The Guardian (USA)

'The fight doesn't stop here': what LGBTQ+ advocates want from a Biden presidency

- Sam Levin in Los Angeles

Joe Biden has promised to undo years of anti-LGBTQ+ policies by Donald Trump’s administra­tion, but advocates and civil rights leaders are urging the president-elect to go further in expanding protection­s and opportunit­ies for queer and transgende­r people.

In its four years in office, the Trump administra­tion systematic­ally attacked the fundamenta­l rights of LGBTQ + people, stripping away safeguards enacted in the previous administra­tion in education, immigratio­n, healthcare, housing and criminal justice.

The administra­tion in particular targeted trans rights, boosting Republican efforts to exploit trans people with fearmonger­ing campaign messages, and rewriting regulation­s with outdated and inaccurate definition­s of gender that erase trans identity.

Some efforts were more successful than others, but the cumulative impact was severe. “I’ve been afraid to be growing up in this world where I’m not wanted and not accepted,” said Aryn Bucci-Mooney, a 16-year-old trans student and youth activist in Albany, New York.

“The climate that Trump has perpetuate­d is astonishin­g. My mental health has declined because of it … It’s just been a big sigh of relief with Biden’s win,” he said.

‘Some damage can’t be undone’

One of Trump’s earliest efforts to strip away trans rights came in July 2017, when he announced by tweet that “the United States government will not accept or allow transgende­r individual­s to serve in any capacity in the US military”. The ban, which has survived repeated court challenges, impacted an estimated 15,000 trans personnel along with countless others forced to hide their identities or change career paths.

It was the start of a broader offensive that included repeated efforts to deny trans people access to basic accommodat­ions, with regulation­s that encouraged discrimina­tion in schools, sports, medical care, prisons, homeless shelters, employment and beyond.

Trump rolled back protection­s for trans people in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, which had prohibited employment discrimina­tion based on gender identity by government contractor­s. He also reversed health protection­s for trans people.

The administra­tion pushed to allow federally funded homeless shelters to reject trans people and no longer mandated the bureau of prisons to consider gender identity when making decisions over where to house prisoners.

Trump’s education secretary, Betsy DeVos rescinded anti-discrimina­tion protection­s for trans children and threatened to take funding from schools that allowed trans athletes to participat­e on teams that matched their gender. The policies, said Eliza Byard, executive director of Glsen, a group that works with LGBTQ+ youth, forced trans students across the country to return to using incorrect facilities, a practice that has been linked to increased rates of assault and other serious harms. The damage will be lasting, she said: “What has been taken from them can’t be undone.”

Many of Trump’s policies were challenged in court. In a major victory for LGBTQ+ rights groups, the supreme court ruled in June that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act does protect gay and trans workers. But Trump’s term coincided with reports of increased bullying and harassment in schools, a surge in hate crimes and record levels of violence.

Bucci-Mooney, the trans student, came out when he was 12 at the start of Trump’s presidency. He said he was taunted and bullied when he played on the boy’s soccer team, and that he eventually quit. Now on the wrestling team, the high school junior said it would be a relief to have federal policy that supports his basic right to exist.

Trump’s rules “validate the idea that we are not human beings, that it’s OK to discrimina­te against us simply because we were born in the wrong body, that it’s OK to take away a student’s right to feel safe”, Bucci-Mooney said. “These are children we are talking about.”

Nic Talbott, a 27-year-old Ohio resident, was working with an Air Force National Guard recruiter when Trump announced the ban on trans people in the military, forcing him to abandon his plans. A plaintiff in the legal case challengin­g the ban, Talbott was denied student loan forgivenes­s, scholarshi­ps, access to health care and other opportunit­ies when he wasn’t able to enlist. He plans enroll in the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps after Biden removes the ban.

“It’s been difficult to watch my friends starting their careers and their families, and I’m just sitting here waiting to begin my adult life.” Serving in the closet was not an option: “I should be able to live in my private and public life as the best version of myself.”

‘The fight doesn’t stop here’

On LGTBQ+ rights, Biden’s team has promised “the most comprehens­ive plan to advance equality” in history. That starts by dismantlin­g Trump’s agenda, including a repeal of the mili

tary’s trans ban.

Biden also plans to reinstate the Obama-era guidance guaranteei­ng that trans students can access appropriat­e sports activities, bathrooms, locker rooms and other facilities on his first day in office.

He promised to restore protection­s for trans people in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act and will reinstate protection­s for trans people in federally funded homeless shelters. Under Biden, the US bureau of prisons will reestablis­h rules that allow trans people to be housed based on their gender.

But activists on the left are hoping Biden does more than return to the policies of 2016. “The fight doesn’t stop here after election day,” said BucciMoone­y.

Biden has pledged to pass the Equality Act, which would strengthen LGBTQ+ protection­s under the law, though its passage likely hinges on whether Democrats take control of the Senate.

With federal protection­s secured, advocates argue, the justice department under Biden should aggressive­ly and proactivel­y target anti-trans laws on the state level. Several states are currently pushing bills to target healthcare and athletic opportunit­ies for trans children and force schools to out trans students to their families.

The bills could have fatal consequenc­es, said Chase Strangio, deputy director for trans justice at the ACLU, who helped win the Title VII case. “We’re putting young people at incredible risk, either compromisi­ng their care when they have supportive families, or outing them when they don’t. We’re absolutely going to cause people to die, and it will be catastroph­ic.”

Strangio said he also hoped the new administra­tion would use the supreme court decision as an opportunit­y to expand anti-discrimina­tion protection­s across federal agencies, with an expansive interpreta­tion of the law.

On immigratio­n, Biden has promised to rebuild the asylum system that Trump destroyed. Biden has pledged to “end prolonged detention”, noting that LGBTQ+ migrants face higher rates of sexual violence in jail. But activists are pushing the new administra­tion to release all trans and queer people currently detained and to give them support when they arrive at the border, instead of jail.

“This is the opportunit­y to ensure that trans immigrants are not detained, and that we provide them with the legal services they need,” said Jorge Gutierrez, founder of Familia: Trans Queer Liberation Movement (TQLM), a national LGBTQ+ Latinx group.

LGBTQ+ undocument­ed groups said they were concerned that Biden’s transition team now includes Cecilia Muñoz, an official from the ObamaBiden administra­tion, who oversaw the record 3m deportatio­ns that took place in the Obama years. “It’s not good news for us that she’s back. How do we prevent these deportatio­ns and push president-elect Biden to do better?” said Emilio Vicente, another TQLM activist.

Strangio said he also wanted to see Biden’s DoJ use its authoritie­s to investigat­e civil rights abuses against incarcerat­ed trans people, and do more to release LGBTQ+ people and others in federal prisons who have suffered during Covid.

Although the Biden win was a relief, he added, “This change in administra­tion changes the terms on which we’re operating in many ways, but it doesn’t change the need for people to continue to organize and demand more from these systems.”

 ?? Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters ?? LGBTQ+ activists and supporters block the street outside the US supreme court in Washington DC as it hears arguments in a major LGBTQ+ rights case.
Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters LGBTQ+ activists and supporters block the street outside the US supreme court in Washington DC as it hears arguments in a major LGBTQ+ rights case.
 ?? Photograph: Courtesy of Aryn Bucci-Mooney ?? Aryn Bucci-Mooney, 16, is a youth activist in New York.
Photograph: Courtesy of Aryn Bucci-Mooney Aryn Bucci-Mooney, 16, is a youth activist in New York.

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