News
New McCrory ad calls anti-LGBT law ‘common sense’
Video blames outside forces for seeking to instate LGBT protections in North Carolina

Gov. Pat McCrory (R-N.C.) is campaigning on his state’s anti-LGBT law. (Photo by Hal Goodtree; courtesy Wikimedia Commons)
In the 30-second ad, made public on Wednesday and titled “Common Sense,” McCrory blames outside forces for seeking to instate non-discrimination measures for transgender people in North Carolina, which he said amounts to “pushing to make our schools allow boys to use the girls’ locker rooms and showers.”
“Are we really talking about this?” McCrory says. “Does the desire to be politically correct outweigh our children’s privacy and safety. Not on my watch. Our kids and teachers are my priority. This is North Carolina. Let’s do what’s right.”
Signed by McCrory in March after a single day of consideration by the state legislature, HB2 nullified all pro-LGBT city ordinances in the state, including one recently enacted in Charlotte, and now bars transgender people from using the public restroom in schools and government buildings consistent with their gender identity.
HB2 has inspired a massive outcry in business community, which has cancelled plans for expansion in North Carolina as a result of the law. North Carolina Attorney Roy Cooper, who’s challenging McCrory in the gubernatorial race, has made repeal of the law a campaign promise.
Jamal Little, a Cooper campaign spokesperson, said the campaign ad disregards the financial impact the anti-LGBT law has had on North Carolina.
“How can we fix this problem if we have a governor who won’t even acknowledge it exists?” Little said. “While the governor continues to deny the economic impact of House Bill 2, by running this ad it’s clear he recognizes the impact it is having on his poll numbers. It’s time for a leader who will work to repeal House Bill 2 and put the interests of North Carolinians first.”
According to a Monmouth University poll published earlier this month, Cooper holds a lead over McCrory of 52 percent to 43 percent in the gubernatorial race. The same poll found that 7-in-10 voters believe HB2 has been bad for North Carolina’s national reputation. Compared to the 36 percent of state residents who support the law, 55 percent oppose it, the poll found.
Dan Rafter, a spokesperson for Freedom for All Americans, said McCrory’s effort to campaign on the anti-LGBT law ignores reality.
“The truth is, Pat McCrory and his allies in the North Carolina general assembly convened a special session – at great cost to taxpayers – to push through a blatantly discriminatory law that has thrashed the state’s economy and imperiled the governor’s political future,” Rafter said. “Gov. McCrory continues to live in an alternate universe where he’s choosing to remain blind to the damage he’s done to his state, and instead doubles-down on discrimination. The voters will have the final say on McCrory and his policies in November.”
Photos
PHOTOS: Helen Hayes Awards
Gay Men’s Chorus, local drag artists have featured performance at ceremony

The 41st Helen Hayes Awards were held at The Anthem on Monday, May 19. Felicia Curry and Mike Millan served as the hosts.
A performance featuring members of the Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington and local drag artists was held at the end of the first act of the program to celebrate WorldPride 2025.
The annual awards ceremony honors achievement in D.C.-area theater productions and is produced by Theatre Washington.
(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)


























District of Columbia
Laverne Cox, Reneé Rapp, Deacon Maccubbin named WorldPride grand marshals
Three LGBTQ icons to lead parade

WorldPride organizers announced Thursday that actress and trans activist Laverne Cox, powerhouse performer Reneé Rapp, and LGBTQ trailblazer Deacon Maccubbin will serve as grand marshals for this year’s WorldPride parade.
The Capital Pride Alliance, which is organizing WorldPride 2025 in Washington, D.C., revealed the honorees in a press release, noting that each has made a unique contribution to the fabric of the LGBTQ community.

Cox made history in 2014 as the first openly transgender person nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award in an acting category for her role in Netflix’s “Orange Is the New Black.” She went on to win a Daytime Emmy in 2015 for her documentary “Laverne Cox Presents: The T Word,” which followed seven young trans people as they navigated coming out.
Rapp, a singer and actress who identifies as a lesbian, rose to prominence as Regina George in the Broadway musical “Mean Girls.” She reprised the role in the 2024 film adaptation and also stars in Max’s “The Sex Lives of College Girls,” portraying a character coming to terms with her sexuality. Rapp has released an EP, “Everything to Everyone,” and an album, “Snow Angel.” She announced her sophomore album, “Bite Me,” on May 21 and is slated to perform at the WorldPride Music Festival at the RFK Festival Grounds.
Deacon Maccubbin, widely regarded as a cornerstone of Washington’s LGBTQ+ history, helped organize D.C.’s first Gay Pride Party in 1975. The event took place outside Lambda Rising, one of the first LGBTQ bookstores in the nation, which Maccubbin founded. For his decades of advocacy and activism, he is often referred to as “the patriarch of D.C. Pride.”
“I am so honored to serve as one of the grand marshals for WorldPride this year. This has been one of the most difficult times in recent history for queer and trans people globally,” Cox said. “But in the face of all the rhetorical, legislative and physical attacks, we continue to have the courage to embrace who we truly are, to celebrate our beauty, resilience and bravery as a community. We refuse to allow fear to keep us from ourselves and each other. We remain out loud and proud.”
“Pride is everything. It is protection, it is visibility, it is intersectional. But most importantly, it is a celebration of existence and protest,” Rapp said.
The three will march down 14th Street for the WorldPride Parade in Washington on June 7.
Congress
House passes reconciliation with gender-affirming care funding ban
‘Big Beautiful Bill’ now heads to the Senate

The Republican-led U.S. House of Representatives on Thursday voted 215-214 for passage of the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” reconciliation package, which includes provisions that would prohibit the use of federal funds to support gender-affirming care.
But for an 11th hour revision of the bill late Wednesday night by conservative lawmakers, Medicaid and CHIP would have been restricted only from covering treatments and interventions administered to patients younger than 18.
The legislation would also drop requirements that some health insurers must cover gender-affirming care as an “essential health benefit” and force states that currently mandate such coverage to find it independently. Plans could still offer coverage for transgender care but without the EHB classification patients will likely pay higher out of pocket costs.
To offset the cost of extending tax cuts from 2017 that disproportionately benefited the wealthiest Americans, the reconciliation bill contains significant cuts to spending for federal programs like Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.
The Human Rights Campaign criticized House Republicans in a press release and statement by the group’s president, Kelley Robinson:
“People in this country want policies and solutions that make life better and expand access to the American Dream. Instead, anti-equality lawmakers voted to give handouts to billionaires built on the backs of hardworking people — with devastating consequences for the LGBTQ+ community.
“If the cuts to programs like Medicaid and SNAP or resources like Planned Parenthood clinics weren’t devastating enough, House Republicans added a last minute provision that expands its attacks on access to best practice health care to transgender adults.
“This cruel addition shows their priorities have never been about lowering costs or expanding health care access–but in targeting people simply for who they are. These lawmakers have abandoned their constituents, and as they head back to their districts, know this: they will hear from us.”
Senate Republicans are expected to pass the bill with the budget reconciliation process, which would allow them to bypass the filibuster and clear the spending package with a simple majority vote.
Changes are expected as the bill will be reviewed and amended by committees, particularly the Finance Committee, and then brought to the floor for debate — though modifications are expected to focus on Medicaid reductions and debate over state and local tax deductions.