After failing to use her previous name, a transgender girl who hoped to work for the Ohio House of Representatives has criticized the decision to disqualify her from the competition.
Bill Roemer’s daughter Vanessa Joy, who amassed all the required signatures to run for House District 50 as a Democratic candidate, was disqualified from the race after officials claimed she broke an obscure Ohio legislation.
Roemer and Joy are related by blood, but they are not romantically involved and have never met.
According to the law, petition signatures from candidates running for public office must record any brand changes from the previous five years. Joy criticized the plan rule after changing her name legally.
Joy told News 5 Cleveland, “I would have had to have my dying brand on my requests.” However, in the trans group, there is a reason why our names are dead—a deceased individual who has passed away and been buried.
The trans group refers to an ex-name as a “dead name.”
Joy claimed she was unaware of the obscure laws.
She stated that “something that is that critical should have been on the recommendations.” “The plea ought to have included it.”
The local shop claims that the concept is also absent from the secretary of state’s 2024 applicant guide.
This account is still in its infancy and will be updated as new details become accessible.