
One of my highest priorities is protecting children while also respecting the fundamental and God given role parents play in raising them. That's why I've filed SB1010, a bill focused on protecting Missouri families from unnecessary government interference based on deeply held beliefs regarding gender transition and sexual orientation.
Let me be clear: Children must ALWAYS be protected and kept safe.
Abuse and neglect are real, serious issues, and the state has a duty to intervene when a child is truly in danger. SB 1010 does not weaken those protections in any way.
This bill draws an important and necessary line.
Parents Should Not Be Treated Like Criminals For Their Beliefs
Believe it or not, right here in Missouri we have already seen public entities, such as schools, and elected officials push for parents to affirm any gender ideology a child chooses regardless of the parent's beliefs. This is why I filed SB 1010.
During the 2024 legislative session, in a Senate Education Committee hearing on SB 728, a Democrat senator offered an amendment (shown below) that would have required schools who contact parents regarding their child's gender identity or sexual orientation choice to also notify Children's Division within the Department of Social Services and alert them that the student is at high risk of homelessness.

Another Democrat senator then offered an amendment to this amendment by adding "and subject to child abuse" after "homeless." The amendment to the amendment was made spontaneously and was followed by a voice vote, which failed. A roll call vote was then taken on the underlying amendment, which is seen above. Thankfully, it failed. One Republican senator voted yes, which made the vote 5-4.
My bill, SB 1010, makes it clear that a child cannot be considered abused or neglected and they could never be investigated or taken from their family because a parent does not affirm the child's gender identity or sexual orientation.
These are Matters of Faith & Family
Government has no business stepping in and declaring those beliefs harmful.
Under this bill:
- The Children's Division could not initiate an investigation or review based on non-affirming parenting
- The child who is not affirmed would not be considered neglected or abused
- Non-affirming parents would not be accused of endangering the welfare of a child
Parent's should not lose their natural rights or their children because of their faith-based or traditional views.
Protecting Children Without Undermining Parents
SB 1010 strikes a careful balance. It protects children from real harm while also protecting families from government overreach. We can do both.
Missouri should be a state where:
- Children are safe
- Parent's rights are protected
- Faith is not treated as abuse

Days 1 & 2 Were Quiet - And That's Normal
The 2nd regular session of the 103rd General Assembly has gotten underway.
Getting a session started in the legislature is a lot like the first few days of school. Slow. It often looks unproductive to the public. But laying the foundation and getting the necessary rules and paperwork in place is necessary and required.
Each session begins new. This is the 103rd General Assembly and each assembly consists of two regular sessions over a two year period.
At the beginning of each session there are actions that have to be taken in order for the senate to conduct business. Among those actions are:
- Reading the senator's names & district numbers
- Offering resolutions that adopt rules and open the senate for business
- Accepting messages from the Governor for appointments
- Listening to an opening address made by the President Pro Tem
- Accepting concurrent resolutions made by senators
- First reading of all pre-filed bills on Day 1, of which there were over 600
- Second reading & referring bills to committee on Day 2, of which there were around 200
- Setting committee schedules
There was no debate on the senate floor, just necessary procedural motions which is normal. And that's exactly what these couple of days have been - a normal start to a legislative session.
If you'd like to read what happened, check out the daily journals. They are posted each day and are the minutes recorded for each session. The journals are where you'll find the official voting records as well.
If you'd like to learn more about the rules of the senate and procedures that we follow, you can read them on the Missouri Senate website.
What's Next
Next week, beginning January 12, committee hearings will begin and the pace and activity will pick up. But, we will be interrupted by the Governor's State of the State Address.
If you'd like to listen to committee hearings, the audio is streamed live. You can find all the committee related information on the senate website.
There still won't be any bills out on the floor for debate, so if you are listening in or watching from the gallery and there seems to be very little happening rest assured senators are hard at work prepping for committees, presentations, meeting with people, having conversations, reading bills and doing all the work required to be prepared for the important floor action when the time comes.
While things are moving more slowly on the floor, the necessary meetings, decisions about policy details and required administrative work is the focus.
By week three, things should be running at a little quicker pace although it will be a short week due to the holiday.
That's what we've been focused on the first couple of days of session and we will continue until bills are voted out of committee and are ready for debate on the floor.

What It Does & Why It Matters
My job is simple: protect liberty and freedom for Missourians.
That's why I filed SB 1011, The No Sharia Act.
This bill makes sure that Missouri law comes first - not international laws, international groups, and not religious legal systems from outside the United States. The No Sharia Act makes it clear that international organizations have no authority in Missouri. This includes groups like:
- The World Health Organization (WHO)
- The United Nations (UN)
- The World Economic Forum (WEF)
- Any other international body
Under this bill their laws, their mandates, their policies or rules cannot be enforced in Missouri. Only laws passed by our elected leaders - grounded in our Constitution - apply to Missourians.
No Foreign Law in Missouri Courts
SB 1011 also protects our court system.
It says that foreign law cannot be used in Missouri courts if it infringes on the natural or constitutional rights of another person.
That includes:
- Religious laws used instead of U.S. or Missouri law
- Legal systems from other countries
Protecting Basic Rights
This bill protects natural rights, including:
- Freedom of religion
- Freedom of speech
- Equal protection under the law
- Due process
- Rights involving marriage, children and property
If a foreign law would violate any of these rights, it would not be enforceable in Missouri. That's common sense.
Why This Bill Is Important
Missourians didn't vote for international groups. We didn't approve foreign legal systems. We should never allow them to override our freedoms.
SB 1011 draws a clear line.
- Our God-given natural rights always come first.
- Missouri sovereignty is the priority.
- NO foreign control. Ever.
I will always stand strong for Missouri sovereignty, Missouri values, and liberty for all Missourians.

Parents — not government and not schools — have the fundamental right to raise their children. That principle is at the heart of Sage’s Law, the legislation I filed to protect Missouri families and ensure schools do not keep critical information about a child’s well-being from parents.
Across the country, school districts have adopted policies allowing school staff to withhold information when a child begins identifying as a different gender at school. These policies cut parents out of deeply personal and life-altering conversations — and that is wrong.
Federal Courts Agree: This is Government Overreach
In a recent federal court ruling issued by US District Court Judge Roger T. Benitez, a California law that allowed schools to hide a child’s gender transition from parents was struck down, affirming that such policies violate parents rights.
Schools notify parents in every other area when students health or wellbeing is at risk or compromised. If they get hurt at school, if they have a fever or get sick, if there is a fight or even a threat, when there is bullying, and of course when they are struggling with academics.
Schools should not be keeping secrets from parents. Ever. And certainly not when there is something as serious as a child choosing to change their identity.
It's Happening Right Here in Missouri
Unfortunately, the heart of America is not immune to this problem.
Missouri school districts including Hazelwood, Kansas City Public Schools, St. Louis Public Schools, Springfield Public Schools, North Kansas City Public Schools, Liberty and Mehlville Public Schools, Parkway, Ladue, Webster Groves, and Rockwood have adopted policies that allow secrets to be kept from parents. Unfortunately, there are probably many more we haven't discovered yet.
That should alarm every parent in Missouri.
What Sage's Law Does and How It Works
Sage's Law was inspired by the story of Sage, a student in Virginia. who was secretly socially transitioned at school. When her custodial grandparent found out and was confused about what transgender meant, CPS took Sage from her home and put her in foster care. She ran away and was sex trafficked for months before being recovered.
Sage’s Law restores transparency and accountability by clearly defining the role of parents in their children’s education. Specifically, the bill:
- Prohibits schools from intentionally withholding information when a student expresses gender incongruence or requests a change in name, pronouns or gender presentation at school
- Affirms a parent's right to be informed, reinforcing existing constitutional protections under state law.
- Prevents school policies from overriding parental authority, ensuring that local rules cannot contradict constitutional rights.
- Protects teachers and school staff by making clear they can communicate openly with parents or guardians without fear of discipline for violating secrecy policies.
This promotes openness, trust and cooperation between schools and families where secrecy breeds division.
Standing With Parents & Families
I believe schools are meant to educate children, not make critical parenting decisions. Sage's Law draws that line clearly and ensures Missouri stands firmly with parents, families and constitutional freedoms.

Digit ID Should Be a Choice Not a Mandate
In Missouri, freedom, privacy, and safety are priorities. We should never sacrifice any part of these values because technology advances. As government and private entities increasingly move toward digital identification systems, serious questions arise about privacy, security, access, and control over our most personal information.
SB 921 is about protecting your freedom to choose.
It ensures that no Missourian is forced into using a digital form of identification and that a non-digital option will always remain available. This legislation recognizes the convenience technology can offer while protecting our citizens against mandates that could expose them to surveillance, data breaches, discrimination, and more.
SB 921 puts the safety & security of our people first.
What SB 921 Does
- Prohibits public entities from requiring a digital form of identification. A physical form of ID must always be offered as a choice.
- Anyone who has agreed to use a digital form of ID, must always be permitted to view, correct, remove, destroy or restrict the usage of the digital ID.
- Written consent must be given by the individual for each purpose for which the digital ID will be used.
- Personal data may only be collected by a public entity for the purpose stated and only with consent of each individual. Personal data may not be sold or transferred to any public or private entity without written consent.
- A digital form of ID will not be required by any public entity for entry into any place of public accommodation.
- Cause of action suits may be brought for violations.
- Drivers licenses are prohibited from being connected to automated license plate readers.
Why It Matters
Loss of Liberty
Digital ID systems have the potential to be the source of tracking, tracing and inventorying of everything about your personal life.
From your medical records to the drive through order you place at lunch time, there is potential for 24/7 surveillance and monitoring without transparency or consent. This could destroy liberty and privacy.
The purpose of the government is to protect freedom & liberty, NOT erode it through these types of mandates.
Security
Centralized ID systems are incredibly valuable to criminals. That puts you at risk. Identity theft, account takeovers, phishing attacks and data breaches cause long term harm that can damage finances, families, reputations, credit scores and so much more.
Security depends on design and oversight usually done by one or more third parties. Risks are significant.
Access
Many Missourians may not own or want to rely on digital technology. Especially among our senior citizens, this could create a serious problem for equal access to services.
Be Part of the Solution
- Please share this article with your friends & family.
- Contact your senator and let them know you’d like to see them support SB 921 and any measures that would allow you to always have a choice regarding your personal identification. Use the link below to find your legislator's contact information.
- Subscribe to stay connected & informed.
SB 921 is about keeping choice and control in the hands of Missourians. It doesn't stop anyone from using digital IDs if they want to, but it makes sure no one is forced to go digital to access services or prove who they are. The bill protects privacy, gives people control over their personal information, and makes sure both government and businesses are held accountable. Simply put, its about making sure technology works for the people - not the other way around.





