Congress
Trump endorses anti-LGBTQ Rep. Jim Jordan for Speaker
Congressman has long anti-equality record
With a Truth Social post early Friday morning, former President Donald Trump endorsed U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan (Ohio), the ultraconservative and anti-LGBTQ chair of the House Judiciary Committee, to lead his party’s majority in the House.
The move comes after U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) forced a motion on Tuesday in which he and seven other far-right members joined with the Democrats to remove U.S. Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) from the Speaker’s chair, voting 216-210.
U.S. Rep. Patrick McHenry (R-N.C.) was tapped to serve in the interim as Speaker pro tempore as House Republicans scramble to coalesce around a new leader. Jordan and GOP House Majority Whip Steve Scalise (La.) declared their bids for the job on Wednesday.
So far, several high-profile GOP members including U.S. Reps. Byron Donalds (Fla.) and Troy Nehls (Texas) have lined up behind Jordan, who was one of the nine founding members and the first chair of the ultraconservative House Freedom Caucus.
In a post published on X Thursday night, Nehls declared that he had spoken with Trump, disclosed the former president’s plans to back Jordan, and urged colleagues to “listen to the leader of our party.”
Just had a great conversation with President Trump about the Speakerās race.
— Congressman Troy E. Nehls (@RepTroyNehls) October 6, 2023
He is endorsing Jim Jordan, and I believe Congress should listen to the leader of our party.
I fully support Jim Jordan for Speaker of the House.
Trump wrote on Truth Social that the Ohio Republican “has been a STAR long before making his very successful journey to Washington, D.C.,ā adding, āHe will be a GREAT Speaker of the House, & has my Complete & Total Endorsement!ā
Jordan has staunchly opposed LGBTQ rights
Jordan’s statement announcing his bid for the speakership contains, among other commitments, a pledge to address federal agencies’ supposed practice of “targeting parents at school board meetings.”
The congressman has repeatedly argued that U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland, with a memo he issued in 2021, directed the Justice Department to treat parents who have voiced objections to LGBTQ-inclusive policies and educational materials as domestic terrorists.
Last September, a Trump-appointed federal judge dismissed these same claims when they were brought by a group of parents, ruling that the memo “is not regulatory, proscriptive, or compulsory in nature because it does not impose any regulations, requirements, or enforcement actions on individuals.”
A spokesperson for Jordan did not immediately respond to a request for comment on how he would approach LGBTQ issues if elected speaker or how he would address criticism over his anti-LGBTQ record.
Over the years, LGBTQ groups like GLAAD and the Human Rights Campaign have repeatedly noted the congressman’s anti-equality record, including his staunch opposition to same-sex marriage.
As the U.S. Supreme Court was considering Obergefell v. Hodges, Jordan co-sponsored a resolution for a constitutional amendment to limit the federal government’s recognition of marriages to only opposite-sex unions ā and then came out against the court’s ruling when it was handed down in June of 2015.
Last year, when Congress introduced the Respect for Marriage Act to enshrine protections for same-sex couples in anticipation of a possible reversal by the high court’s conservative supermajority, House Republican leadership opted not to whip votes in either direction.
Jordan tried, nevertheless, to shore up opposition in the conference, 47 members of whom would ultimately vote with the Democrats in favor of passing the bill.
As chair of the Judiciary Committee, Jordan has organized hearings to oppose guideline directed gender affirming healthcare interventions and other anti-trans policies and practices that have been passed by conservative state legislatures.
Congress
EXCLUSIVE: Markey bill would offer additional support to LGBTQ elders
Measure would create Office of LGBTQI Inclusion within HHS
U.S. Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) will introduce a bill on Friday to support LGBTQ elders and older adults living with HIV by establishing an Office of LGBTQI Inclusion within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Among other responsibilities, the office would advocate, coordinate activities, issue policy recommendations, and oversee the collection of data from these communities.
A major piece of the work to improve health equity at HHS under the leadership of Secretary Xavier Becerra and Assistant Health Secretary Rachel Levine has been data collection initiatives for LGBTQ and other populations that can encounter barriers accessing care.
The Elder Pride Act will also “establish a rural grants program to serve the unique needs of rural LGBTQI+ older adults, including through education and training, community outreach and creation of community spaces, and improved cultural competency,” according to a press release announcing the legislation, which the senator’s office previewed exclusively with the Washington Blade.
āAfter years of exclusion and discrimination from health care settings, workplaces, and their local communities, LGBTQ+ older Americans deserve the protections their neighbors are afforded,” Markey said.
“Queer and trans elders should be able to age with dignity, grace, and surrounded by community,” he added. “TheĀ Elder Pride ActĀ will ensure that all older adults are able to have access to the care and services they need.āĀ Ā
Cosponsoring senators include Bob Casey (D-Penn.), Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Alex Padilla (D- Calif.), and Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.). The legislation’s provisions were included in a pair of bills introduced earlier this year by U.S. Rep. Suzanne Bonamici (D-Ore.), who chairs the Congressional Equality Caucusās Aging Issues Task Force.
The press release from Markey’s office also highlights several of the challenges faced by LGBTQ older adults vis-a-vis their cisgender and heterosexual peers: Fewer sources of support. higher poverty rates, poorer healthcare, poorer health access, and poorer health outcomes.
At the city and county level, older adults are served by local area agencies on aging (AAAs), which receive services and activities from HHS. Fewer than half of these organizations report that they will be able to provide LGBTQ-specific activities by the time the population of LGBTQ elders reaches 7 million, which is expected by 2030.
Congress
Garcia slams effort to ban drag shows as GOP passes NDAA with anti-LGBTQ riders
Equality Caucus denounces anti-LGBTQ amendments
U.S. Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.) slammed Republican U.S. Rep. Josh Brecheen’s (Okla.) effort to ban drag shows on American military bases during a debate over the annual National Defense Authorization Act spending bill on Thursday.
The appropriations package, which contains five anti-LGBTQ riders pushed by House GOP members, was passed on Friday.
āWe know there are a lot of threats to the health and well-being of our service members and their families: poisoned water, toxic mold in military housing, PTSD, and suicide,” said Garcia, who is gay and a co-chair of the Congressional Equality Caucus.
“So Iām stunned to see that the Republican idea to protect our troops is to ban drag shows,” he said. “Mr. Speaker, my Republican colleagues want us to believe that āthese gays are trying to murder us.ā They want us to believe that drag is harmful, or immoral and wrong. This is ridiculous.”
āWe can document and celebrate drag shows on military bases since the late 1800s, and through both world wars,” Garcia continued. “The USO and the Red Cross supported drag during World War II.Ā Thatās right: the Army that defeated Hitler and saved the world included drag queens.āĀ
āRonald Regan starred in a movie called ‘This Is the Army!’ — a movie about World War II that featured four drag performances,” he said. “And heās not the only Republican president who knew that drag can be fun and sometimes silly.”
Garcia displayed a photo of former president and presumptive 2024 GOP nominee Donald Trump alongside former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who was dressed in drag.
āMr. Speaker,” the congressman said, “drag is Art. Drag is Culture. Drag is Creativity. Drag is Comedy. And no, drag is Not a Crime. Itās not pornography. The real obscenity is when one of our colleagues, the gentlewoman from Georgia, shows literal posters of revenge porn in our Oversight Committee! If we want to end porn in government facilities, letās ban that.ā
In a statement on Friday, the Equality Caucus called out House Republicans’ politicization of the military appropriations bill.
āLike last year, House Republicans voted to add poison pill, anti-LGBTQI+ provisions to the NDAA that discriminate against our LGTBQI+ servicemembers and their families,” said Caucus Chair U.S. Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wis.) “The Equality Caucus remains committed to preventing these discriminatory provisions from becoming law.ā
Along with Brecheen’s drag show ban, the caucus highlighted four of these riders from this year’s NDAA:
- Amendment 46 by U.S. Rep. Greg Steube (R-Fla.), which would “prohibit funds for the Department of Defense Education Activity from being used to purchase, maintain, or display in a school library or classroom books that include transgender and intersex characters or touch on topics related to gender identity or variations in sex characteristics,”
- Amendment 49 by U.S. Rep. Cory Mills (R-Fla.), which would “ban Pride flags from any workplace, common access area, or public area of the Department of Defense,” and
- Amendments 52 and 53 by U.S. Reps. Matt Rosendale (R-Mont.) and Ralph Norman (S.C.), which would, respectively, “ban TRICARE from covering and furnishing gender-affirming surgeries and hormone treatments,” and “prohibit the Exceptional Family Member Program (EFMP) from covering or providing referrals for āgender transition proceduresāāincluding puberty blockers, hormone therapy, and surgeriesāfor servicemembersā dependent minor children.”
Congress
Merkley, joined by Advocates for Trans Equality, makes Equality Act push
Ore. senator said ‘our rights and freedoms are on the ballot this year’
U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) called for passage of the Equality Act during a press conference on Wednesday alongside Advocates for Trans Equality, who were convened on Capitol Hill for the Trans Day of Empowerment lobby day.
Instead of freedom and the opportunity to participate fully in society, the senator said, “We see hatred, we see harassment, we see homelessness, we see discrimination, and bigotry, and violence, we see unemployment, we even see state-sanctioned attempts to outlaw the very identity of our transgender members of our community.”
“Across America in 2024, in our state legislatures there have been 500 bills drafted to constrain the opportunity for transgender Americans,” Merkley said. “They take on school curriculum, or they ban gender affirming care or otherwise seek to constrain the opportunity to participate in society, by our transgender individuals, in so many different ways.”
“This is wrong,” he said. “This is unacceptable. And we need to therefore pass the Equality Act here in the halls of Congress.”
Merkley, who introduced the latest iteration of the bill in the Senate, noted the legislation would “end discrimination on sexual orientation or gender identity in employment, in housing, in public accommodations, in mortgages, in financial transactions, in jury duty ā every facet of American society.”
U.S. Rep. Mark Takano (D-Calif.), who is gay and a co-chair of the Congressional Equality Caucus, is leading the House version of the bill.
However, Merkley said, “our partners on the right side of the aisle have abandoned us. So, the responsibility to pass the Equality Act falls firmly on the Democratic Party.”
The senator called for an end to the Senate filibuster as a means of passing important legislation like the Equality Act.
Separately, in a statement to the Washington Blade, Merkley said, “Voting is the heart of our democracy. As Americans cast their ballots this fall, they have the chance to decide major issues facing our nation ā from LGBTQ+ rights to reproductive freedom to so much more.”
āDemocracy doesnāt exist unless every eligible voter has equal opportunity to make their voice heard,” he said. “As attacks on our LGBTQ+ friends and neighbors continue in the halls of Congress, state legislatures, and in our communities, we must all speak out and vote against this rising hate.”
The senator added, “Our rights and freedoms are on the ballot this year, and I wonāt stop fighting until every American can live safely and freely as their authentic self.ā
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