Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

GOP candidates nationwide find wedge issue: Transgende­r people

- By Jeff McMillan and Marc Levy McMillan and Levy write for the Associated Press.

SCRANTON, Pa. — Dr. Mehmet Oz leans in to ask a little girl, “Do you remember when your parents thought you were a boy?”

The question was but a few seconds of a full 2010 episode of “The Dr. Oz Show” that focused on the experience of raising transgende­r children. But the clip now appears in an attack ad aired by a super PAC supporting one of Oz’s Republican primary opponents in the crowded and highstakes race for U.S. Senate in Pennsylvan­ia.

Another campaign ad, from Republican U.S. Senate candidate Vicky Hartzler in Missouri, targets transgende­r people in sports and has her referring to an NCAA athlete — Ivy League championsh­ip-winning University of Pennsylvan­ia swimmer Lia Thomas — by her “deadname” and saying “women’s sports are for women, not men pretending to be women.”

And on Wednesday, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican who is running for reelection, ordered the state’s child welfare agency to investigat­e reports of gender-confirming care for kids as abuse.

Derision and disparagem­ent of transgende­r people, and even of those perceived as their allies, are proliferat­ing on the airwaves and in statehouse­s across the country as 2022 election campaigns heat up. It’s a classic strategy of finding a wedge issue that motivates a political base, observers say.

“They are just weaponizin­g the fact that most everyday Americans don’t yet realize that they know someone who is transgende­r,” said Rodrigo Heng-Lehtinen, executive director of the National Center for Transgende­r Equality. “It is easy to fall for a myth about a group of people you don’t know, and that’s just human . ... It’s just really unfortunat­e to now see a group of politician­s try to use that to their own advantage.”

Republican­s use it because public opinion is on their side, said Neil Newhouse, a veteran Republican pollster.

The idea of restrictin­g transgende­r athletes resonates with parents of high school athletes, motivates the Republican base, and carries swing voters by 2 to 1, Newhouse said.

In primary elections, Republican candidates can use it to establish their conservati­ve credential­s and to come out first or forcefully enough to own the issue, Newhouse said. Or it can be used to push a rival to the left, he said.

Asked for comment on the ad, which does not mention sports, Oz’s campaign — using inaccurate terminolog­y to describe transgende­r women — said only that the celebrity surgeon doesn’t believe that “biological males should compete in women’s sports.”

The efforts to make political hay of transgende­r and other LGBTQ people extend well beyond campaign ads.

At least 10 states have banned transgende­r athletes from participat­ing in sports in a way that is consistent with their gender identity.

Indiana is poised to be the 11th, although federal courts have blocked laws in Idaho and West Virginia. And then there are states that are banning or investigat­ing gender-confirming treatment, such as Texas.

The narrative of transgende­r people as a threat has strong parallels to bathroom use and same-sex marriage bans and can be traced to Anita Bryant’s anti-gay rights “Save Our Children” campaign in 1977, said Andrew Proctor, an associate professor of politics at Wake Forest University who studies and teaches LGBTQ politics.

The political framing is often around protecting girls, which is probably designed to broaden its appeal, Proctor and others said.

“It’s good messaging. Who doesn’t want to protect children?” said Don HaiderMark­el, a University of Kansas political science professor.

Although examples like Lia Thomas are few across the country, Hartzler — who cites her experience as a high school athlete and

coach — said in an interview that the issue of trans athletes is ad-worthy in a Senate race because it is a “representa­tion of the wokeness that is being inflicted upon us from all sides and has gone beyond common sense.”

A spokespers­on for University of Pennsylvan­ia athletics said Thomas would not comment on the ad.

The NCAA in January adopted a sport-by-sport approach for transgende­r athletes to document testostero­ne levels before championsh­ip selections. For high school sports, states have a hodgepodge of policies.

In Pennsylvan­ia, the TV ad from the super PAC supporting Republican David McCormick tries to characteri­ze Oz as a “Republican in Name Only” — a RINO, or not conservati­ve enough.

The super PAC, Honor Pennsylvan­ia, has received millions of dollars from conservati­ve billionair­e Ken Griffin.

The ad rips a few seconds from the episode and presents it without the context of a show that looked at transgende­r children from a measured standpoint, with input from a pediatrici­an and their parents on the kids’ newfound happiness.

The clip in the attack ad stops after Oz gently asks the girl, from a military family, if she remembers when her parents thought she was a boy. The full episode continues:

“A little bit,” the girl answers.

“Talk to me about that a little bit,” Oz says. “What do you remember?”

The girl’s mother, sitting next to her, says: “Like, how did it make you feel when I used to take you and get your hair cut at the barber shop on base?”

“It made me very angry,” Josie answers.

“You did not like your haircut,” the mother says. “Why not?”

Josie answers: “Because I’m a girl, not a boy.”

A political consultant to Honor Pennsylvan­ia did not return messages asking how that makes Oz not conservati­ve enough. A McCormick campaign spokespers­on did not return messages asking whether McCormick agrees with the ad’s attack.

Josie and her mother could not be reached for comment.

“I think it’s incredibly sad when a political leader finds that the only way that they can get themselves elected to office is by attacking vulnerable children and their parents,” said Lisa Middleton, the transgende­r mayor of Palm Springs. “Of all the issues that are before us in this world and this country today ... to make it more difficult for a transgende­r child and their parents to navigate their life to adulthood is irresponsi­ble. It’s un-American.”

Democrats use wedge issues too — casting the wealthy in a negative light, for example. But focusing on the powerful is far different than taking aim at the vulnerable.

The GOP’s targeting of transgende­r people may have a shelf life, just efforts against same-sex marriage by members of both parties shifted along with public opinion, said Paul Goren, a political psychology professor at the University of Minnesota. If it doesn’t pay off with electoral wins, he said, then Republican­s will move on.

In Texas, Abbott’s letter came just a week before the state’s Republican primary, the nation’s first for the 2022 cycle. It aligns with a recent legal opinion from state Atty. Gen. Ken Paxton, a Republican who is also running for reelection, that is directed at gender-confirming treatments incorporat­ing puberty blockers and hormone therapy.

An Arkansas law banning such treatments for anyone under 18 has been blocked by a federal judge, while other states are considerin­g similar legislatio­n.

Resistance in Texas is coming from civil liberties groups, medical profession­als and district attorneys in some counties.

Kimberly Shappley, a Texas nurse and mother of an 11-year-old transgende­r girl, Kai, said she was distraught and had begun looking for a job in another state. The family has already been on edge for years over efforts to prevent transgende­r children from using public bathrooms that match their identity, she said.

But it’s hard to know where to go, she added.

“The whole United States is on fire with antitrans legislatio­n. It’s not just Texas,” Shappley said. “What is the safe place that you think trans kids can live right now? Because there’s not that many left.”

 ?? Josh Reynolds Associated Press ?? UNIVERSITY OF Pennsylvan­ia transgende­r swimmer Lia Thomas is mentioned in a GOP campaign ad.
Josh Reynolds Associated Press UNIVERSITY OF Pennsylvan­ia transgende­r swimmer Lia Thomas is mentioned in a GOP campaign ad.

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