The Norwalk Hour

Some in GOP fear party overreach on LGBT issues

- By Annie Linskey and Casey Parks

WASHINGTON — Republican lawmakers around the country are pushing an array of bills that limit the discussion of gay rights in schools under the auspices of parental rights, leading some party strategist­s to worry that the initiative­s may backfire with moderate voters by making the party seem anti-gay.

Legislatio­n includes a recent law passed in Florida that limits what kindergart­en to third grade teachers can talk about in the classroom regarding sexual orientatio­n and gender identity — a measure dubbed the “don’t say gay” law by critics. Several other state legislatur­es, including Alabama, Louisiana and Ohio, are considerin­g or have passed similar bills.

The measures have been accompanie­d by a push among some Republican­s to falsely describe backers of gay rights as “groomers” who are recruiting children to question their own sexuality or gender identity at a young age, torquing up rhetoric that LGBTQ activists say is dangerous. One top Senate Republican also recently criticized the legal underpinni­ngs of a 2015 Supreme Court decision affirming the right to samesex marriage — a ruling that has broad public support.

Tim Miller, a former spokesman for Jeb Bush’s 2016 presidenti­al bid who has since left the GOP, said of the recent measures, “I think in the short term, it’s a political winner, and that’s why you see so many other states doing copycat bills on Florida.”

But “I think that there are some big risks for Republican­s, though in the medium term,” he added. “There’s a reason that the politics on gay marriage shifted so quickly . ... The broad middle of this country does not want to see gay people or trans people be targeted.”

Many Republican­s argue that their recent legislativ­e efforts are geared toward giving parents more control over their children’s education and are not aimed at marginaliz­ing gay or transgende­r communitie­s. Rather, they say, the push for legislatio­n is the latest iteration of post-pandemic conservati­ve organizing around public schools and is similar to the move against teaching what conservati­ves have characteri­zed as “critical race theory.”

Fifty percent of Americans, including 65 percent of Republican­s, said parents have “too little” influence on classroom curriculum, according to an APNORC poll released in March. But 21 percent of Americans supported prohibitin­g teachers from teaching about sex and sexuality in schools, including 33 percent of Republican­s, the poll showed.

Democrats have been quick to criticize the GOP moves as anti-gay and antitransg­ender, and highlight the likely impact of the legislatio­n on children.

“This is a political wedge issue and an attempt to win a culture war,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said when asked during a recent podcast interview about recent GOP legislatio­n. “And they’re doing that in a way that is harsh and cruel to a community of kids.”

“I’m going to get emotional about this issue, because it’s horrible,” Psaki continued. “But it’s like kids who are bullied, and all these leaders are taking steps to hurt them and hurt their lives and hurt their families.”

Charles Moran, president of the Log Cabin Republican­s, a GOP group that pushes for equality between straight and gay Americans, said he is not opposed to Florida’s Parental Rights in Education law, which he views as being limited in scope.

But his group is scrambling to develop a state legislativ­e strategy to track other parental rights bills that are moving around the country, saying that some of them do pose problems for gay Americans. “Every one of these bills are different in each state, and some of them are truly dangerous,” Moran said. “Some of them are actually bad. Some of them we are going to come out and oppose.”

The wave of new initiative­s came as a surprise to Moran. “I was not prepared to do this this year,” he said. “I’m having to rapidly build a legislativ­e analysis team to really go through and identify the states that have these bills.”

In Florida, Moran said that he was able to help kill an amendment to Florida’s law that would have required teachers to report when children questioned their gender identity or sexual orientatio­n while in the classroom. “That was a huge problem,” he said.

Still, he said that he does not view the Florida law as an attack on gay rights. “There are some people who are turning this into an attempt to claw back progress on LGBT issues,” Moran said. “But that is not how I read this. I’m consistent­ly reminding everyone: This is not a gay rights thing. This is a parental rights thing.”

The recent cluster of parental rights legislatio­n stems from the 2021 Virginia gubernator­ial race, some Republican­s said.

Republican Glenn Youngkin bested Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe by roughly two percentage points just a year after Joe Biden, a Democrat, won the state by 10 percentage points in his presidenti­al campaign.

Youngkin focused heavily on the public school curriculum and pushed for parents to have more say in their children’s education. The issue let him capitalize on deep-seated frustratio­n among many parents after nearly two years of pandemic-related school disruption­s.

“Youngkin invented this, and DeSantis has perfected it,” said Dan Eberhart, a GOP donor who is close with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, R. Eberhart said laws like the one in Florida signal to the base of the party a willingnes­s to take on fights.

But Eberhart said that he thinks DeSantis “may have gone too far” in pushing subsequent legislatio­n that stripped special tax breaks from the Walt Disney Co. after it opposed the parental rights bill. Now, he said, Democrats can paint DeSantis as hurting the economy in central Florida, where Disney employs thousands of workers.

The resurgence of antigay rhetoric is reminiscen­t of a past era, some observers said. In 2004, for example, Republican­s pushed state referendum­s banning same-sex marriage. But by the time of the Donald Trump administra­tion, GOP antipathy to gay and lesbian rights had in many respects faded.

“On the substance, it’s a departure from Trump-era conservati­sm,” said Sasha Issenberg, the author of “The Engagement: America’s Quarter-Century Struggle Over Same-Sex Marriage.”

But Issenberg said the style of discourse around the bills bears the imprint of Trump’s party. “Overthe-top, borderline-libelous online rhetoric clearly feels like the way Trump’s right wing communicat­es,” Issenberg said.

Trump openly campaigned for LGBT support. At the same time, while president, Trump tried to ban transgende­r soldiers from the military and moved to restrict access to homeless shelters for transgende­r people. His administra­tion also erased protection­s for transgende­r patients against discrimina­tion by doctors, hospitals and health insurance companies.

Some Republican strategist­s are concerned enough about the new laws and rhetoric that they are working to launch campaigns against the measures. One group, Conservati­ves Against Discrimina­tion, released a video on Wednesday that focuses on the struggles of a transgende­r man and held a roundtable to discuss how gay and transgende­r issues are being talked about.

“The LGBT advancemen­ts was one of those issues that, over time, there was consensus in this country,” Sarah Longwell, a Republican strategist, said during the virtual forum. “If you allow for this new spate of ‘we’re going to frame things differentl­y now; we’re going to frame it as protection of children,’ we’re going to create more distrust.”

During the forum, former Indianapol­is mayor Greg Ballard, a Republican, said he had seen firsthand the effects discrimina­tory bills can have.

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