Proposed Arkansas bill classifies drag show as adult-oriented business

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Drag queens who hold storytime with kids might have their days numbered in Arkansas now that a new bill is seeking to re-define performances as ‘adult-oriented businesses’ – and to ban them from public property. 

Senate Bill 43, which was filed on Monday in the Arkansas Senate, is aimed at placing restrictions on where drag performances could take place in the state.

The proposal sponsored by Arkansas Senator Gary Stubblefield and Rep. Mary Bentley has added ‘drag performance’ to a list of adult-oriented businesses in the Arkansas code.

Examples of adult-oriented businesses at present include adult bookstores or video stores, adult live entertainment, escort agencies, nude model studios, massage businesses with adult services, adult motion picture theatres and adult cabarets.

Proposed Arkansas bill classifies drag show as adult-oriented business

A drag queen tells stories to children in Rhode Island when similar story time sessions could have their days numbered in Arkansas

Drag performances have been defined as an 'adult oriented business' in a proposed bill filed on Monday in the Arkansas Senate sponsored by Arkansas Senator Gary Stubblefield (pictured)

Drag performances have been defined as an ‘adult oriented business’ in a proposed bill filed on Monday in the Arkansas Senate sponsored by Arkansas Senator Gary Stubblefield (pictured)

The bill goes on to define a drag performance as something where a performer ‘exhibits a gender identity that is different from the performer’s gender assigned at birth.’

‘[This includes] using clothing, makeup, or other accessories that are traditionally worn by members of and are meant to exaggerate the gender identity of the performer’s opposite sex,’ the bill reads.

The performer would be someone before an audience of two or more, and ‘is intended to appeal to the prurient interests.’

Webster’s defines ‘prurient’ as ‘Having or expressing lustful ideas or desires,’ or ‘tending to excite lust, lascivious, lewd.’

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The bill also states that no adult-oriented business may be located on public property or where a minor, defined as someone less than 18 years of age, can view it.

‘Drag performance means a performance in which one or more performers sings, lip-synchs, dances, or otherwise performs before an audience of at least two persons for entertainment,’ the bill states.

‘An adult-oriented business shall not be located: On public property or where a minor can view what the adult-oriented business is – otherwise offering to the public that qualifies it as an adult-oriented business.’

In previous legislative sessions Arkansas has made national headlines for legislation seeming to target the trans community.

In 2021, Arkansas made headlines for passing the first-ever kind of legislation in the nation banning drug or surgical intervention on minor patients who identify as transgender.

The Save Adolescents From Experimentation Act, or SAFE Act, passed despite Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson’s veto. Hutchison said he opposed the bill, describing it as a ‘vast government overreach.’

A lawsuit filed in opposition to the law is currently before the trial judge for a decision.

The new bill is seeking to re-define drag performances as 'adult-oriented businesses' - and to ban them from public property and where minors can view them

The new bill is seeking to re-define drag performances as ‘adult-oriented businesses’ – and to ban them from public property and where minors can view them

While some events include drag performers reading books to children, the appropriateness of the content, which sometimes introduces transgenderism to underage kids, has fueled debate.

After being introduced Monday, the bill was referred to the City, County & Local Affairs Committee.

Many bills need a simple majority to pass, according to the Arkansas Senate website.

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‘In the 35-member Senate, a simple majority is 18 votes. In the 100-member House it is 51 votes,’ it reads. 

‘Appropriations and some tax increase bills need an extraordinary majority of 75 percent to pass. 

‘In the Senate that is 27 votes. Bills that would change an initiated act require a two-thirds majority, or 24 votes in the Senate and 67 in the House.

After a Senate bill is recommended out of committee and approved by the entire chamber, it is sent to the House, where the process is repeated. 

‘If the House adds an amendment, the Senate must vote again on the amended version of the bill in what is known as concurrence in the amendment.’

Stubblefield told arkansasonline.com that the aim of the bill ‘is to stop these drag queen shows’ from being shown to minors in Arkansas.

‘If they want adults, that’s up to them. We have all kinds of laws to protect our kids,’ he said.

At the weekend, ugly scenes unfolded outside a drag queen reading hour for neurodiverse children in Manhattan.

It came just a week after a man was arrested for assaulting an NYPD cop outside a similar event.

Protesters hurled obscenities and slurs outside the event at the Andrew Heiskell Library in the Chelsea neighborhood on Saturday.

Meanwhile, in December, protesters demonstrating against a drag queen reading hour event for kids in New York City were met by more than 100 counter-protesters.

Guardians of Divinity, who describe themselves as ‘God’s Army,’ marched towards Jackson Heights Library, in Queens, where a Drag Story Hour event was being held.

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But they were met with a larger crowd defending the event.

Earlier that month, people protested a drag queen story time event for children in Ohio.

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