US News

North Carolina governor signs new bathroom bill after costly boycotts

North Carolina on Thursday repealed a law regulating bathroom use for transgender people, hoping to lure back businꦯesses and sports leagues that boycotted the Southern state because they saw the year-old measurꦇe as discriminatory.

Democratic Governor Roy Cooper signed the replacement b𒈔ill into law after the Republican-controlled state Senate and House of Representatives approv🌱ed it in separate votes earlier in the day in the capital, Raleigh.

It was unclear if the legislation would be sufficient to bring back the basketball games, concerts, financial firms and technology companies that abandoned North Carolina, costing its economy hundreds of million🔯s of dollars.

The new measure rescinds House Bill 2, the so-called bathroom bill that required 💛transgender people to use the bathrooms, changing rooms and showers in state-run buildings that correspond to the sex on t🥂heir birth certificate rather than their gender identity.

But it also bars cities and school districts from enacting their own anti-discrimination rules for nearly four years, a compromise that drew harsh criticism from civil rights groups and advocates for lesbian🍨, gay, bisexual and transgender, or LGBT, people.

Under the new law, transgender people are 💃free to use the bathroom of their choice, but they also lack any recourse should any person, business or state entity eject them.