An Arizona State lawmaker has proposed a bill that would slap a tax on pornography, with some of the proceeds going towards funding President Donald Trump’s border wall.
Sen. Gail Griffin’s bill would require all electronic devices to come with software to block access to porn websites. Adults wanting to view porn would have to shell out $20 for the privilege.
Those fees would then be used to set up a fund called the John McCain Human Trafficking and Child Exploitation Fund, named for the late Arizona Republican senator and noted border wall opponent.
Other causes range from funding of health, education and housing services to programs to prevent sexual assault, child abuse and human trafficking.
READ MORE: U.S. shutdown could end up costing $6B by Friday — more than Trump wants for the border wall
It’s unclear if the McCain family has offered its blessing for the bill to be named after the legendary senator, who died in August 2018. Global News has reached out to the family for comment.
McCain famously said he declined to vote for Trump in the 2016 presidential election and provoked Trump’s ire by voting against his efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare.
In his farewell statement, McCain said America’s greatness was weakened “when we hide behind walls, rather than tear them down.”
He also requested that Trump not attend his funeral.
WATCH: Meghan McCain takes shot at Trump at John McCain funeral
The Arizona Mirror reported that Griffin’s bill may be linked to anti-LGBTQ activist Chris Sevier, who runs a website named “Human Trafficking and Child Exploitation Prevention Act” — which also happens to be the title of the bill.
Sevier has previously been linked to pornography tax campaigns in other states.
In March, a Rhode Island senator withdrew a bill proposing a $20 porn tax after it was revealed that Sevier championed it as the “Elizabeth Smart Law” — after the Utah kidnapping victim and anti-trafficking campaigner — without Smart’s permission.
That same month, a Utah judge threw out a lawsuit from Sevier in which he targeted gay marriage by arguing that he should be able to marry his laptop.
— With files from the Associated Press