![]() Last month, an Arizona Republican state senator broke with his party, blocking legislation that would have banned gender-affirming care for transgender youth. While this moment in LGBTQ rights has been “very dark,” as Branstetter put it, advocates have also had several wins. “If they care about families in the way that they say they do, or if they care about kids in the way that they say they do, they would leave us alone and allow us the opportunity to take a breath to be the boring PTA parent who organizes a fundraiser and is able to attend after-school activities.” “It’s exhausting, it’s painful and it’s something that I have to prepare for every year, and I’m still in shock that I have to advocate for my child,” Trujillo said. Since the start of 2021, 11 states have written trans sports bans into law, according to tallies from the ACLU and the Human Rights Campaign, an LGBTQ advocacy group. “They’re responding to trans kids as if they were responding to a contagion.”Īnti-trans legislation - specifically, measures that would block trans students from competing on school sports teams that align with their gender identity - have been among the most successful of the anti-LGBTQ bills filed in recent years. “The authors of these bills and the dark money groups pushing for them do not want it to be possible to be a trans kid in this country,” said Gillian Branstetter, a longtime trans advocate and the press secretary for women’s advocacy group the National Women’s Law Center. ![]() This year, about 65 percent of the anti-LGBTQ bills filed as of March 15 - 154 - were anti-trans bills. For example, 22 of 2019’s 60 anti-LGBTQ proposed bills, or 37 percent, were anti-trans bills, compared with 153, or 80 percent, of 2021’s 191 anti-LGBTQ bills. NBC News’ analysis of the ACLU and Freedom for All Americans data found that among anti-LGBTQ bills, measures targeting trans Americans have significantly increased in recent years. “LGBTQ rights have become a natural target because they go against one of the most traditional institutions of society, and that is the family.” “Conservative politicians, conservative religious leaders, religious organizations, and sometimes conservative scholars, often present themselves as defenders of traditional values and traditional institutions in society,” said Gabriele Magni, an assistant professor of political science at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles. They also reason that the bills are part of a wider political strategy to use transgender people as a “ wedge issue” to motivate right-wing voters. Michael Siluk / UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images fileĪctivists contend that the groups have pushed for the legislation in response to a string of progressive wins, including two landmark Supreme Court rulings - one that legalized same-sex marriage in 2015 and another that won LGBTQ people nationwide protection from workplace discrimination in 2020 - and the election of President Joe Biden in 2020. People rally March 6 at the Minnesota State Capitol in St. LGBTQ advocates and political experts say the uptick in state bills is less about public sentiment and more about lobbying on behalf of conservative and religious groups. That same survey also found that nearly 70 percent of Americans support same-sex marriage, up from 54 percent in 2014. Nearly 8 in 10 Americans, or 79 percent, support laws that protect LGBTQ people from discrimination in jobs, housing and public accommodations, according to a Public Religion Research Institute survey released Thursday. “What more terrifying intrusion of the state could there be?”Īs the number of anti-LGBTQ bills hits record highs, research shows that so, too, has support for LGBTQ rights and policies prohibiting discrimination against lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer people. “It’s important for people to pause and think about what is happening - especially in the health care context - because what we’re seeing is that the state should have the authority to declare a population of people so undesirable that their medical care that they need to survive becomes a crime,” Chase Strangio, the deputy director for transgender justice at the ACLU LGBT & HIV Project, said. Opponents, however, contend they’re discriminatory and are more about scoring political points with conservative voters than protecting constituents. ![]() ![]() Proponents of these bills say they’re about protecting children, parental rights, religious freedom or a combination of these. The slate of legislation includes measures that would restrict LGBTQ issues in school curriculums, permit religious exemptions to discriminate against LGBTQ people and limit trans people’s ability to play sports, use bathrooms that correspond with their gender identity and receive gender-affirming health care. ![]()
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