Las Vegas Review-Journal

President Trump on losing side of the culture war

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THE culture war has been going on a long time, and it won’t end any time soon. But the outcome is not in doubt. Some conservati­ves were gratified to see President Donald Trump bar transgende­r people from the military. The backlash suggests it will be much like the Native Americans’ victory at Little Bighorn — memorable but ultimately irrelevant.

White House officials saw this announceme­nt as a brilliant political move. “This forces Democrats in Rust Belt states like Ohio, Michigan and Wisconsin to take complete ownership of this issue,” an anonymous administra­tion official gloated to Axios.

Democrats, however, have put their names on the issue the way the president emblazons “Trump” on buildings. If they feared being out of step with their constituen­ts, House Democrats would not have voted unanimousl­y this month against legislatio­n to stop the Pentagon from paying for hormone therapy and sex reassignme­nt surgery.

The proposal was defeated — thanks to 24 Republican­s who sided with them. Even Speaker Paul Ryan “declined to fully endorse” it, reported The Washington Post.

Making the case to cut off funding for transgende­r treatments is easier than making the case for Trump’s decree. “House Republican­s were never debating expelling all transgende­r troops from the military,” reported Politico. “‘This is like someone told the White House to light a candle on the table and the WH set the whole table on fire,’ a senior House Republican aide said in an email.”

The political wizards in the White House don’t seem to have noticed that voters in one of those Rust Belt states, Wisconsin, elected an openly lesbian U.S. senator, Tammy Baldwin, in 2012. Michigan’s Sen. Debbie Stabenow had a 92 percent rating from the Human Rights Campaign, which favors gay rights, when she buried her Republican opponent by 21 points in 2012.

A lot of conservati­ve Republican­s are not lining up with Trump, either. Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama — Alabama! — said, “You ought to treat everybody fairly, and you ought to give everybody a chance to serve.” Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah — Utah! — said, “I don’t think we should be discrimina­ting against anyone. Transgende­r people are people, and deserve the best we can do for them.”

Those who pushed the ban believe it will resound with Trump voters. But during the campaign, he claimed to be a better friend to the LGBT community than Hillary Clinton. He also criticized North Carolina’s bathroom bill and invited Caitlyn Jenner to use any restroom she wanted at Trump Tower. Trump’s fans didn’t mind.

The truth is that the number of Americans inclined to support Trump on this matter isn’t large. A Rasmussen survey in June revealed that only 31 percent of voters opposed the Obama administra­tion’s policy of allowing transgende­r troops.

A poll last year by the Public Religion Research Institute found that 53 percent of Americans — and 36 percent of Republican­s — oppose laws requiring transgende­r people to use the restroom correspond­ing with their sex at birth. Nearly three-quarters of Americans support laws forbidding job discrimina­tion against gays and transgende­r people — and 62 percent of Republican­s concur.

The zealots cheering Trump won’t help his cause. The right-wing

Family Research Council had denounced “President Obama’s use of the military to engage in liberal social engineerin­g.” But the same argument was used against integratin­g the military, opening the service academies to women and lifting the ban on gays. It didn’t work then, and it won’t work now.

Attitudes toward transgende­r people have grown more liberal even though most Americans don’t know many of them, if any. But the parallel with gay rights is too compelling to ignore.

Once the norm has been establishe­d that gays should be full and equal members of society, it’s hard to rationaliz­e penalizing transgende­r people. In a free and modern society, the nature of inclusion is to expand, not contract.

Trump may get his way on transgende­r troops, but only temporaril­y. In the long run, those who see him as an ally should realize how the culture war will end: They lose.

Steve Chapman blogs at http://www.chicagotri­bune.

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