and canceled its parade.
“We hope that everyone understands that this is definitely not what we wanted at all and are working with the city to assure our safety as well as produce a positive event,” the alliance said in a Facebook post.
Before the law passed this spring, DeSantis’ administration had moved to revoke the liquor license of a Miami hotel that hosted a Christmas drag show under a law already on the books and took similar action against a performing arts venue in Orlando.
The federal judge’s rulings may indirectly help at least one of those cases since the state “will have a hard time proving that drag queens are lewd on their own,” Israel said.
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Republished with permission of The Associated Press.
8 comments
Dont Say FLA
July 20, 2023 at 4:01 pm
Sometimes I almost want to feel sorry for Rhonda, but it’s Rhonda, so I don’t.
LOL @ Loser Rhonda, Losing Again. Don’t they get tired of losing so much?
RonBeGone
July 20, 2023 at 5:28 pm
Don’t cry for Ron all you Repubs,
the truth is, he never loved you.
All through the pudding, the random jet trips,
he shirked his promise,
from a long distance.
Thomas Kaspar
July 20, 2023 at 4:10 pm
“Librarians who feared fines for hosting drag queen story hours”. Cross dressers and men dressed as prostitutes should never be around children .
RonBeGone
July 20, 2023 at 5:23 pm
Oh thank goodness Thomas and the Morality Police have arrived in their spiffy, blacked-out van. What would we ever do without the Morality Police to tell us how to dress and act? Shudder to think. I’m sure we can find the old girl a hijab if you’ll just let her finish this Dr. Seuss story before carting her off. It was just staring to get interesting. /s
In case that was too clever for you, it’s none of your freaking business…at all…how others dress. It’s also not up to you to decide what constitutes prostitute attire. If you can’t handle that, that’s on you.
Mark
July 21, 2023 at 3:03 am
So Tom, if I dressed up as Anne Bonny or Mary Reed in order to give an educational presentation at the local library on the Caribbean pirate trade you would have me arrested? Or if I was in a historically accurate presentation of any Shakespeare play (all men, even in the female roles) at a county park, I should go to jail. Also, what gives you the right to assume a drag queen is a prostitute? Sounds like a “you” problem, Tommy Boy.
Michael K
July 20, 2023 at 5:32 pm
Safer than thousands of well documented so-called “Christian” clergy wearing long robes using their power to abuse children and adults.
Jake
July 20, 2023 at 6:40 pm
Good Catholics, like our Gov. He remains silent on that sex cult.
PeterH
July 20, 2023 at 6:58 pm
Yet another DeSantis political stunt squashed!
Comments are closed.