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Equality California re-imagined and roiling to work

The statewide LGBT lobbying organization has gone national

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Rick Zbur. (Photos courtesy Claudia Unger)

September 2017 in Donald Trump-land is not exactly the kind of post-summer activism Equality California expected 18 months ago when the 32-year-old statewide lobbying organization became the first major LGBT group to endorse Hillary Clinton for president. At the time, Equality California had been so successful securing so many LGBT equality bills and electing so many LGBT and pro-equality candidates, Executive Director Rick Zbur was growing weary of the same tiresome question: What is left for EQCA and the California LGBT rights movement to do?

And then, once again, the old adage proved true: Elections have consequences.

Despite campaign assurances from Trump that he would ā€œprotectā€ LGBTQ people, with daughter Ivanka winking from the sidelines that she had daddyā€™s ear and would intervene to squash anti-LGBT policies, the LGBT movement has seen a dramatic and sanctioned outbreak of racism, sexism, anti-Semitism, homophobia and white supremacy at the White House. It started on Day One with the new administration wiping the White House website of any mention of LGBT equality. Next was the death of the Office of National AIDS Policy and soon after, the mass resignation of six members of Trumpā€™s AIDS Advisory Council.

Equality California was suddenly tasked with not only introducing new bills to continue advancing LGBT equality but protecting what was already law, especially those involving transgender students in places like Fresno and encouraging legally correct and compassionate teachers at private Rocklin Academy.

But instead of waiting in the safety of Californiaā€™s big blue state to see what ill winds might blow in from D.C., Zbur picked charging toward the belly of the beast. On Aug. 8, he announced a new logo, a refined mission statement and tagline, and established a national presence in Washington, D.C., to lobby Californiaā€™s massive congressional delegation of 53 House and two Senate seats.

Equality California will shine ā€œas a beacon of LGBTQ civil rights for the rest of the nation,ā€ says Zbur.

ā€œHelp us create a world that is just, healthy and fully equal for all LGBTQ people,ā€ he says in a video that explains the new logo: an ā€œEā€ and a ā€œCā€ with an ā€œequalā€ sign embedded in the State of California. Additionally, ā€œfor all,ā€ a press release notes, ā€œacknowledges that LGBTQ people are a part of every racial, ethnic and religious community and that improving the lives of LGBTQ people requires a focus on social justice for all communities of which LGBTQ people are a part.ā€

In Trumpā€™s America, intersectionality is not just an academic discussion. Health disparities, for instance, ā€œare even greater for LGBTQ people who are also people of color, immigrants or transgender.ā€ Equality Californiaā€™s new taglineā€”until the work is doneā€”ā€œreflects our organizationā€™s determination to work vigorously on the significant priorities that remain to be accomplished.ā€

And on Sept. 5, two major battles came to the fore simultaneously: Trump ended DACA, the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program and EQCA challenged Trumpā€™s directive to reinstitute the transgender open military service ban.

Zbur is both outraged and heartbroken over Trumpā€™s order to rescind President Obamaā€™s executive order creating DACA. He believes the move is racist, ā€œthereā€™s no other explanation for it.ā€

DREAMers have lived here since they were children and ā€œare American in every way except for their immigration status. Many have never traveled to their country of origin and do not speak its language, butā€”without DACAā€”they live in fear of deportation and are extremely limited in educational and professional opportunities because of their immigration status,ā€ says Zbur, a father of three who is half Latino with family roots in New Mexico. ā€œItā€™s appalling to me.ā€ Ā 

There are real-life consequences for LGBT undocumented immigrants. ā€œTransgender or HIV-positive immigrants are especially vulnerable, facing abuse or lack of essential medical treatments in detention centers. They face even worse if deported to countries like Honduras, where violence against LGBTQ people is endemic, or Venezuela, which just publicly announced it has run out of vital drugs to treat HIV,ā€ Zbur says.

The Equality California staff in D.C. is urging members of the California congressional delegation to quickly pass the BRIDGE Act and other pending pieces of legislation ā€œto protect these young Americans and to prevent them from cruelly being uprooted from their homes, families, careers and lives.ā€ Zbur notes that EQCAā€™s 800,000 members include 300,000 from outside California who joined during the Prop 8 battle in 2008 and have remained active.

On Sept. 5, just as much of America was focused on Trumpā€™s DACA announcement, Zbur held a news conference in front of LA City Hall announcing the filing of a federal lawsuit challenging Trumpā€™s Aug. 25 directive to reinstate the ban on transgender military service. Some questioned why EQCA jumped into the fray since national groupsā€”NCLR/GLAD, Lambda Legal/OutServe-SLDN and the ACLUā€”are already seeking an immediate injunction against implementation of the disruptive personnel change and challenging the banā€™s constitutionality.

But the reasoning is clear to Zbur. ā€œCalifornia is the state with the largest LGBTQ community. Weā€™re also the state with most LGBTQ people serving in the military and obviously, a state in which are members are really harmed by this directive. So we decided we wanted to bring a suit of our [800,000] members that are affected by this ban. We thought it was important that there be a case in California,ā€ Zbur told the Los Angeles Blade.

As of May 2016, California has the most military bases and installations in the country, 32, with the most active duty and reserves members of the military, 190,160. That number goes up to more than 360,000 employed by the Department of Defense in California when civilian employees are included.

ā€œThe cases seek to block the order,ā€ says Zbur. ā€œThe order is one that doesnā€™t give the military discretion about whether to allow service of transgender people in the military, despite some of the communications that have come out by (Defense Sec) Gen. James Mattis that appear to indicate that there is some discretion. In fact, the presidentā€™s directive leaves no discretion to the military and requires that they take action to discharge members of the military currently serving and to also enlistment of people that would want to serve and have taken steps to join the military. And it prohibits medical care thatā€™s necessary for transgender service members. So our case raises a number of claims that the order violates the Constitution of the United States and is obviously motivated by animus towards transgender people and on a variety of Constitutional grounds, seeks to block the order.ā€

(Photos courtesy Claudia Unger)

Some see a loophole in the line in the order that says the old policy should be reinstated ā€œuntil such time as a sufficient basis exists upon which to conclude that terminating that policy and practice would not have the negative effects discussed above. Ā The Secretary of Defense, after consulting with the Secretary of Homeland Security, may advise me at any time, in writing, that a change to this policy is warranted.ā€ (Emphasis added.) Some LGBT military watchers think that could come as a result of recommendations made by an expert panel Mattis is putting together.

Zbur, an attorney, is not among them. ā€œThe directive is very clear and it does not give the military leadership discretion. It gives them a certain amount of time into either February or March to implement it but there is no discretion in the presidentā€™s order,ā€ he says emphatically.

ā€œThe period that Gen. Mattis has indicated they will be studying this issue is consistent with the timing in the presidentā€™s order and the order does not leave discretion for the military to not implement the ban and discharge members of the military or prevent re-enlistment or to allow for necessary medical care.ā€

Zbur notes that training has already happened in the entire militaryā€”and it happened without controversy. Additionally, commanding officers have been openly supportive of their trans troops.

ā€œThis is disruptive,ā€ Zbur says. ā€œIt is harmful to military readiness. It is expensive for the militaryā€”essentially they will be ripping transgender service members out of key and important roles and will be in a position where they will have to identify people to replace them and train them. So thereā€™s no justification for this order. Thereā€™s no justification in terms of cost or military readiness. In fact, if anything, all arguments go in the other direction. This is harmful.ā€

Equality California is simultaneously tackling issues and working on bills within the state, as well. As the legislative year winds down, they are focused on four bills in particular: SB 239, Modernizing Discriminatory HIV Criminalization Laws (HIV decriminalization); SB 179, Gender Recognition Act of 2017 (appropriate documents); SB 219 ā€“ Seniors Long Term Care Bill of Rights; and SB 421 ā€“ Tiered System for California Sex Offender Registry (based on crime, not lifetime).

Anti-LGBT California right-wing groups join Steve Bannonā€™s Brietbart and company in targeting the senior rights bill, which essentially calls for cultural competency when placing seniors, especially trans seniors, in roommate situations. Ā 

And, of course, Equality California is preparing for the 2018 midterm elections. If California LGBT politicos canā€™t recoup Hillary Clinton, at least EQCA can help vote the GOP disruptors out while achieving full equality in the state.

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California’s perspective on the U.S. v Skrmetti case

A final ruling on the case won’t be made until June 2025

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Canva graphic by Gisselle Palomera

The U.S. v Skrmetti case has been on the Supreme Courtā€™s radar since November 2023, when a writ of certiorari petition was filed on behalf of Jonathan Thomas Skrmetti and 2 other families. 

On Dec 4, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the lawsuit that states the Tennessee ban on gender-affirming healthcare for youth is unconstitutional and violates the Fourteenth Amendment. 

The question presented was whether Tennessee Senate Bill 1, which prohibits all medical treatments or courses of action intended to treat gender dysphoria or affirm gender transitions for youth, violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment or Section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act, which prohibits sex-based discrimination.

The far-reaching impacts of U.S. v Skrmetti are being felt even prior to the decision of the case. The Washington Post recently reported that following the results of the presidential election, LGBTQ+ Americans began stockpiling gender-affirming medications and making plans to move out of states that have not taken the necessary steps to provide sanctuary. This is reminiscent of reports earlier this year pointing toward a trend of women and non-male people stockpiling on abortion medication following the overturning of Roe v Wade in 2022. 

Samantha and Brian Williamsā€™ daughter, the trans teen at the center of this case, spoke about her perspective in a published case brief by the American Civil Liberties Union. 

ā€œI donā€™t even want to think about having to go back to the dark place I was in before I was able to come out and access the care that my doctors have prescribed for me,ā€ she said. ā€œI want this law to be struck down so that I can continue to receive the care I need, in conversation with my parents and my doctors, and have the freedom to live my life and do the things I enjoy.ā€ 

Understanding the case 

Tennessee SB 1 is codified under section 68-33-103, states that a healthcare provider should not perform or offer to perform medical procedures with the purpose of treating discomfort or distress relating to gender dysphoria, except when it is explicitly necessary to treat defects, physical injury or diseases. 

Under this code, it is also explicitly stated that ā€œgender dysphoria, gender identity disorder, gender incongruence, or any mental condition, disorder, disability or abnormality,ā€ do not count as a ā€œdisease.ā€ That section of the code summarized above, specifically states that the only exceptions to the ban on trans healthcare are to treat defects, injuries or diseases. Meaning that the language here intentionally points toward closing a loophole that would allow patients to get treatment if being transgender was considered a disease.Ā 

If the Supreme Court sides with Tennessee, this could set the path for states to deny gender-affirming care to youth on the state level, affecting progress in many states like Colorado, Michigan, Maine and Rhode Island. 

In August, the Human Rights Campaign listed Tennessee along with a dozen other states, stating they are all in current litigation proceedings challenging similar bans targeting trans youth. HRC published a map to track the legislation in a total of 26 states that have current bans on gender-affirming care in the U.S.

This case also marks the first time the Supreme Court has directly considered how the Equal Protection Clause in the fourteenth amendment applies to trans, gender nonconforming and intersex youth. 

Whatā€™s to be determined

The Supreme Court will directly consider how the Equal Protection Clause would apply to gender-affirming care for youth. 

The standard of that review is to be determined, which is how the case will be addressed, based on a level of scrutiny. There are 3 levels of scrutiny that determine how a law will be evaluated: strict scrutiny, intermediate scrutiny and rational basis review.  

With strict scrutiny at the highest level, the first transgender lawyer to argue before the Supreme Court, Chase Strangio, argued that this case should be treated with skepticism, or the highest level of scrutiny, due to the law discriminating based on sex. Meaning, this law should be heavily questioned as to whether or not it violates the Constitution. 

The Tennessee Att. General argued that the law does not make a sex classification and also argued that states have the power to regulate this issue without bringing in the skepticism of the Supreme Court. 

This case will determine the precedent for future cases regarding human rights, freedoms and protections under The U.S. Constitution regarding healthcare. 

The other part of the case to be determined, would be whether Tennessee could justify the ban. 

At last Wednesdayā€™s hearing, Justice Brett Kavanaugh and Justice Samuel Alito spoke in depth about the allegations raised by the state. They also discussed the level of effectiveness, against the levels of risk of gender affirming care. The sources that the Justices referenced have been determined by experts to be unreliable, biased, misleading and inaccurate. They argued that the state has a right to make a decision based on those sources, regardless of their credibility. 

Solicitor General Elizabeth Prologarā€™s oral argument on behalf of the petitioner stated that this case is about access to medications that have already been safely prescribed and safely used for decades to treat a wide range of conditions, including but not limited to, gender dysphoria. 

ā€œBut SB1 singles out and bans one particular use. In Tennessee, these medications can’t be prescribed to allow a minor to identify with or live as a gender inconsistent with the minor’s sex,ā€ argued Solicitor General Porlogar. 

Lambda Legalā€™s Nonbinary and Transgender Rights Project Director, Sasha Buchert commented on the case. 

ā€œSince 2021, 26 states have banned hormone therapies for transgender youth. These are all similar cases introduced by conservative state legislatures targeting trans youth and their families pushed by conservative and far-right groups using copy-cat legislation and peddling misinformation and conspiracy theories,ā€ she explained in a Lambda Legal FAQ

The California Perspective

Though it is believed that there wonā€™t be a decision from the court until sometime in June 2025, local organizations and community leaders have begun to discuss how the future will shape up once SCOTUS makes a ruling. 

Planned Parenthood in California, issued a statement following the oral arguments case.

ā€œThe Planned Parenthood affiliates in California know this playbook all too well and no matter what lies ahead, we are ready to fight to protect the right of transgender people, including youth, to access the care they need and deserve. While some states may be emboldened by the Supreme Courtā€™s eventual decision in this case to criminalize critical health care services once again, California will continue to be a safe haven for transgender people and their health, safety, privacy, and well-being,” said Jodi Hicks CEO and president at Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California.

Bamby Salcedo, president and CEO of the Trans Latin@ Coalition has built her entire career and legacy on championing transgender rights and believes that if the Supreme Court decides to uphold Tennessee’s right to enforce this law, California will also eventually see itself challenged as a safe haven for trans youth, as well as adults.  

“When we launched our policy agenda, we were going to focus the following legislative session in California, on a bill to reform Cal Aid and after the election, we had to rethink that because we know the state gets its funding from the federal government for [programs like] Medical and Medicare.”

Following last Wednesdayā€™s hearing of oral arguments, Attorney General Rob Bonta reinforced Californiaā€™s commitment toward protecting trans youth and their access to healthcare.  

ā€œFollowing oral arguments in U.S. v. Skrmetti in the Supreme Court, my office reaffirms our unwavering commitment to protecting the health and rights of transgender individuals to access medically necessary care,ā€ said Attorney General Bonta.

 ā€œLaws such as Tennesseeā€™s Senate Bill 1 are dangerous and discriminatory by denying transgender youth the critical, lifesaving care they need. Amid a growing wave of legislative attacks on LGBTQ+ rights, it is more important than ever to stand against these harmful measures. I urge the Supreme Court to protect the rights of transgender youth and ensure they are not denied the care they need to live full and authentic lives.ā€

In September, General Bonta led a multi-state coalition which included 20 attorney generals to challenge Florida’s law and administrative rule that severely limits access to gender-affirming care. He initially filed the amicus brief in May of last year, stressing California’s efforts and state responsibility in protecting transgender healthcare rights. In the brief, he also stressed the consequences of not receiving appropriate care.

Organizations like TransLatin@ Coalition, Bienestar Human Services and Equality California are amping up their voices and rolling up their sleeves to provide sanctuary, protections and resources to the LGBTQ+ and TGI communities.

The University of California, Los Angeles William’s Institute created an amicus brief which was submitted by Federal Policy Director Elana Redfield and Selendy Gay, a law firm based in New York, on behalf of Senior Scholar of Public Policy Jody Herman and Legal Director Christy Mallory. Herman and Mallory provided the court with appropriate and credible research to help the Justices understand the population affected by gender-affirming care bans and the impacts of the final ruling.

Regardless of what the outcome is, the decision will set a new standard for how transgender care, rights and issues will be viewed under the Constitution.

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Heritage Foundation praises effort to ban transgender healthcare for military families

House GOP signals eagerness to implement Project 2025ā€™s anti-LGBTQ policies

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President-elect Donald Trump addresses the anti-LGBT Heritage Foundation in 2017. (Washington Blade file photo by Michael Key)

In a statement released Tuesday, the conservative Heritage Foundation praised House Republicansā€™ military spending bill, including the provision added by Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) that would ban gender-affirming healthcare interventions for the children of U.S. service members.

Victoria Coates, vice president of the organizationā€™s Kathyrn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for National Security and Foreign Policy, said the National Defense Authorization Act, which was passed by the U.S. House Rules Committee along party lines on Monday, marks an ā€œimportant step toward a defense budget that flows from strategy and directs DOD to become as lethal as possible to protect the national security of Americans.ā€

ā€œThe bill authorizes resources for DOD at the border, retains the Houseā€™s ban on corrosive race-based policies, eliminates the Senateā€™s provision to draft our daughters, prohibits transgender surgeries for minors under TRICARE, supports military construction in the Indo-Pacific and shipbuilding, including a third Arleigh Burkeā€“class destroyer, and incremental funding for a second Virginia-class submarine,ā€ Coates said. ā€œThese policies in this bill, combined with new military leadership, will make America stronger.ā€ 

In April 2022, the Heritage Foundation published Project 2025, a comprehensive 920-page governing blueprint for President-elect Donald Trumpā€™s second term that proposes radical reforms to imbue the federal government with ā€œbiblical principlesā€ and advance a Christian nationalist agenda, including by stripping rights away from LGBTQ Americans while abandoning efforts to promote equality for sexual and gender minorities abroad.

ā€œThe next conservative president must make the institutions of American civil society hard targets for woke culture warriors,ā€ the authors explain on page four, beginning ā€œwith deleting the terms sexual orientation and gender identity (ā€œSOGIā€), diversity, equity, and inclusion (ā€œDEIā€), gender, gender equality, gender equity, gender awareness, gender-sensitive, abortion, reproductive health, reproductive rights, and any other term ā€¦ out of every federal rule, agency regulation, contract, grant, regulation, and piece of legislation that exists.ā€

The document also lays the groundwork for the incoming administration to revive the ban on military service by transgender troops that Trump implemented during his first term, arguing that ā€œgender dysphoria is incompatible with the demands of military service.ā€

Leading up to the election, when Project 2025 became a political liability for Trump, he tried to distance himself from the document and its policy proposals, but as the New York Times documented, an ā€œanalysis of the Project 2025 playbook and its 307 authors and contributors revealed that well over half of them had been in Mr. Trumpā€™s administration or on his campaign or transition teams.ā€

The Times also noted that Trump has held meetings with Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts and a co-founder, Edwin Feulner.

In October, the Congressional Equality Caucus published a report entitled, ā€œRipping Away Our Freedoms: How House Republicans are Working to Implement Project 2025ā€™s Assault on LGBTQI+ Americansā€™ Rights.ā€

The groupā€™s openly gay chair, U.S. Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wis.), noted that ā€œWhen Republicans took control of the House of Representatives last year, we saw an avalanche of attacks against the LGBTQI+ community.ā€

The congressman added, ā€œDuring the past two years, they forced more than 70 anti-LGBTQI+ votes on the House floor. And nearly every bill and amendment idea was ripped out of the pages of Project 2025ā€™s ā€˜Mandate for Leadership 2025: The Conservative Promise.ā€™ā€

The NDAA filed by House Republicans is unlikely to pass through the U.S. Senate while the chamber remains under Democratic control, and President Joe Biden has vowed to veto legislation that discriminates against transgender and LGBQ communities, but the spending package will face far fewer obstacles after the new Congress is seated on Jan. 3 and Trump is inaugurated on Jan. 20.

Objecting to the spending billā€™s inclusion of language prohibiting military families from accessing gender affirming care are congressional Democrats like U.S. Rep. Adam Smith (Wash.), who serves as the ranking member of the U.S. House Armed Services Committee, and advocacy groups like the Human Rights Campaign and the American Civil Liberties Union.

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Trump nominates gay man for Treasury secretary

Hedge fund executive would be the second openly gay cabinet secretary

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Scott Bessent (Screen capture: YouTube)

President-elect Donald Trump nominated openly gay hedge fund executive Scott Bessent as U.S. Treasury secretary on Friday.

Once a prolific donor to Democrats and a protege of liberal billionaire philanthropist George Soros, if confirmed Bessent would be the first LGBTQ official to lead the Treasury Department and the second gay cabinet secretary after Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.

“Trumpā€™s selection of Bessent, who is also openly gay, married, and has two children with his partner, is also a reminder of President Trumpā€™s love and respect for LGBT Americans,” the conservative LGBTQ group Log Cabin Republicans said in a statement.

ā€œScott Bessent is a terrific choice to become the next Treasury Secretary and the Log Cabin Republicans applaud President Trump for his pick,” the organization wrote. “As one of the most brilliant minds in the financial space and a vocal supporter of President Trumpā€™s economic agenda, Bessent will be a strong asset to help President Trump put America back on the path to financial security and economic prosperity.”

Equality Forum, a national LGBTQ civil rights organization, which oversees LGBT History Month, noted the nomination of Scott Bessent in a press release, writing that he “is highly regarded by the financial community and founder of a global macro investment firm.”

Equality Forum Executive Director Malcolm Lazin added, ā€œIf confirmed, Bessent will be the highest ranking openly gay U.S. government official in American history.”

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GOP resolution targets Sarah McBride, first trans member of Congress

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Delaware state Sen. Sarah McBride (Washington Blade photo by Daniel Truitt)

U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) on Monday proposed a resolution that would prohibit House members and staffers from ā€œusing single-sex facilities other than those corresponding to their biological sex.ā€

The bill, which comes just two weeks after Sarah McBride was elected to become the first transgender member of Congress, would block her from accessing womenā€™s bathrooms in the U.S. Capitol and House office buildings.

Republican leadership including House Speaker Mike Johnson (La.) have indicated they will seriously consider the proposal, while House Democrats denounced the effort as a cruel attempt to bully an incoming freshman colleague.

U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) on Monday proposed a resolution that would prohibit House members and staffers from ā€œusing single-sex facilities other than those corresponding to their biological sex.ā€

The bill, which comes just two weeks after Sarah McBride was elected to become the first transgender member of Congress, would block her from accessing womenā€™s bathrooms in the U.S. Capitol and House office buildings.

Republican leadership including House Speaker Mike Johnson (La.) have indicated they will seriously consider the proposal, while House Democrats denounced the effort as a cruel attempt to bully an incoming freshman colleague.

ā€œEvery day Americans go to work with people who have life journeys different than their own and engage with them respectfully, I hope members of Congress can muster that same kindness,ā€ McBride said in a post on X.

ā€œThis is a blatant attempt from far right-wing extremists to distract from the fact that they have no real solutions to what Americans are facing,ā€ she said. ā€œWe should be focused on bringing down the cost of housing, health care, and child care, not manufacturing culture wars.ā€

ā€œDelawareans sent me here to make the American dream more affordable and accessible and thatā€™s what Iā€™m focused on,ā€ McBride added.

In her successful bid for Delawareā€™s at-large congressional seat, McBrideā€™s campaign did not center the historic nature of her candidacy but rather her record of delivering results for her constituents like paid family and medical leave.

She did, however, talk about how everyone deserves a representative in Congress who respects them and their families.

Mace used transphobic language attacking McBride when speaking with reporters about her bill on Monday. ā€œSarah McBride doesnā€™t get a say. I mean, this is a biological man,ā€ she said, adding that the lawmaker ā€œdoes not belong in womenā€™s spaces, womenā€™s bathrooms, locker rooms, changing rooms, period, full stopā€ and instead should ā€œuse the menā€™s restroom.ā€

ā€œIā€™m going to be standing in the brink, standing in his or her way, putting a stop to this insanity and this nonsense,ā€ the South Carolina congresswoman said. She did not directly address a question about what ā€œmechanismā€ might be used for ā€œchecking whoā€™s qualified to use the ladiesā€™ room,ā€ but her bill specifies that the House sergeant-at-arms would be responsible for enforcement.

Asked whether she introduced the bill ā€œspecifically because Sarah McBride is coming to Congress,ā€ Mace said ā€œthat, and more.ā€

Fielding questions from reporters on the steps of the Capitol Monday, far-right U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (Ga.) endorsed her colleagueā€™s proposal while using anti-trans language and deliberately misgendering the incoming congresswoman from Delaware.

ā€œHe is a man. He is a biological male,ā€ she said. ā€œHe has plenty of places he can go.ā€

LGBTQ House members rally behind soon-to-be colleague

Gay U.S. Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wis.), who chairs the Congressional Equality Caucus, shared a statement with the Washington Blade on Tuesday.

ā€œItā€™s been a while since Nancy Mace has had her 15 minutes of fame,ā€ he said. ā€œRepublicans keep desperately lashing out against trans people to try and distract from the fact that this Congress has been one of the least productive in historyā€”they canā€™t even pass a Farm Bill or pass major appropriations bills, so they turn to using these cruel attacks to distract from their inability to govern and failure to deliver for the American people.ā€

ā€œNancy Maceā€™s resolution is a pathetic, attention-seeking attempt to grab Trumpā€™s eye and the media spotlightā€”and trans people, including trans employees, are paying the price,ā€ Pocan added.

Several of the eight other LGBTQ House members, all serving as co-chairs of the caucus, had spoken out against the bill as of Tuesday morning.

ā€œThe cruelty is the point,ā€ U.S. Rep. Becca Balint (D-Vt.) said. ā€œIs that what we want the sergeant-at-arms to be doing when we had an attack on the freaking Capitol?ā€

ā€œLetā€™s call this what it is: bullying,ā€ Equality PAC Co-Chairs Ranking Member Mark Takano (D-Calif.) and Congressman Ritchie Torres (D-N.Y.) said in a joint statement. ā€œInstead of working to lower daily household costs for families and provide real relief for those struggling across our country, House Republicans have decided to single out one newly elected Member of Congress and make her life more difficult for absolutely no reason at all.ā€

ā€œThis is nothing more than a pathetic attempt from a member who has repeatedly shown no interest in governing simply to make headlines and get attention,ā€ they said. ā€œCongress has a responsibility to focus on the issues that matter to all Americans, not to police who uses which bathroom.ā€

The congressmen added, ā€œEquality PAC stands proudly with Sarah as we fight back against this baseless attack on her and the trans community. And we will always stand up to bullies ā€“ especially those we serve alongside in the US. Capitol Building.ā€

HRC condemns Maceā€™s resolution

Human Rights Campaign spokesperson Laurel Powell released the following statement on Tuesday:

ā€œLetā€™s call this what it is: Rather than focusing on issues that matter to Americans, Rep. Mace is seeking a spotlight by cruelly discriminating against her incoming colleague, the first openly transgender person to be elected to Congress.

ā€œHer resolution would also target trans people who have worked and served in the Capitol long before this monthā€™s electionsā€“more proof this is merely a political charade by a grown-up bully.

ā€œIt is another warning sign that the incoming anti-equality House majority will continue to focus on targeting LGBTQ+ people rather than the cost of living, price gouging or any of the problems the American people elected them to solve.ā€

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Kamala Harris’s loss prompts mixed reaction in India

Vice president’s mother was born in Chennai

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Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at Howard University in D.C. on Nov. 6, 2024, after she conceded to President-elect Donald Trump. (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

Vice President Kamala Harris’s loss in the U.S. presidential election has elicited mixed reactions among LGBTQ+ activists in India.

A notable portion of Indians expressed support for now President-elect Donald Trump over Harris, even though her maternal lineage traces back to India. Her mother, Shyamala Gopalan, was born into a Brahmin family in Chennai in 1938, and her grandfather, PV Gopalan, hailed from the village of Thulasendrapuram in Tamil Nadu.

Harris’s loss prompted mixed reactions within the LGBTQ+ community.

While some individuals expressed disappointment, others backed Trump.

The Washington Blade in August reported that Harris’s grandfather moved to New Delhi to serve as a civil servant in British-ruled India. This move eventually facilitated Gopalan’s journey to the U.S., where she pursued biomedical science at the University of California, Berkeley a step that played a foundational role in shaping Harris’s future political aspirations.

The Washington Blade since Election Day has spoken with several LGBTQ+ activists and influencers in India.

Harish Iyer, a plaintiff in one of India’s marriage equality cases, in response to Trump’s election said the “path for queer liberation has never been straight.”

“The presidential election was filled with rhetoric from the Republican side against transgender persons,” said Iyer. “There has been a complete denial of the existence of transgender people and also widespread ignominy and ostracism. This, adding to the overturn of Roe vs. Wade, has aggravated tensions for everyone from gender variant persons to birthing parents of all genders.”

He further noted there is a strong change of more transphobic legislation and rhetoric in the U.S. with Trump in the White House, Republicans in control of the U.S. Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives, and a conservative majority on the U.S. Supreme Court.

“In a largely connected world, where many Indians and India-born people are in America, the effect of this will be palpable in India too,” said Iyer.

Indrani Chakraborty is a prominent social activist and advocate for transgender rights, particularly in northeast India. She has been outspoken about the challenges faced by her trans daughter.

Chakraborty said the effects will be felt around the world if Trump continues his transphobic rhetoric and the U.S. government does not support the LGBTQ+ community. Anwesh Kumar Sahoo, an Indian artist, writer, model, and the youngest winner of Mr. Gay World 2016, told the Blade that Trumpā€™s policies are a setback in the ongoing fight for LGBTQ+ rights and visibility.

“It’s a strong reminder of how interconnected our struggles are globally,” said Sahoo. “It highlights the importance of standing up for equality everywhere.”

Abhijit Iyer Mitra, an LGBTQ+ activist and senior fellow at the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, in response to Harris’s loss said her Indian roots “really do not matter.”

“America expects assimilation and not just integration,” said Mitra. “She has no real connect to India in any sense or knowledge of India in any sense. So, being from here absolutely means nothing. She is American through and through, she has demonstrated no knowledge of India, no nothing, so it is what it is.”

“I am not really worried, certainly not from an Indian point of view because her particular political supporters are all viciously anti-India, but not Biden,” added Mitra. “Biden is pro-India. But Kamala, especially her supporters, belongs to the same woke circuit which would be… ‘Oh India … genocide happening’ etc. So just being Indian means nothing.”

While responding to the Trump campaign’s rhetoric on trans issues, Mitra said “the issue is not the transgender community, but the forcing of gender ideology on everyone, where you put kids on puberty blockers and have irreversible surgery done, and kids taken away from their parents.”

“I thought I was a girl when I was a kid,” said Mitra. “When I grew up, I realized that I was a man. I am very comfortable being who I am and thank God none of this happened. Had this happened now, I would have been taken away from my parents, asked to undergo surgery, and would not have been able to lead the life I am leading.”

“What is being propagated as this ‘trans ideology’ or ‘gender ideology’ is essentially homophobia, where you are told a man cannot be attracted to a man. A woman cannot be attracted to a woman. They are instead pushed to undergo irreversible sex changes and become something else,” added Mitra. “This is exactly what Iran does ā€” they punish homosexuality with death, but if you have a sex change, it is considered acceptable.”

“There is nothing pro-LGBTQ about the Democrats ā€” far from it. It is an LGBTQ genocide. It is erasing the viability of the LGBTQ community. It is a huge disservice to gender dysmorphic individuals, who are the ones who might genuinely need surgery. But why do they need surgery? It is because they are shunned by society and forced to undergo something that no one should have to endure,” said Mitra. “They need to be accepted and loved for who they are, not turned into something society demands them to be.”

Sarah McBride, a Democrat from Delaware, on Election Day became the first openly trans person elected to Congress. Biden, former President Barack Obama, California Gov. Gavin Newsom, and Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker are among those who specifically mentioned marriage equality and other LGBTQ+ rights during the 2024 Democratic National Convention in Chicago.

“Kamala’s defeat is a huge setback for our friends from the LGBTQ community in the U.S.,” Kalki Subramaniam, an activist, queer artist, and actor who is a member of Indiaā€™s National Transgender Council, told the Blade.

“As a Tamil woman from Kamala’s mother’s state, I am disappointed that Kamala was not elected,” added Subramaniam. “As Kamala said, never give up and burn bright. For all my LGBTQ families around the world, let us support more leaders like Kamala Harris and strengthen them. Let us step forward and take leadership to win back all our rights.”

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California Politics

What does Measure G mean for Los Angeles County?

L.A. County makes historic strides toward achieving more government accountability and representation

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Canva Graphic by Gisselle Palomera

Measure G campaign declares victory, making way for pivotal and significant reform in Los Angeles County and ushering in a new era of accountability. Voters in favor of the measure hope to see a transformation of the bureaucratic system and more valid representation from the additional board supervisor seats. 

ā€œWith the passage of Measure G, we are advancing a vision of Los Angeles County that prioritizes transparency, accountability and equitable representation. This measure gives a voice to communities that have often been overlooked, creating a governance structure that truly reflects our diverse County,ā€ said Nichelle Henderson, president of the Los Angeles Community College District.

This measure made history, declaring victory after gaining majority approval from voters. This measure makes history after various attempts to expand the LA County Board of Supervisors failed in 1962, 1976, 1992 and again in 2000. 

The measure will now require County departments and agencies to present their budgets to the Board in open, public meetings, prior to adoption of annual budgets, effective immediately. 

The ā€œrevolving door,ā€ policy prohibiting former County officials from lobbying the County for a minimum of two years after leaving office, will now be strengthened, effective immediately. 

Elected officials who are criminally convicted of a crime will be suspended without pay, also effective immediately. 

The measure will establish and create an independent Ethics Commission, as well as an Office of Ethics Compliance, led by an Ethics Compliance Officer by 2026. 

Under the measure, a County Executive will be elected in 2028 and the Board of Supervisors will nearly double in size by 2032, following the 2030 independent redistricting process. 

The motion was originally co-authored by LA County Board Chair Lindsey Horvath and Supervisor Janice Hahn, with the support of Supervisor Hilda L. Solis. Horvath and Solis argued that five people could not effectively represent such a large and diverse population, while Supervisors Holly Mitchell and Kathryn Barger panned the move as rushed and ill-conceived.

LA County residents have affirmed that the way forward lies in a complete transformation of the Countyā€™s governance. Now that itā€™s been approved, the measure will add true checks and balances through a more representative legislative branch and executive branch with direct accountability to voters.Ā 

ā€œWe will now have the ability to fix what is broken and deliver the results our communities are counting on, especially in the face of threats to our most vulnerable residents from the next federal administration,ā€ said Horvath.

ā€œThrough this historic change, we will address the most pressing issues facing Angelenos with greater urgency and accountability, and create a more ethical and representative government fit for the 21st century.ā€

The approval of this measure made history because previous attempts to change the countyā€™s charter failed, while Measure G was approved through broad-based support from nurses, small businesses, civil rights groups and stateā€“as well asā€“federal leaders from throughout the county.Ā 

The academic community responded to the approval of the measure, which is set to be enshrined into the L.A. County Charter shortly after it is certified by the L.A. County Registrar-Recorder on December 3, 2024. 

ā€œThis historic victory gives voice to communities who have long been marginalized in the decision-making process,ā€ said Sara Sadhwani, Ph.D., professor of politics at Pomona College. ā€œWith a more transparent and responsive governance structure, weā€™re creating a County government that truly reflects the diversity and needs of its people. This is a win for democracy and for all Angelenos.ā€

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Politics

Will Rollins loses razor-close race for Republican Ken Calvert’s House seat

Gay Democrat lost to anti-LGBTQ+ Republican

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Will Rollins, right, with partner Paolo Benvenuto (Photo courtesy ofWill Rollins for Congress)

A major, late-breaking U.S. House of Representatives race was called on Wednesday for the anti-LGBTQ+ Republican, U.S. Rep. Ken Calvert, who with his victory managed to stave off a second attempt by gay former U.S. Attorney Will Rollins to flip the 30+ year incumbent’s seat representing California’s 41st Congressional District.

The results all but extinguished the Democratic Party’s prospects of regaining control of the House, a stinging blow that comes a week after Republicans won the White House and retook their U.S. Senate majority.

Given how narrow the margin in their race was expected to be, and how narrow the House Republican majority was heading into the election, a lot of money was poured into the contest for CA-41.

While final vote counts have not yet been reported, their race was close, as was expected this year and as it was in 202 after Calvert’s district was redrawn to include the city of Palm Springs, a heavily Democratic area with a sizable LGBTQ+ population.

Endeavoring to reposition himself as a friend to the community, the congressman subsequently embraced some pro-LGBTQ+ policies such as by voting for the Respect for Marriage Act, which codified legal protections for married same-sex couples

Critics including Rollins said his “evolution” was insincere and opportunistic, pointing to Calvert’s anti-LGBTQ+ moves after 2022, like striking funds in an appropriations bill that had been earmarked for three LGBTQ+ centers.

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Politics

Dems must not abandon trans people after Trumpā€™s win: Kierra Johnson

LGBTQ advocates prepared for all outcomes ahead of election

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National LGBTQ Task Force Action Fund President Kierra Johnson speaks at the group's D.C. Board cocktail reception in September. (Blade file photo by Michael Key)

As Democrats look inward following Vice President Kamala Harrisā€™s electoral defeat, the party must not abandon transgender people or cede the fight to expand rights and protections for the community, National LGBTQ Task Force Action Fund President Kierra Johnson told the Washington Blade.

President-elect Donald Trumpā€™s campaign, and those run by other Republican candidates, spent tens of millions on anti-trans ads leading up to the election, a messaging strategy that has been credited with energizing the conservative base and ultimately defeating Democrats like U.S. Rep. Colin Allred (D-Texas), who ran for Ted Cruzā€™s (R-Texas) U.S. Senate seat.

Others doubt whether the issue had much, if any, impact on the elections, especially the presidential race ā€” arguing that the results are better explained by headwinds like the post-pandemic disadvantage faced by incumbent leaders around the world, or by the realignment of the American electorate that decisively sent Trump back to the White House.

When she was at Howard University on Wednesday to watch Harris deliver her concession speech, Johnson said she was asked twice whether ā€œthe alignment around trans rights was a part of the problemā€ or whether Harris was doomed by her campaignā€™s failure to distance the vice president from President Joe Biden. Her response: ā€œGod, no.ā€

Broadly, she said, ā€œitā€™s pointless to be in this space of, ā€˜what could the Harris campaign have done differentlyā€™ when weā€™re operating in this contextā€ where authoritarianism and fascism have taken hold while sexism, racism, homophobia, transphobia, anti-immigrant bigotry, and other forms of prejudice are now expressed so openly.

Plus, Johnson added, the vice president ā€œhad, what, 107 days of a campaign? And she got that close ā€” thatā€™s pretty damn amazing.ā€

Challenging the theory that the anti-trans advertising was effective, she said, is (1) the success of so many LGBTQ candidates like Delaware State Sen. Sarah McBride, who made history with her election to become the first transgender member of Congress, and (2) the fact that Trump and his allies did not just leverage anti-trans messaging in their campaigns, but also leaned into other forms of bigotry, from fear mongering about immigrant communities to racist attacks focused on Harrisā€™s biracial identity.

NBC News reported on Friday that hundreds of LGBTQ candidates were elected to public office across the U.S., and many races have not yet been called. According to the LGBTQ+ Victory Fund, the number of known LGBTQ people who ran this year, 1,017, marks a 1.1 percent increase from 2020, with more non-cisgender candidates running than ever before.

About 80 percent have been successful. Several, like McBride, have made history. For instance, Hawaii, Iowa, and Missouri will welcome the first transgender representatives to their state legislatures, Kim Coco Iwamoto, Aime Wichtendahl, and Wick Thomas.

ā€œWhen I see this many trans people who were voted by the people into elected office, some who were reelected into office, Iā€™m hard pressed to believe that that was the winning strategy,ā€ Johnson said, pointing to wins by other trans candidates in Minnesota, Kentucky, New Jersey, and Illinois.

ā€œThe Trump campaign had a lot of bigotry, throughout the first campaign, continuing on till now, that was anti-Black, anti-immigrant, anti-woman, anti-queer, anti-trans,ā€ she said, adding, ā€œThereā€™s an appetite for that kind of racist, bigoted way of doing and being. They did a whole lot of that. And, yeah, I think it spoke to a particular part of their base ā€” and I donā€™t think that that was about us, what we did or didnā€™t do right.ā€

Dividing the Democratic coalition is a losing strategy

ā€œItā€™s really easy for us to point our fingers at conservatives, right-of-center [folks] or Trumpers or Tea Partiers,ā€ she said. ā€œBut itā€™s harder for us to admit and talk about racismā€ and other forms of discrimination and prejudice ā€œthat is existent and perpetuated in left, leftist parties and left communities and organizations that are doing social justice work.ā€

ā€œWhen I hear people who identify as Democrats saying we need to distance ourselves from trans people and perpetuating this notion that thatā€™s why we lost,ā€ Johnson said, ā€œthat is transphobia among leftist political peopleā€ and evidence of the need to root out and combat it.

ā€œWeā€™ve got to start building our strategies with our whole community intact,ā€ she said. ā€œNot how weā€™re going to do this without trans people. Not how weā€™re going to do this without, you know, evangelical Black people. Not how weā€™re going to do this without people in the Midwest and the Rust Belt or the Bible Belt. Not how weā€™re going to do this without immigrants.ā€

Each of those approaches would alienate critical parts of the Democratic base, Johnson said.

Beyond the work of electing pro-equality candidates, she said the movement and the Democratic Party must ā€œaffirm the humanity of all of us and build strategies that put the most vulnerable at the center,ā€ which ā€œmeans we have to question how things have always been doneā€ along with the systems that were not originally designed to accommodate the full diversity of people they serve.

ā€œPart of it is about representation,ā€ Johnson said, ā€œthe presence of non-binary, trans, queer people in the work, in ads, in media. But itā€™s also a power analysisā€ that involves, or requires, talking ā€œabout trans people not as a separate community of people, but part of the different communities we are in.ā€

For example, trans people are experiencing the struggle for affordable housing as much as anyone else, she said. ā€œRegardless of the work that weā€™re doing ā€” prison reform, voting rights, housing access ā€” put our people at the center, trans people at the center, as yet another voice that is a part of that whole.ā€

The success of LGB and queer and trans candidates last week, and the protections for LGBTQ people and womenā€™s reproductive freedoms in ballot measures that passed in states like New York, were important, Johnson said.

At the same time, ā€œwhat I want people to understand,ā€ she said, ā€œis weā€™ve got to move beyond identity politics and representation and really think about how we are building power. So with these wins, how are we leveraging them for gained power in our communities? Weā€™ve got to be working overtime to come up with the pathways and strategies to leverage that power toward progress for our whole community.ā€

LGBTQ movement ready for incoming administration

When asked to share a message for the LGBTQ community in the wake of the election, Johnson said ā€œweā€™ve got to create space and time to feel and heal,ā€ but ā€œwe also have to find our organizations, our community partners, our friend groups that we can actually dig in with to get the work done.ā€

ā€œYou have every reason to be mad, sad, confused, frustrated,ā€ she said, ā€œbut do not be helpless.ā€

Johnson added, ā€œOur communities have been resilient through decades, centuries. And that perspective is important. While we are in hard times, our ancestors and foreparents created a lot of progress, and now weā€™re called to do the same. We have a responsibility to do the same.ā€

ā€œA lot of our peers didnā€™t make it to be freedom fighters,ā€ she said, but ā€œwe have. Letā€™s step into that power.ā€

While LGBTQ advocacy groups, including the Task Force, are expected to lose their seats at the table once the Trump-Vance administration takes over in January, Johnson told the Blade, ā€œThatā€™s all good, because the power is actually in the people anyway.ā€

ā€œAccess to the White House, influence in the White House, is important,ā€ she said, but ā€œthatā€™s never been the end-all-be-all. We know that power is built from the grassroots up, and so that just gives us more time to organize and strategize with our people on the ground.ā€

ā€œBring it,ā€ Johnson added. ā€œWeā€™ve got powerful, powerful voices. Folks who are in Texas and in Michigan and Ohio, that that are ready. Theyā€™re ready to dig in, to keep this fight going ā€” and to fight smarter, and in a broader, bigger coalition.ā€

ā€œWhile we couldnā€™t have predicted exactly where we were going to be today, the Task Force and other organizations in the LGBTQ movement have been doing scenario planning for months,ā€ she said, ā€œso weā€™re not caught with our pants down. Weā€™ve run scenarios, and we are already moving to implement different strategies in the communities that weā€™re working in.ā€

Johnson highlighted the Task Forceā€™s flagship ā€œCreating Changeā€ conference in Las Vegas from Jan. 22 to 26, where the organization will be ā€œbringing together legal minds to actually do, basically, office hours on-site,ā€ allowing attendees the opportunity to consult attorneys with questions about their rights and protections under the next administration.

ā€œItā€™s not about advocacy,ā€ she said. ā€œItā€™s about taking care of our people. I think youā€™re going to see more of that ā€” in addition to the policy and advocacy work, more is going to be done to actually hold and support and protect our people.ā€

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Politics

HRCā€™s Brandon Wolf reflects on Trumpā€™s victory, path ahead for LGBTQ movement

He joined the Blade for a conversation on Rated LGBT Radio

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Human Rights Campaign National Press Secretary Brandon Wolf (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

Human Rights Campaign National Press Secretary Brandon Wolf and Washington Blade White House reporter Christopher Kane spoke with Rated LGBT Radio on Thursday, following Donald Trumpā€™s victory over Vice President Kamala Harris.

They covered subjects ranging from the impact of anti-trans advertising by the former presidentā€™s campaign and other Republican candidates in down-ballot races to the future of the Democratic Party and what lies ahead for organizations in the LGBTQ movement.

Prior to joining HRC, Wolf served as press secretary for Equality Florida. A survivor of the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando, he is recognized for his work in LGBTQ advocacy, public speaking and media appearances, and his critically acclaimed 2023 memoir ā€œA Place for Us.ā€

The conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

MODERATOR: What is the mood at HRC and what are leaders and staff saying?

BRANDON WOLF: Like millions of people, the folks at HRC are heartbroken. I know I can speak for myself in saying that I am most heartbroken for those who have had their humanity questioned for years by Donald Trump and the MAGA movement. Iā€™m most heartbroken for those who have been in the crosshairs, who have seen their freedoms and rights stripped away in state after state, in places like Texas and Tennessee and Florida. Iā€™m heartbroken for the families who have been terrorized by their political leaders for years because of the kind of environment that people like Donald Trump have created, and Iā€™m heartbroken for all the people who arenā€™t sure what happens next, the people whoā€™ve listened to Donald Trumpā€™s words, whoā€™ve seen the ads that heā€™s run, whoā€™ve read through Project 2025 and are deeply concerned about what happens next for themselves and their families.

This is a really challenging time, and the obstacles weā€™re facing are incredibly difficult, but weā€™ve also been here before as a community. I think about our ancestors a lot. I think about when we were being beaten and brutally assaulted by police officers, we fought back at Stonewall, and birthed a movement when people were dying by the 1,000s of AIDS and leaders refused to acknowledge that pain and suffering. We fought back, we formed Act Up, and we brought ourselves to this moment in time where we have the opportunity to potentially end that epidemic in our lifetime. We have been in incredibly challenging circumstances before, and at every one of those moments, weā€™ve locked arms with each other. Weā€™ve chosen to get through it together. We dared ourselves to imagine whatā€™s possible when we finally overcome those hurdles, and at every one of those moments, we have been successful. Weā€™ve made progress happen. So, Iā€™m heartbroken by the results of the election, but Iā€™m certainly not feeling broken today.

MODERATOR: What are you hearing from LGBTQ groups youā€™ve spoken with in terms of their reaction to the election?

CHRISTOPHER KANE: The remarks that we just heard from Brandon actually echo what I heard earlier from Kierra Johnson, whoā€™s the president of the LGBTQ Task Force and Task Force Action Fund. She was saying how we have this rich history as a community of activism, and how brave our forebears have been and how many of our brothers and sisters lost their lives defending our rights.

Something that I think these advocacy groups will be thinking about is what the next administration might cost [them], in terms of their access to levers of power. To what extent is the Trump administration going to work with these groups? And that means kind of a change in strategy, because the focus becomes, you know, political organizing and a lot of the other work thatā€™s so important that these groups are engaged in, right? You know, whether itā€™s going out into the field and helping people get, in our community, get exactly what they need, Whether itā€™s providing legal resources for folks, in light of what weā€™re going to see in terms of regulatory and legal changes over the next administration. So thereā€™s just so much work to be done.

[Note: Johnson told the Blade that Task Force and the other movement groups had been ā€œdoing scenario planning for monthsā€ to prepare for all possible outcomes, and together are already ā€œmoving to implement different strategies in the communities that weā€™re working in.ā€]

MODERATOR: It seems the Trump campaign sought to divide the community between LGB people on one side and trans and nonbinary communities on the other. VP-elect J.D. Vance saying, for example, that the ā€˜normal gay guyā€™ vote would break in their favor.

WOLF: First, Iā€™m loath to let J.D. Vance tell anybody what normal is supposed to be. But the truth is, the data does not bear out that they won any significant part of the LGBTQ+ community. Exit polls show that people in the community backed Harris over Donald Trump by a 70 point margin, 84 to 14. That margin is second only to Black women in support of Vice President Harris. So, the LGBTQ+ community continues to be a very reliable part of the Democratic coalition, and I think that is because of a couple of things: Number one, we understand whatā€™s at stake. We understand what we have to lose in these elections. We understand what weā€™re up against in Donald Trump. And number two, in Kamala Harris and [her VP pick, Minnesota Gov.] Tim Walz, we had real champions for our community ā€” career-long champions who were doing the work of equality even before that was, maybe, politically advantageous or easy for them to do. It was Kamala Harris who was performing some of the first same-sex marriages in California when the country was having a debate over whether or not we should be able to get married at all. It was Tim Walz who, in the late ā€™90s, as a football coach, was the sponsor of the Gay-Straight Alliance club at his high school.

So, I think you saw that drive turnout in the LGBTQ+ community. That number expands when you get into some of these highly competitive battleground states. In Arizona, equality voters, who are people who prioritize LGBTQ+ equality when deciding who to vote for, equality voters backed Democratic candidates by a 92 to seven margin. So, again, weā€™re talking about a community that understands whatā€™s at stake, and really showed up in this election cycle.

The other thing I want to address is, youā€™re talking about the MAGA agenda of driving people apart from each other. This is the old playbook. This is the right-wing playbook that they use every single time. And itā€™s because the MAGA agenda is not one that is designed to bring people together. MAGA candidates and campaigns donā€™t have a vision for our country. They donā€™t fundamentally believe in a multi-racial, multi-generational democracy, and so the only thing they have to offer the American people is division, chaos and hate. They pit neighbors against each other. They turn one community against another. They dare us to build higher walls and taller fences, because so long as weā€™re fighting with each other, we wonā€™t find the time or the resources to organize against them collectively. And so that is what they have to offer us, this agenda of chaos, division, and hate, and that is what theyā€™ve been trying throughout the election cycle, instead of offering policy proposals to help people address the cost of housing or groceries, instead of offering offering real comprehensive conversations on immigration reform, for instance, they serve up hate and xenophobia and transphobia and general bigotry. So, I think we have to be wary of falling into that same trap.

Weā€™re going to spend years dissecting the election and figuring out how to build a winning coalition moving forward, but I can tell you that scapegoating trans people in this moment is not going to help us build the path forward. I think at HRC, I can speak for us that you know our job is to be in community with those other organizations. Weā€™ve already been having conversations throughout the election cycle with our progressive partners, people in the labor space, people in the immigrant rights space, people in the civil rights space, the voting rights space, certainly the reproductive freedom space and others. We have to keep those conversations going. We have to make sure that weā€™re building a plan and a strategy that organizes communities across issue areas, and ultimately, weā€™re going to have to be united. We have to be a united front in defense of democracy and freedom and our basic civil liberties.

KANE: As Brandon said, first of all, the exit polls show that this strategy of dividing communities didnā€™t work, and it should come as no surprise, because [Brandon is] exactly right ā€” thatā€™s not how to win. Weā€™re much stronger together.

Itā€™s only been, what, less than 48 hours, right, since the election was called? We still have to collect a lot of information, and thereā€™s plenty of time for reflection and recrimination and everything else to figure out exactly what happened here. To the extent possible. But I think one thing worth probing is whether the spend by Republicans on anti-trans advertising had any effect. And I think thatā€™s something thatā€™s perhaps worth looking into and maybe examining what would be the best way to respond to those anti-trans commercials. Should the campaign have done more to address it directly? Should they have pivoted to an economic message and said, you know, Republicans want to focus on [going after trans people] at the expense of improving materially the lives of the American people? You know, there are a lot of directions you could take that, but I think itā€™s worth revisiting in the future when we have more information.

MODERATOR: At Equality Florida, you fought against the extreme anti-LGBTQ laws passed under Gov. Ron DeSantis (R). How should the community prepare for or respond to those policies if or when they are introduced at the federal level after Trump takes office?

WOLF: Project 2025 is horrifying, but itā€™s not all that surprising if youā€™ve been living its beta test for years, and people in places like Florida and Texas and Tennessee have indeed been living this beta test of Project 2025. I think the next steps come in phases in my mind. And I would say, we start with community. We have to take care of our people. Iā€™ve been at several of these inflection points when bad legislation is passing and leaders are trafficking in dehumanizing language, and the first thing we do is is reach out to people and ask what they need. I know that thatā€™s what weā€™re going to be doing at HRC. Weā€™ve got some plans in place to be with community, gathering information, listening, hearing what folks need. Weā€™ve already put out a number of mental health resources that people can get access to. So, in these really difficult moments, we have to start with community. Iā€™ve been in some really dark moments in my life, and in those moments, I didnā€™t know that the next day was worth living for, but it was community that reminded me I had to get up and fight every single day. Weā€™re going to need that community right now more than ever.

The second thing I would say is we have the same rights today as we did when polls closed on Tuesday. In fact, we have the same congressional makeup today as we did when polls close on Tuesday. And thereā€™s work to be done so long as we have control over the White House [and] a pro-equality majority in the Senate. There are things that we can do. I know that weā€™re having conversations internally with the administration to see where we can safeguard and shore up peopleā€™s access to freedoms and rights. Weā€™ve got to do that work during the lame duck session.

And finally, I think we have work to do once Donald Trump is inaugurated. Weā€™re going to have to work with Congress to try to blunt some of the attacks that will come through the legislative branch. Weā€™re going to have to work with governors and state legislatures to try to safeguard peopleā€™s freedoms and protections on the state level. And weā€™re going to have to work with our foundation, our educational programs, to change the culture, to humanize people. So often we can get lost in the political rancor. People become talking points. Itā€™s our job to put human faces and stories behind the policies that weā€™re debating, and weā€™re going to have to do that ā€” whether itā€™s, you know, in classrooms, talking to young people about the kind of future they want for themselves and their peers, or whether itā€™s workplaces, challenging companies to make their values more than just a dusty poster on a wall, but living, breathing values that make peopleā€™s lives fundamentally better. So, itā€™s going to take a whole of organization, a whole-of-community approach, to resist Donald Trump, but I donā€™t want us to skip past the part where we we take care of each other first for a second.

MODERATOR: Reactions to Delaware State Sen. Sarah McBrideā€™s victory in her race for the stateā€™s at-large seat in the U.S. House, which distinguishes her as the first transgender candidate elected to Congress?

WOLF: Youā€™re spot on when youā€™re talking about the power that Sarah has, and I donā€™t want to lose that. You know, Tuesday was a rough night in the presidential, and certainly did not go the way we wanted it to in other races, but we canā€™t lose sight of the historic wins that we got either. Sarah McBrideā€™s victory is groundbreaking for people. There are trans kids out there who are wondering whether or not this country loves them, who will look up and see Sarah McBrideā€™s face on a television screen and believe that they can be whoever they want to be. That really matters. When we say representation matters, thatā€™s what representation really looks like.

And when youā€™re talking about the story that Sarah tells just by walking the halls or or giving speeches from the floor, donā€™t forget that Sarah did not just win this race for Congress. She dominated in the primary field because of her record of service. She cleared that field very early on. Adnd then in the general election, she garnered the highest support among any other Democrat running in Delaware, except for one, the insurance commissioner. Weā€™re going to have to dissect how that happened. But, you know, weā€™re talking about Sarah McBride getting more votes, you know, than folks running for governor and for Senate. So Sarah is a gravitational pull right now in Delaware politics, she is a groundbreaking win for the community, and it matters that she got there by being an incredibly talented champion for her constituents.

And so, to answer your question, yes, we have to tell the story of why Sarah McBrideā€™s race is historic, why her serving is groundbreaking. And we have to tell the story of how Sarah got there, that she got there by doing really good, hard, work. By connecting with her constituents. By delivering results for people every single day. Thatā€™s what it looks like to be successful. And when we tell those full, rich stories of all that people are, thatā€™s when we see them as human, right?

I think we can do such a better job in the media and in digital social media spaces [of] telling the rich fullness of peopleā€™s lives. I want to hear the stories of the trans business owners. The trans parents. I want to hear the story of the trans woman who just graduated from law school. I want to hear those rich, full stories, and thatā€™s how we chart a new path.

KANE: I agree with everything Brandon said. You know, Iā€™ll add that when I interviewed President Biden at the end of September, one of the things we talked about was Sarah McBride. And he said something, I wish I had the exact words in front of me, but it was something like, ā€˜Sarahā€™s going to be, I pray to God, a member of Congress.ā€™ And I think he understood and understands and was communicating just the unbelievable power of having a transgender woman serving in the United States Congress, and everything that that means.

And itā€™s not, of course, just that sheā€™s elected and is serving there, but itā€™s the work that sheā€™s going to be doing when she gets there. And, you know, Sarah is the real deal. Sheā€™s so widely respected and for her work, I mean, as a state senator in Delaware, she was very effective in securing a bill that provided paid family leave for people in Delaware. So, sheā€™s just been very effective, and, again, very widely respected.

MODERATOR: The Trump-Vance administration will bring an influx of insiders ā€” lobbyists, staffers, attorneys, advisers ā€” to Washington. When contending with new policies concerning LGBTQ rights, how critical will it be to work with those folks, and what does that look like?

KANE: I just had a conversation with a senior employee at a federal government agency, and I was asking her about what the transition process looks like. Iā€™ve never covered a presidential transition, but the process is more or less consistent and tends to work in the same way each time. You have folks that are eager to make their ins and make inroads at various agencies, and they have their eye on various jobs.

And then thereā€™s a lot of, I think especially with this crowd, frankly, a lot of people knifing each other. There are warring factions. Also so thatā€™s something that we need to understand, like within the Republican Party and even within Trumpā€™s closest group of aides, there was conflict. A lot of conflict. So, ultimately, yes, of course, like it comes down to the people that are really effectuating these policies and and also the question, of course, of how effective they can be, especially where thereā€™s a lot of dysfunction. And I think we can probably expect to see ā€” as much as weā€™ve been promised that this administration is going to be a lot smoother, and he knows what heā€™s doing this time ā€” I think based on the reporting about how his campaign went, that we can expect a lot of dysfunction.

WOLF: I will cosign that and say, you know, one of the things that people warned about Trumpā€™s Project 2025 plan all along was this idea of purging the federal government and replacing dedicated career public servants with Trump acolytes. And what that would mean for those levers of power, right? You think about people like Stephen Miller and Steve Bannon and the devastating impact they had the first time, you can just imagine a federal, you know, government full of people like Stephen Miller and Steve Bannon, with very few people there to act as a check and a balance.

Your second point is so important to me, Chris, which is about dysfunction. When you put unqualified, incompetent people in important positions, then systems and structures break down, right? Youā€™re talking about putting Elon Musk in charge of anything ā€” Iā€™m not sure he knows how government works, and it concerns me that he would be overseeing large government agencies that have complicated functions that impact peopleā€™s daily lives. Youā€™re talking about some of these other people that just have no background in public administration. They donā€™t know how these agencies are supposed to function, and youā€™re putting them in positions because theyā€™re a pal or theyā€™re a yes man. Thatā€™s incredibly dangerous, that the federal government plays a critical role in peopleā€™s everyday lives, and putting incompetent people in these positions could do real damage.

KANE: And itā€™s even hard when they put people in there that are really competent, because ā€” this is part of the conversation I was having earlier today ā€” itā€™s even hard for the most qualified people, because it is such a short timeframe to learn everything about the way the institution is run, whether itā€™s the Justice Department, State Department, or whatever. [New appointees and officials have to learn] everything from where the bathrooms are and how many employees are there to, you know, what are the active investigations that the outgoing administration is going to put in your hands? So you can imagine that having somebody in there that doesnā€™t know what theyā€™re doing. I mean, you can imagine, right?

MODERATOR: How are LGBTQ movement organizations looking at the threat posed by Trumpā€™s appointment of more judges on the federal bench?

WOLF: Weā€™ve seen the devastating impact, not just on the Supreme Court level, but across the judiciary of Trump stacking the court system with his acolytes and, again, sometimes it is incompetence. We saw that with the judge down in Florida, where she just didnā€™t really know the basic functions of the job, and clearly had been put there to help influence cases in a direction that someone like Donald Trump might like.

And then, you know, you look at some things that are maybe more sinister, which is this bench of candidates that organizations like the Heritage Foundation and the Alliance Defending Freedom have groomed for these positions to use their roles as judges to reshape the United States of America legally and culturally. We saw the impact of that, obviously, most infamously with the Dobbs v. Jackson decision that overturned Roe v Wade. There, you had these candidates who had been hand picked and groomed through the system, through the right wing system, who got up there, lied to the Senate committee, said that Roe v Wade was decided precedent, that there would be no reason to go back on that kind of precedent. Yet [they were confirmed and seated] and immediately [went] after Roe v Wade protections and precedent.

Weā€™re in a very precarious position with a President Donald Trump and a Senate majority who could further stack the judiciary. And then you look at the threat on the Supreme Court. Thereā€™s a very real possibility that he could, you know, harass one or two justices into leaving and replace them with 40-year-old candidates that have been groomed and hand picked and cement a conservative majority on the Supreme Court for a very long time to come. So I think thatā€™s why people named, in the beginning, the threat that Trump posed to the courts. Thatā€™s why it was a part of peopleā€™s pitch during the election cycle. And weā€™re up against some real challenges with him nominating judges.

KANE: Iā€™m nodding in agreement. Kevin Jennings, the CEO of Lambda Legal, made the point recently that if she serves as long as Ruth Bader Ginsburg did, [Trump-appointed] Justice Amy Coney Barrett would leave the court in, I think he said, 2049. Weā€™re talking like generational impact in terms of the rightward shift of the judiciary that weā€™re going to see in the next administration.

The [incoming] Trump administration is expected to be able to appoint, I believe, roughly as many judges as the Biden administration did, and as many as the [first] Trump administration did. I believe the first Trump administration also perhaps set a record ā€” or, if not, came close ā€” in the number of judges on the federal bench that they appointed. So weā€™re about to see massive, massive changes throughout the country. And, you know, it really matters who these judges are. Theyā€™re deciding things that affect our everyday lives for people across the United States.

WOLF: I donā€™t want to get ahead of our legal team on what potential litigation tactics might look like, but I will say they know the law really well. Theyā€™re very savvy about understanding the ways in which discriminatory policies violate the law. Theyā€™re really good at helping to tell that story in courtrooms across the country, and every case is very different. So it is likely that there will be a lot of strategizing in the months and years to come.

MODERATOR: Over the past few years, a number of Democratic governors have made refuge for trans people who live in other (redder) states that have anti-trans laws and healthcare restrictions on the books. This week, many of those same governors pledged to resist a number of the incoming administrationā€™s proposed policies. Where does that leave LGBTQ folks?

WOLF: We canā€™t deny that thatā€™s happening to people, that they have been forced from their homes. I know plenty of people that I love and care about a lot who have made the really difficult decision to leave their homes. There was a trans woman that I used to work with in Florida who. through tears, called me one day and said, ā€˜if you see a GoFundMe on my Facebook page, itā€™s so that I can save enough to rent a U-Haul, put all my stuff in it, and Iā€™ll just drive until I find somewhere thatā€™s safer.ā€™ Those kinds of stories are heartbreaking, and theyā€™re already happening around this country. Trans people are made into refugees in their own states.

And I also think we canā€™t lose sight of the fact that some people just canā€™t do that, right? Itā€™s too complicated for them to move. Maybe theyā€™re taking care of a family member, or they have kids that are enrolled in school, or they canā€™t afford it. Maybe theyā€™re in a home that their families had for generations, and they donā€™t want to leave it behind. People deserve to be treated with dignity and respect they deserve to have their humanity respected in their home. Thatā€™s what I get so passionate about, is that people should not be forced ā€” in order to get the basics, the fundamental freedoms that they deserve simply on the basis of being a human being.

Itā€™s going to be our job to, one. help to expand protections [for trans people that were passed in some blue states]. Minnesota is a great example. Under Governor Walzā€™s leadership, theyā€™ve become a refuge for people who are seeking health care access. Itā€™s going to be our job to help support those states and expand their footprint to give people as many options as possible, and itā€™s going to be our job to help get resources and support to people who are in states where they are facing the highest hurdles.

MODERATOR: Trump has promised to disband the U.S. Department of Education. He and his allies support anti-LGBTQ curriculum restrictions, book bans, etc. What are your concerns with the incoming administrationā€™s approach to education?

WOLF: Project 2025 is a 900+-page manifesto of terrifying things, and this might be one of the most terrifying among them, which is the complete dismantling of our public education system. Just for reference for folks, as a society, weā€™ve decided that education K through 12 is a right, and that everyone should be able to have access to it, because it helps us build a better society together, that young people deserve to be able to go to school to get an education so they can go out and be the thriving adults they deserve to be.

The MAGA agenda stands in opposition to that idea that everyone should have access to education in that way, and it is in part because education poses a threat to the MAGA agenda. The more people know about who we are as a country and who weā€™ve been, the more they ask questions about who we want to be in the future. The more access they have to different kinds of communities and different lived experiences. The more compassionate they are to those lived experiences.

And MAGA canā€™t have that. Their agenda, again, is built on division and chaos and hate, and so they work to dismantle the education system. They work to influence young people by destroying their access to one of their most fundamental rights in this country. Dismantling the Department of Education would be disastrous for people, and I want people to maybe consider what it would mean for folks in everyday life. Schools are not just a place to learn, theyā€™re a place where young people are for long periods of the day. Everything that they interact with while theyā€™re at school impacts who they grow up to be. And families rely on schools to keep their kids safe, to make sure their kids are treated with dignity and respect, to make sure they get a good education. So disrupting the education system in this country would be absolutely devastating for families all over the place, and especially so for LGBTQ+ young people, many of whom donā€™t have a safe space outside of the classroom where they spend so many hours of the day.

MODERATOR: What is your advice for LGBTQ people, including young queer and trans people, who are worried?

KANE: As a journalist, I am poorly positioned to answer such a question, especially relative to someone in the advocacy or political organizing space, or someone with experience in social work and mental health. Itā€™s not an easy question. I would encourage folks to look out for their personal welfare and the welfare of their families and friends, to lean on other people, and to avail themselves of the resources provided by LGBTQ movement groups like HRC.

WOLF: Especially for trans and non binary folks, things feel really daunting, for good reason. As someone whoā€™s been on the front lines in Florida before and has seen these things firsthand, the first thing I would recommend is feel all the feelings. I have routines on days where Iā€™m feeling all the feelings. Everybody has their routine, but you have to allow yourself to feel it. Sometimes the temptation is to bury yourself in work or to become numb to it, or try to tell yourself that your feelings arenā€™t valid or that youā€™re overreacting, but you have to feel all the feelings.

And the second thing is what Chris said, which is to lean on people around you. As I mentioned, Iā€™ve been through some pretty dark times in my own journey, and on the days where I wasnā€™t sure that tomorrow was worth waking up for, it was the little things. It was somebody offering a shoulder to cry on. It was the woman at Publix who offered a hug even though she didnā€™t know what I was going through. It was the woman at the bank who offered me a tissue when I couldnā€™t stop crying. It was the person at a vigil who wrapped their arms around me and told me that I was loved exactly as I am. It was that sense of community that reminded me that every day is worth getting up and fighting for. Weā€™re going to need that community in this moment. So feel all the feels. And then, as Chris said, lean into each other, do everything you can to care for each other. Weā€™ve been through dark times. Weā€™re in dark times again. And weā€™ve gotten through them before, but only together.

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California Politics

Mark Gonzalez triumphs: A new era begins for Assembly District 54

Gonzalez will now represent neighborhoods in Montebello, Commerce, East L.A., Boyle Heights, Chinatown and Koreatown

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Photo Courtesy of Courtney Lindberg for Mark Gonzalez's campaign.

LGBTQ+ Democratic candidate Mark Gonzalez wins Assembly District 54 seat against John Yi and succeeding Assemblymember Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles), who did not seek reelection for the position.Ā 

Both first-time candidates ran to represent one of the poorest districts in the state, with Gonzalez securing over 12,000 votes over Democrat John Yi, who ran against Gonzalez.Ā 

ā€œRunning to represent AD54 and earning the votes of those in our community, has been the honor of a lifetime,ā€ said Gonzalez in an X post following the announcement of his win. ā€œI remain committed to serving its people and our state as its next Assemblymember. 

His opponent Yi, is the Executive Director of Los Angeles Walks, a pedestrian advocacy group and self-titled Local Nonprofit Leader. Yi is also a Democrat who championed a single-payer healthcare system that would insure all residents of California and previously advocated for the expansion of Medi-Cal benefits for all Californians, regardless of immigration status. 

Gonzalez raised nearly ten times more than his opponent, who has had a history in nonprofit leadership and multiracial coalitions to promote health and justice-centered policies. 

While running for Assembly, Gonzalez championed raising wages for working families, tackling LAā€™s homelessness and affordability crisis, and a guarantee for healthcare to all. 

Gonzalez is an Assembly staffer who has served the area for over a decade, former Chair of the Los Angeles Democratic Party and Equality California Institute Board member. He worked for former Assembly Speaker John PĆ©rez and served most recently as District Director for the current Assembly member, Miguel Santiago. 

ā€œThis win is a testament to his dedication to the community and his vision for a more inclusive and equitable Los Angeles,ā€ said Equality Californiaā€™s executive director, Tony Houang. ā€œWe look forward to seeing the positive change he will bring to the Assembly and our state. On behalf of Equality California, we are excited to partner with him to continue the fight for equality and justice for all.ā€ 

As a former Chair of the L.A. County Democratic Party, Gonzalez championed change to make community college free, protect air and water quality, make housing affordable and safeguard abortion rights. 

He grew up as the son of a single mother who relied on Section 8 to provide housing for them. He is a renter, organizer and activist who knows that the system as it is now, is not working towards the progress, safety or well-being of the marginalized and low-income communities of this district. 

ā€œI look forward to working with my colleagues in Sacramento to advance bold, common-sense policies that will make a meaningful impact on individuals and families across the state.ā€ 

Gonzalez will now represent District 54, will be responsible for neighborhoods in Montebello, Commerce, East L.A., Boyle Heights, Chinatown and Koreatown. 

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