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LGBT Advocacy Groups Blast North Carolina Lt. Governor for 'Offensive' Response to NCAA Decision

He said, "We value our women too much to put a price tag on their heads."

September 13, 2016, 3:26 PM

— -- Prominent LGBT advocacy groups blasted North Carolina's lieutenant governor today after he issued a statement criticizing the NCAA for moving its championship games out of state.

The NCAA announced last night that it was relocating its championship games because of North Carolina's passage of House Bill 2, a controversial measure that has been criticized as the most anti-LGBT bill in the country.

HB2, which was passed in March, declares that state law overrides all local ordinances concerning wages, employment and public accommodations. It also directs all public schools, government agencies and public college campuses to require that multiple-occupancy bathrooms and changing facilities be designated for use according to the "biological sex" stated on a person's birth certificate.

North Carolina Lt. Gov. Dan Forest said in a statement today that the "NCAA's action sends a message to every female athlete and female fan attending their events that their privacy and security in a bathroom, shower or locker room isn't worth the price of a ticket to a ballgame."

He continued, "The line has now been drawn in the sand, first by Hollywood, now by the NBA and NCAA, either accept their 'progressive sexual agenda' or pay the price. North Carolina will not play that game. We value our women too much to put a price tag on their heads."

The NBA moved its 2017 All-Star Game from the state in July.

Rights groups, including the National Center for Transgender Equality and the American Civil Liberties Union of North Carolina, have since condemned Forest's statement — calling it "offensive" and "shameful."

"It's just nonsense and completely offensive and condescending toward women and trans people," said Mara Keising, the executive director of the National Center for Transgender Equality.

"None of this has ever been about protecting women," Keisling told ABC News today. "This narrative of big, strong men defending women from the NCAA is just pretty outrageous, condescending and misogynistic."

The ACLU of North Carolina's legal director, Chris Brook, said it was "beyond shameful that North Carolina's leaders continue to double down on their support" of a "discriminatory law that is wreaking so much havoc on our state's people, reputation and economy."

"Treating transgender people with respect and dignity in no way compromises public safety or the privacy of others, and to suggest otherwise is deeply offensive and wildly inaccurate," Brook told ABC News. "HB2 is a solution in search of a problem, born of fear of those who are different. The North Carolina General Assembly should repeal HB2 without delay."

The Human Rights Campaign said North Carolina's Gov. Patrick McCrory "should show some leadership and rather than sending out his cronies to launch over the top attacks, apologize and repeal HB2."

"Gov. McCrory is so blinded by his own prejudice that he would rather sanction attacks on the NCAA while it stands up for equality and fairness rather than fix the problem and repeal HB2," JoDee Winterhof, HRC's senior vice president of policy and political affairs, said in a statement to ABC News.

When the NBA moved the 2017 All-Star Game from North Carolina, McCrory responded in a statement, saying, "American families should be on notice that the selective corporate elite are imposing their political will on communities in which they do business, thus bypassing the democratic and legal process."

In a statement today, he said of the NCAA decision, "The issue of redefining gender and basic norms of privacy will be resolved in the near future in the United States court system for not only North Carolina but the entire nation. I strongly encourage all public and private institutions to both respect and allow our nation’s judicial system to proceed without economic threats or political retaliation toward the 22 states that are currently challenging government overreach. Sadly, the NCAA, a multibillion-dollar, tax-exempt monopoly, failed to show this respect at the expense of our student athletes and hard-working men and women."

The NCAA told ABC News in a statement today, "We stand by our comments yesterday and have nothing further at this time."

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