Donald Trump criticises North Carolina bathroom law

Republican presidential candidate opposes restrictions for transgender people

US Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump  gestures to the crowd during an appearance on NBC’s  Today Show in Rockefeller Plaza in New York. Photograph: Peter Foley/EPA
US Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump gestures to the crowd during an appearance on NBC’s Today Show in Rockefeller Plaza in New York. Photograph: Peter Foley/EPA

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump sided on Thursday with those criticising a controversial new North Carolina law requiring transgender people to use government and school bathrooms that correspond with the sex on their birth certificate.

Mr Trump said the law was unnecessary and people should be allowed to use whichever bathroom feels appropriate.

“Leave it the way it is,” he said during a town hall on NBC’s Today Show.

“There have been very few complaints the way it is,” said Mr Trump, who is frontrunner to be the Republican presidential nominee in November’s election.

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Corporations, entertainers and activists are calling for a repeal of the measure which was signed into law last month by the state’s Republican governor, Pat McCrory.

State tourism and business groups say tens of millions of dollars in revenue have been lost as meetings have relocated, entertainers including Bruce Springsteen have cancelled concerts and PayPal Holdings and Deutsche Bank halted or cancelled plans to add jobs in protest at the law.

“North Carolina did something [that] was very strong, and they’re paying a big price,” Mr Trump said.

Trump's main rival for the Republican nomination, US senator Ted Cruz, reiterated his support on Thursday for North Carolina's law, which invalidated an ordinance passed in Charlotte and is now the subject of a federal lawsuit.

“We shouldn’t be facilitating putting little girls alone in a bathroom w/ grown men,” Mr Cruz said on Twitter. “That’s just a bad, bad, bad idea.”

LGBT rights

North Carolina’s law has been criticised for denying protections to the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community beyond just the issue of bathroom access.

Mr McCrory has signalled a willingness to revise some aspects of the measure, but he and other top Republicans in the state are standing firm on the controversial bathroom provision.

Mr McCrory is seeking re-election in November. His campaign has defended the provision, saying it affects only bathrooms in public schools and government buildings.

Target Corp this week said transgender employees and customers could use the bathroom that matches their gender identity, becoming the first big retailer to weigh in on the debate that has captured national attention for weeks.

Responding to Trump’s remarks, Mr McCrory’s campaign said the governor stood by his belief that boys and girls should be kept separate in bathroom and shower facilities in public schools.

"It's just common sense," campaign spokesman Ricky Diaz said in a statement.

Reuters