Judge rejects Montana Rep. Zooey Zephyr's effort to return to state House
CBSN
Rep. Zooey Zephyr, the transgender Montana lawmaker who was silenced after telling Republicans they would have blood on their hands for opposing gender-affirming health care for kids, cannot yet return to the statehouse House floor and participate in debate, a judge ruled Tuesday.
The ruling came after attorneys for the state of Montana asked the judge to reject transgender Zephyr's attempt to return after she was silenced and then banished for admonishing Republican lawmakers and encouraging a raucous statehouse protest.
Lawyers working under Attorney General Austin Knudsen cautioned that any intervention by the courts on Zephyr's behalf would be a blatant violation of the separation of powers. They wrote in a court filing that the Montana House of Representatives retains "exclusive constitutional authority" to discipline its own members.
On the eve of the D-Day invasion, Gen. Dwight Eisenhower spent the remaining hours of daylight with the paratroopers who were about to jump behind German lines into occupied France. A single moment captured by an Army photographer became the most enduring image of America's greatest military operation.