At a campaign stop captured on video and distributed on social media, GOP gubernatorial candidate Scott Jensen claimed that schools are allowing children to use litter boxes to urinate.
"What are we doing to our kids? Why are we telling elementary kids that they get to choose their gender this week? Why do we have litter boxes in some of the school districts so kids can pee in them, because they identify as a 'furry'?" asked Jensen, a family physician and former state senator, during the Sept. 29 stop in Hutchinson, Minn. "We've lost our minds. We've lost our minds."
Asked multiple times to identify which schools Jensen was referring to, his campaign declined, responding instead, "The campaign has no comment."
"Furries" are people who broadly identify with animals and sometimes dress up in fur suits and attend conventions. Not all of them dress up, and many say it's just another way of being social and meeting people — not a sexual fetish. A 2015 Star Tribune story reported a state chapter of about 100 furries, although not all furries are in an active social organization.
Persistent — and debunked — rumors about litter boxes in schools have been promoted by Republicans throughout the country for several months. Last week, a GOP gubernatorial candidate in Colorado made a similar false claim.
Officials at the Minnesota Department of Education (MDE) say they have no evidence that litter boxes are placed in classrooms or schools for students to use.
"MDE doesn't believe this is happening in any Minnesota schools," spokesman Kevin Burns said, but he added that "this isn't a reportable event or situation," meaning schools aren't required to notify the state.
"Even though it's not reportable, we haven't been made aware in any other manner that this is happening," he said.