The Guardian (USA)

Lauren Boebert accused of hypocrisy over prayers for LGBTQ+ club shooting

- Erum Salam

LGBTQ+ advocates in the US have criticized the far-right Colorado Republican congresswo­man Lauren Boebert as a hypocrite in light of her past anti-LGBTQ+ statements after she offered prayers to the victims of the recent Club Q mass shooting in Colorado Springs.

The shooting at the LGBTQ+ club that left five dead took place on the eve of the Transgende­r Day of Remembranc­e. ACLU-Colorado’s senior policy strategist and trans activist Anaya Robinson called Boebert’s condolence­s “disingenuo­us”, and blamed incendiary comments about the community for such tragedies.

Robinson said: “Certain language and statements are the things that are perpetuati­ng this violence and this hate. Change course … dehumanizi­ng individual­s and communitie­s because of who they are and who they love – it makes it accessible to harm them.”

According to a study by the Williams Institute at the UCLA School of Law, “Transgende­r people are over four times more likely than cisgender people to experience violent victimizat­ion, including rape, sexual assault, and aggravated or simple assault.”

Boebert has been outspoken about her stance against same-sex marriage, which the US supreme court ruled a constituti­onal right in the landmark 2015 case, Obergefell v Hodges.

On her official government website, Boebert says that she opposes “efforts to redefine marriage as anything other than the union of one man and one woman”.

Boebert has also taken aim at drag shows, which have become a focus of bigoted far-right conspiracy theories and a target for violence and protests. On Twitter, she once wrote: “Take your children to CHURCH, not drag bars.”

Boebert, who has been in office since 2021 and was narrowly re-elected in the 2022 midterm elections, also has a history of pushing anti-LGTBQ+ policies in legislatio­n.

In 2021, Boebert introduced a bill to block funding for research into gender-affirming treatments for transgende­r youth. Boebert called the research “evil” and spread conspiracy-based misinforma­tion about the National Institute of

Health (NIH), which she called the “National Institute of Horrors”.

On social media, Boebert aims to shock – equating gender-affirming treatment and surgeries to “childgroom­ing”.

It’s a comparison advocates from Glaad, the world’s largest lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r and queer media advocacy organizati­on, have called “dangerous”.

Sarah Kate Ellis, president and CEO of Glaad, told the Guardian: “Boebert’s vile anti-LGBTQ rhetoric and her glorificat­ion of guns and violence is a toxic combinatio­n – researcher­s who study extremism say it’s like a hot pan on a burner with popcorn kernels ready to pop – anyone listening can be encouraged to pop.

“Boebert led on creating a culture of anti-LGBTQ hate in Colorado and beyond. The lies Boebert spews about LGBTQ people are absolutely despicable. Instead of offering her thoughts and prayers, how about Boebert instead stops her barrage of anti-LGBTQ hate and works to enact stronger gun safety reforms? We need politician­s who will represent us all and keep us safe, not politician­s who put our lives in danger just to bolster their careers.”

In its official statement on the Club Q shooting, Glaad wrote: “Our hearts are broken for the victims of the horrific tragedy in Colorado Springs, and their loved ones. This unspeakabl­e attack has robbed countless people of their friends and family and an entire community’s sense of safety.

“You can draw a straight line from the false and vile rhetoric about LGBTQ people spread by extremists and amplified across social media, to the nearly 300 anti-LGBTQ bills introduced this year, to the dozens of attacks on our community like this one.”

 ?? ?? Congresswo­man Lauren Boebert speaks at a gun store in Midland, Texas, last year. Photograph: Eli Hartman/AP
Congresswo­man Lauren Boebert speaks at a gun store in Midland, Texas, last year. Photograph: Eli Hartman/AP

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