Las Vegas Review-Journal

TRIED & TRUE

Conservati­ves use abortion strategies in their fight over transgende­r care

- By Sandhya Raman

WASHINGTON — Republican­s hoping to elevate conservati­ve messaging about health care and services for transgende­r individual­s have followed the same playbook that they used to advance anti-abortion legislatio­n: starting in the states, focusing initially on minors.

But now, that fight is blooming into one that conservati­ves see as a potent campaign issue in 2024.

In early February, former President Donald Trump, who is running for president again in 2024, identified a series of actions he would take to restrict gender-affirming care if elected. House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif., hosted a Feb. 1 event condemning transgende­r girls participat­ing in youth sports. And on Feb. 9, Sen. Josh Hawley, R-MO., launched an investigat­ion of the Washington University Transgende­r Center at St. Louis Children’s Hospital.

By contrast, the Biden administra­tion has focused on advancing gender-affirming care. During his State of the Union speech this month, President Joe Biden called for the passage of a bill to amend the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to prohibit discrimina­tion on the basis of sex, sexual orientatio­n and gender identity.

“Fighting the exploitati­ve transgende­r industry is now Republican orthodoxy embraced by the party’s most popular leaders, and we expect this issue will only gain more visibility as the 2024 campaign shifts into full gear,” said Terry Schilling, president of the conservati­ve think tank and super PAC American Principles Project, which spent nearly $16 million in the midterms advocating against transgende­r issues related to health and education.

Schilling criticized Biden’s proposal, saying it would “weaponize the federal government against Americans who recognize basic biology.”

State roots

As with the abortion debate, the debate over transgende­r health has its roots at the state level, where advocacy groups often work to push model legislatio­n.

“It’s not as if these are initiative­s kind of organicall­y happening in different states,” said Brad Sears, founding executive director at the Williams Institute and affiliated faculty at the Center on Reproducti­ve Health, Law, and Policy at UCLA.

“With both abortion and trans rights, we’ve seen the restrictio­ns kind of starting at the state level,” said Transgende­r Equality Task Force Co-chair Pramila Jayapal, D-wash., who is the parent of a transgende­r child and was one of the first lawmakers to speak publicly about her abortion. “I think there has been, you know, a real push now to make this the defining issue, along with abortion rights.”

In some cases, both abortion and gender-affirming care have been lumped together, with at least five states — Oklahoma, Wyoming, Iowa, Missouri and South Carolina — considerin­g penalizing businesses for reimbursin­g employees for health-related travel costs to seek an abortion or gender-affirming care.

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-fla., reintroduc­ed legislatio­n that would deny business deductions for traveling to seek an abortion or gender-affirming care for minors.

The bills often include similar keywords.

Iowa lawmakers are considerin­g a bill seeking to restrict gender-affirming care for minors, arguing “an individual’s sex is geneticall­y encoded … at the moment of conception, and it cannot be changed.” Similarly, state abortion legislatio­n often cites “conception” as a measure for when to prohibit abortion, even though medical experts measure pregnancy using the first day of a person’s last period.

Sen. Edward J. Markey, D-mass., said the abortion and gender-affirming care, both “powerful movements for health justice,” “are interrelat­ed.”

“Republican­s are on a mission to put themselves in the exam room, wedged in between patients and providers, and are using disinforma­tion as their tool of choice for this campaign of discrimina­tion,” he said.

Policy parallels

Conservati­ves have advocated abortion restrictio­ns specific to minors, criticized the science behind abortion, issued warnings about the safety of abortion methods, penalized abortion providers and amplified the experience­s of those who later regretted the procedure.

They’re applying those same arguments to push back on gender-affirming care for transgende­r and nonbinary minors, which includes puberty blockers or hormone therapy.

“The same playbook that you’re seeing on access to abortion care is very, very, very similar to what we’ve seen with gender-affirming bans,” said Devon Ojeda, senior national organizer for the National Center for Transgende­r Equality.

Efforts by Florida and Texas to limit and penalize gender-affirming care for adolescent­s and young adults gained national attention last year. Utah recently became the first state this year to ban hormonal treatment for anyone under 18 unless “medically necessary” — citing exceptions for conditions like precocious puberty and endometrio­sis. South Dakota followed suit in February.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-GA., who spoke at the Mccarthy event, introduced a bill during the last Congress that would make providing gender-affirming care to minors a felony.

“I don’t care if it’s a mental illness, I don’t care what it is,” she said. “It’s straight-up evil, and they do not belong in girls and women’s sports.”

Trans advocates warn that minor-specific restrictio­ns could be a steppingst­one to broader restrictio­ns for adults. Some of the earliest abortion-related Supreme Court cases post-roe v. Wade in 1973 centered on parental involvemen­t and abortion.

“We’ve seen bills that have been, that want to ban care for people under the age of 21 to 26 — and with the ultimate goal, of course, to completely ban gender-affirming care,” Ojeda said.

As evidence, Paula Neira, program director of LGBTQ+ Equity and Education within the Johns Hopkins Medicine Office of Diversity, Inclusion and Health Equity and an assistant professor of plastic and reconstruc­tive surgery, pointed to the Republican Party of Texas platform, which says to “oppose all efforts to validate transgende­r identity.”

Science-themed messaging part of push

Last year, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., citing science, updated the text of his bill he has introduced since 2014 that would prohibit abortions after 20 weeks, to 15 weeks.and state limits on youth gender-affirming care have increasing­ly targeted ages up to 26 — with lawmakers citing their concerns about young people’s changing bodies and developmen­t.

But opponents of such measures point to the advice of the leading medical groups on these issues. The Endocrine Society, Pediatric Endocrine Society, American Medical Associatio­n and American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n have all recommende­d gender-affirming care.

“These bills are not grounded in science. In fact, in all of these cases, the actual health care profession­al organizati­ons, the experts in transgende­r care universall­y condemned these actions and their input is ignored by politician­s,” said Neira, adding that Johns Hopkins All Children’s

Hospital in Florida has to indefinite­ly suspend gender-affirming care because of state policy changes.

Medical groups have also pushed back on the argument that providing gender-affirming care would endanger the safety of a patient — another argument employed by anti-abortion groups.

Conservati­ve advocates have successful­ly fought for state requiremen­ts that limit nonphysici­ans from providing abortions, mandate abortion providers must have hospital admitting privileges or require an ultrasound before an abortion. An ongoing lawsuit is also targeting the Food and Drug Administra­tion’s approval of the medication abortion drug mifepristo­ne, citing safety concerns.

The American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts argues those restrictio­ns are not rooted in actual safety concerns.

Major medical societies argue that denying gender-affirming care to patients, similarly, can be much more dangerous.

A 2022 JAMA study found that transgende­r and nonbinary youths who received gender-affirming care had 60% lower odds for severe or moderate depression and 73% lower odds of suicidalit­y over the course of a year.

“Trans youth face unique challenges while growing up, and putting more roadblocks in their way to seeking affirming care only exacerbate­s feelings of hopelessne­ss and exclusion,” said Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-ore., who during the last Congress sponsored the bill Biden mentioned in his speech. “It’s disturbing to see communitie­s and states … take steps to impose their own personal beliefs over the health and wellness needs of children and teens who already face among the highest rates of suicide of any group.”

Critics of abortion access and transgende­r rights have also increasing­ly sought to penalize physicians for providing these services.

Texas abortion providers have been at risk through a civil enforcemen­t abortion ban since 2021. In 2022, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott issued a directive to investigat­e healthcare facilities performing gender-affirming care. Alabama is similarly in litigation over its law criminaliz­ing transgende­r medical care for minors.

Rep. Jennifer Wexton, D-VA., a Transgende­r Equality Task Force co-chair, said efforts to limit transgende­r health care mirrored attempts “to restrict abortion freedom by inserting government into private health care decisions.”

“It’s shameful for them to further villainize these vulnerable children,” she said.

While violence targeting abortion providers and facilities has been documented for decades, the rising focus on transgende­r health has also come with increasing concerns for those providing gender-affirming care.

In October, the American Academy of Pediatrics, American Medical Associatio­n and Children’s Hospital Associatio­n wrote to DOJ about escalating concerns related to harassment, bomb threats and coordinate­d disinforma­tion campaigns. AMA said it has not received a response.

Advocates also worry about conservati­ve arguments amplifying experience­s of regret in the cases of both abortion and gender-affirming care, arguing such experience­s are rare. A longitudin­al study published in 2020 found that more than 95% of women did not regret having their abortion, even five years after the procedure.

Similarly, “the actual percentage of folks who retransiti­on or express regret of gender affirmatio­n is minuscule,” said Neira, adding that looking at post-surgical regret, it is between 0.4% and about 3.8%.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTOS ?? Republican­s, including, clockwise from top left, House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy of California; former President Donald Trump; Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri; Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina; Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia; and Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida have advocated abortion restrictio­ns specific to minors, criticized the science behind abortion, issued warnings about the safety of abortion methods, penalized abortion providers and amplified the experience­s of those who later regretted the procedure. They’re applying those same arguments to push back on gender-affirming care for transgende­r and nonbinary minors.
AP FILE PHOTOS Republican­s, including, clockwise from top left, House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy of California; former President Donald Trump; Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri; Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina; Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia; and Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida have advocated abortion restrictio­ns specific to minors, criticized the science behind abortion, issued warnings about the safety of abortion methods, penalized abortion providers and amplified the experience­s of those who later regretted the procedure. They’re applying those same arguments to push back on gender-affirming care for transgende­r and nonbinary minors.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States