Current:Home > reviewsAs anti-trans legislation proliferates in 2024, community fears erasure from public view -AssetLink
As anti-trans legislation proliferates in 2024, community fears erasure from public view
View
Date:2025-04-12 09:47:08
As a third-generation firefighter and then fire captain, Lana Moore served the city of Columbus for 35 years. In 2008, she came out to her crew as transgender.
While some in the department grumbled, Moore said both her chief and union president were fully supportive, and two years after she retired in 2016, she was inducted into the city's hall of fame.
That’s why it pains her to know Ohio lawmakers – for whom, she said, she would have laid down her life as a firefighter – last month overrode Gov. Mike DeWine’s veto of HB68, a bill banning gender-affirming care for youths and preventing transgender girls and women from competing in female high school and college sports. And they’re still mulling a slate of bills that would restrict transgender rights and visibility.
“It’s frightening,” Moore said. “It feels like I’ve been betrayed. They’ve identified a small minority of people they can stereotype and scapegoat. I’m not a historian, but I paid attention in history class, and it’s not hard to recognize what’s happening here.”
As Republican lawmakers nationwide continue to introduce bills targeting the LGBTQ community – and specifically transgender people – at rates on par with last year’s record numbers, Moore and community advocates fear a rising tide of hostile rhetoric is designed to ultimately erase them from public life.
This week, Florida officials revoked transgender residents’ ability to update gender markers on driver’s licenses and ID cards; Utah passed a bill banning transgender people from bathrooms corresponding to their gender identity; and Texas’ attorney general pressed a clinic in Georgia for medical records of transgender youths who used telehealth to obtain gender-affirming care there.
'It has progressively gotten worse'
The Human Rights Campaign, among the country’s largest LGBTQ+ civil rights groups, said 130 bills targeting transgender rights had been filed nationwide so far in 2024, compared to roughly 225 last year. Overall, the group said, 325 anti-LGBTQ bills had been proposed in 2024 as of Jan. 25, compared to 503 in all of 2023.
“For years, transgender people have warned of radical anti-LGBTQ+ forces’ true aim: to abuse governmental power to take away our freedoms and drive trans people out of public society,” said Kelley Robinson, the organization’s president, in a statement decrying what she called a “sinister agenda." “…. They want to humiliate, harass and use policy to eliminate transgender people from public life.”
Last week, Michigan news outlet Mlive.com reported Republican lawmakers from Michigan and Ohio described banning access to gender-affirming care for adults as well as youths as the “endgame” in a conversation on the social media platform X.
Siobhan Boyd-Nelson, co-interim executive director of Equality Ohio, said the group was “profoundly disappointed” in Ohio “lawmakers’ unwillingness to listen to medical professionals, young people and their families…. There’s absolutely no reason for government overreach into the personal medical decisions of Ohioans.”
“It has progressively gotten worse, and we know that Ohio is not alone,” Boyd-Nelson said. “We’re seeing it happen across the country, and we think people should be very concerned about what appears to be an obsession with marginalizing and harming an already marginalized community.”
Anti-equality bills outnumber those in support
When Moore grew up in the 1970s, she didn’t know the term transgender; not until she saw transgender actress and activist Christine Jorgensen on a talk show did she realize she wasn’t the only person who felt as she did.
She now serves on the national board of directors for LGBTQ advocacy group GLAAD, fighting to humanize trans people.
“I took an oath as a civil servant and I took it seriously,” Moore said. “That didn’t end when I retired. But it looks like they’ve (Republican lawmakers) taken an oath to a political party.”
According to health policy research organization KFF, 23 states have enacted laws or policies limited youth access to gender affirming care as of Jan. 31, while 21 states have laws or policies imposing professional or legal penalties on healthcare practitioners who provide minors with such care.
Not that there aren’t bright spots. According to the Human Rights Campaign’s 2023 State Equality Index, more than 253 pro-equality bills were introduced nationwide last year; 50 of them were signed into law.
In contrast, the campaign tallied 571 anti-equality bills in 2023, with 77 of them becoming law.
The campaign gave 20 states and Washington its highest rating (“working toward innovative equality”) while another five were characterized as “solidifying equality,” the index’s next highest ranking.
But 23 other states, most of them in the South, were deemed “high priority to achieve basic equality,” the list’s lowest rating.
“States are trying to rewrite laws to exclude LGBTQ+ people from sex-based protections, and they are continuing to try to erase LGBTQ+ people from history, from the classroom, from artistic performance, and from sport,” the report reads.
'Other people are defining us'
Florida is among the states in the campaign’s lowest rated category. In addition to revoking the ability of transgender people to change the listed gender on their driver’s licenses, the state has passed laws restricting transgender people from using bathrooms in public schools and places, transgender youth participation in sports, gender affirming care for transgender youth and inclusion of LGBTQ+ topics in schools.
“The DeSantis administration’s obsession with scapegoating transgender Floridians has escalated into an outrageous attack that further erodes freedom and liberty in our state,” said Nadine Smith, executive director of Equality Florida, in a statement. “…. These reckless and hateful policies are intended to make the transgender community feel unsafe and unwelcome in Florida and to bully them out of public life entirely.”
Alaina Kupec, president of transgender advocacy group Gender Research Advisory Council + Education, or GRACE, said transgender people provide a "politically opportunistic" group for candidates to prey on. She started the organization out of exasperation over the rhetoric influencing public perceptions of the trans community.
“Nobody was really changing the narrative being put out by hate groups telling outright lies about transgender people and our lives and the care that we get,” Kupec said. “I thought, maybe I should be challenging these five-alarm fires we’re seeing across the country…. Other people are defining us instead of us defining ourselves.”
Through GRACE, Kupec helps trans advocacy groups around the country get their message out while providing them with research and data on issues like gender-affirming care.
“We have a world where the left is shouting at the right and the right is shouting at the left,” she said. “We want to find that movable middle and appeal to their values and not have them see us as the enemy or the woke left. People have tried to portray these issues as partisan, and they’re not.”
Climate prompts fears for personal safety
Kupec and others say some politicians have seized on transgender issues as a means of distraction, trying to make up for lost votes over abortion rights.
“This is purely political theater designed to capture attention,” she said, noting a federal judge last year struck down a 2021 Arkansas law banning gender-affirming care for trans youth, calling it unconstitutional and motivated by ideology. “At the end of the day, the courts are going to knock these things down, because the medical evidence is overwhelming.”
Boyd-Nelson, of Equality Ohio, said while some politicians might fixate on these issues to score points with their constituencies, she wonders at what cost.
“Lives are at stake, and that’s what’s so disgusting about this,” she said.
veryGood! (7211)
Related
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- For Florida’s Ailing Corals, No Relief From the Heat
- This is Us cast, Hollywood stars remember Ron Cephas Jones
- Ecuadorians reject oil drilling in the Amazon in historic decision
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- Horoscopes Today, August 20, 2023
- MLB power rankings: The National League wild-card race is living up to its name
- Preliminary magnitude 5.1 quake shakes Southern California amid Hilary threat
- Jay Kanter, veteran Hollywood producer and Marlon Brando agent, dies at 97: Reports
- Three years after a foiled plot to kidnap Michigan’s governor, the final trial is set to begin
Ranking
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Keke Palmer Shares Difficult Breastfeeding Journey With Her and Darius Jackson's Son
- WWDTM: 25th Year Spectacular Part VI!
- Southern California braces for more floods as tropical storm soaks region from coast to desert
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- A right-wing sheriffs group that challenges federal law is gaining acceptance around the country
- Scott Van Pelt named 'Monday Night Countdown' host with Ryan Clark, Marcus Spears joining
- Teen Mackenzie Shirilla Sentenced to Up to Life in Prison for Murdering Boyfriend and Friend in Car Crash
Recommendation
Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
Texas court offers rehabilitation program to help military veterans who broke the law
Montana asks judge to allow TikTok ban to take effect while legal challenge moves through courts
2nd person found dead in eastern Washington wildfires, hundreds of structures burned
Billy Bean was an LGBTQ advocate and one of baseball's great heroes
'Just the beginning': How push for gun reform has spread across Tennessee ahead of special session
Big Ten college football conference preview: Can Penn State or Ohio State stop Michigan?
Canadian firefighters make progress battling some blazes but others push thousands from their homes