News
Ireland to hold same-sex marriage referendum
Irish government said vote will take place in 2015

Prime Minister of Ireland Enda Kenny (Photo by the World Economic Forum; courtesy Wikimedia Commons)
The Irish government on Nov. 5 announced it will hold a referendum in 2015 on whether to extend marriage rights to same-sex couples.
The announcement comes nearly six months after a commission charged with reforming the Irish constitution overwhelmingly approved a recommendation to allow nuptials for gays and lesbians in the country.
โThe Constitutional Conventionโs landslide vote in favor of allowing same-sex couples to marry was a clarion call for equality which the government has heard today,โ Mark Kelly, director of the Irish Council of Civil Liberties, said in a Nov. 5 statement. โWhen the people of Ireland vote on this issue in 2015, we will be participating in a final act of legal recognition of the full equality of our gay and lesbian colleagues and neighbors, friends and family.โ
More than 1,500 same-sex couples have taken advantage of Irelandโs civil partnership law since it took effect in 2010.
Iceland, Portugal, Spain, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Denmark, Norway and Sweden are among the 15 countries in which same-sex couples can legally marry.
Gays and lesbians will be able to exchange vows in England and Wales next year, while Scottish lawmakers have begun to debate their own same-sex marriage measure.
Croatians in December will vote in a referendum on whether to amend the countryโs constitution to ban same-sex marriage.
Maltese parliamentarians last month began to debate a measure that would allow gays and lesbians to enter into civil unions. The European Court of Human Rights on Thursday ruled Greeceโs 2008 civil unions law that excludes same-sex couples is discriminatory.
Poll: 76 percent of Irish people support same-sex marriage
The Irish Catholic Bishopsโ Conference on Nov. 5 said it would campaign against the referendum.
A poll released on Thursday shows 76 percent of Irish people back marriage rights for same-sex couples.
Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny on Nov. 5 announced his support of the issue.
โWe are delighted with the Taoiseachโs (prime ministerโs) announcement of his strong support for civil marriage for lesbian and gay couples,โ Kieran Rose, chair of Gay and Lesbian Equality Network, an Irish LGBT advocacy group, said. โIt is a momentous and proud moment when our Taoiseach and the leader of our country endorses and supports full citizenship in the Constitution through civil marriage for lesbian and gay people.โ
National
Democrats are trying to disqualify trans candidates. Hereโs how
Jordan Korgood suspended Mass. Governorโs Council candidacy after opponent questioned residency
Uncloseted Media published this article on July 14.
By HOPE PISONI | Jordan Korgood has come a long way. In 2023, she ran into financial difficulties while studying at Northeastern University in Boston and ended up unhoused. Ordinary shelters areย hotbeds of discrimination and mistreatmentย for transgender women like her, and the onlyย trans shelterย was full. So for five months, she slept in her car, in public libraries and anywhere she could find in order to continue her studies and campus activism.
Korgood, now 24, started a bid in March for a seat on Massachusetts Governorโs Council, a state board tasked with approving judicial candidates. Despite running against an incumbent who has been in office for 41 years, she secured key endorsements from local Democrats and racked up more than 7,000 Instagram followers, the equivalent of nearly one-tenth of primary voters during the last election cycle.
But last month, her momentum was ripped away. It started when Ronald Iacobucci, one of her opponents, noticed that she was still registered to vote in the 2024 election with an old New York address. He proceeded to file an objection with the state, alleging that Korgood didnโt meet the five-year residency requirement. While Korgood has lived in Massachusetts since 2019, she didnโt have a valid address to register in the state while she was unhoused. So she used her motherโs address, where she had lived before moving.
In an email to Uncloseted Media, Iacobucci wrote: โBecause serious questions have arisen concerning compliance with those requirements, an objection was appropriate so the matter can be reviewed through the lawful process established by the commonwealth. This objection was nothing personal, it was always about the integrity of the process.โ
While most residency challenges like thisย failย in Massachusetts, the State Ballot Law Commission disqualified Korgood on June 18. While she initially attempted to appeal the decision, the financial and logistical burden became too much โ she estimates it drained about 40 percent of her campaign funds. So on July 10, Korgoodย suspended her campaign.
โI am incredibly frustrated that this is what I have to do at this point,โ Korgood told Uncloseted Media. โIโve spent thousands of hours, Iโve sacrificed my own mental health, my social life, friendships, my professional aspirations and advancement to work on this campaign, and this is how theyโre ruling.โ
โThese are cherry-picking remote issues to target specific individuals,โ Eliot Tracz, assistant professor of law at New England Law Boston, told Uncloseted Media. โTheyโre legitimate laws, but what theyโre looking for is a selective application.โ
Korgood isnโt the only trans candidate facing barriers. While aย 2025 reportย by the LGBTQ+ Victory Institute found that trans representation among elected officials has increased by over 700 percent since 2017, candidates still face major hurdles.
Uncloseted Media found examples of trans candidates running for public office in Ohio and Michigan who have been threatened with disqualification over challenges to their eligibility. Often, the challenges come from their primary opponents: fellow Democrats.
โIt should be voters, not political opponents, who decide who represents them,โ Daniel Hernandez, vice president of political programs at the LGBTQ+ Victory Fund, a nonprofit supporting queer candidates for public office, told Uncloseted Media. โThis is not a legitimate way to fight โ if you have a disagreement on policy, thatโs one thing, but to try and target trans people just because of who they are is completely unacceptable, especially in a Democratic primary.โ
A growing strategy
The first widely publicized eligibility challenge against a trans candidate Uncloseted Media identified took place in Stark County, Ohio, in 2024. The Stark County Board of Elections, which has the same chairman as the countyโs Democratic Party, disqualified Vanessa Joy, a trans woman who was running for a seat in the state legislature. The board cited an obscure state law requiring candidates who changed their name in the last five years to list their former name on candidacy petitions โ in Joyโs case, her deadname.
โThe original spirit of the law I kind of agree with,โ Joy told Uncloseted Media. โBut thereโs hardly any information about this law ever being enforced.โ
Days later, Arienne Childrey and Bobbie Arnold, two other trans candidates, had their eligibility challenged based on this law. While both candidates were cleared to run, that wasnโt the case for Joy, who never made it on the ballot.
Tom Sutton, a political science professor at Baldwin Wallace University, toldย Spectrum News 1ย he had never seen this law enforced in his 30 years of study. At the time, the relevant forms didnโt include a space to list former names, an omission that has since beenย corrected.
โThe only way to find out about it was to dig deep into all of the additional documents on their website,โ says Joy. โThey used this law against me.โ
Similar challenges cropped up in Michigan this year. Joanna Whaley, a trans woman running for a seat in the state legislature, faced a legal complaint from her Democratic primary opponent Frank Liberati, who claimed in April that she should have filed campaign paperwork under her deadname.
โBecause both the original and amended affidavits of identity filed by โJoanna Michelle Whaleyโ contain FALSE statements, she/he cannot be certified to appear on the Aug. 4, 2026, primary election ballot,โย the complaint argues.
The county clerk denied the challenge, which deadnames Whaley, because she had legally changed her name. Liberatiโs complaint was widely condemned, with the Michigan Legislative LGBTQ+ Caucus calling it โmeritlessโ and โtransphobic.โ
โIt completely backfired on him,โ Whaley told Uncloseted Media. โWe tripled our cash on hand within a week because of the support that weโve gotten from our community, and actually are in a stronger position now to win this race.โ
While Whaley benefited from the challenge, thatโs not the norm. Toni Mua, a trans woman running for a seat in the Michigan legislature, received a complaint from political activist Robert Davis in April who alleged that she also should have run under her deadname.
One of Muaโs opponents, Democrat Arthur Harrington, had discussed the challenge with Davis before it was filed, according to DeNiro Jones, Harringtonโs former campaign manager. Jones told Uncloseted Media he sat in on a meeting between the two where they discussed the plan.
Jones also sent Uncloseted Media a screenshot of what he says is a text thread that Harrington sent him. In the screenshot, Davis tells Harrington, โThe transgender candidate will be eliminated,โ and Harrington responds that โToni also wonโt have the money to fight it.โ Those texts were from April 22, two days before Davis filed the challenge.
In an email to Uncloseted Media, Davis called this story โbaseless and meritlessโ and referred to Mua as โan illegitimate candidate seeking attention.โ
โA candidate who happens to identify as transgender clearly violated Michigan Election Law and should not have been allowed to appear on the ballot,โ Davis wrote. โA personโs sexual orientation nor identity played no part in the litigation seeking to have the person who filed a false affidavit of identity properly removed from the ballot.โ
Arthur Harrington did not reply to multiple requests for comment. But in a June statement to Michigan Advance, he denied allegations that he was involved in Davisโs challenge.
These legal fights cost a lot. Korgood paid her lawyer $5,000. And while Mua defeated her challenge, she also had to use an estimated 40 percent of her campaign funds, or $10,000, to fight it.
In its opinion rejecting Davisโs challenge of Muaโs candidacy, the state court of appeals wrote, โPlaintiff misreads the statute โฆ The Court of Claims did not err by concluding that Mua complied with the law or that the Wayne County Clerk did not err in rejecting plaintiffโs challenge.โ
โI had to leave my job to run for this open seat,โ Mua told Uncloseted Media. โIt truly pisses me off, because [Democrats] have always said that they were better than this, and itโs showing truly where their support lies.โ
Quinn Allred, executive director at Let Us Lead, a youth-focused voting rights nonprofit, finds these eligibility challenges from Democrats โdespicable.โ
โInstead of saying โtrans people shouldnโt be running,โ [theyโre entering] into this respectability politics and saying โoh, itโs actually because the names donโt match up, or itโs because of this residency law,โโ Allred told Uncloseted Media. โ[Itโs a] special brand of cowardice that it takes for a Democrat to target a queer person who is also running for office.โ
Uneven enforcement
While challenges to candidatesโ residency arenโt uncommon in Massachusetts, theyย usually fail, according to Western Mass Politics & Insight, a long-running blog by local political and legal analysts.
The blog says most officials with authority over elections have a โgreat reluctance โฆ to remove an individual from the ballot.โ This makes Korgoodโs removal unusual.
And while the State Ballot Law Commission says it considers many factors when determining a candidateโs residency and โno factor standing alone can be dispositive,โ it largely cited Korgoodโs voter registration in its decision despite other evidence that supports her eligibility, including apartment leases and membership in city programs.
โWhile thereโs an undertone of legitimacy to some of those claims, itโs very selective,โ Tracz says. โMost of us, when we move to a new state, donโt bother to go through the process of getting rid of our registration to vote in the prior state.โ
Throughout history, Massachusetts candidates who faced similar challenges have been left on the ballot. These include former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who received a tax credit in Utah reserved for primary residences, and Brockton, Mass., mayoral candidate Hamilton Rodrigues, who had gotten his voter registration in Brockton removed and hadnโt voted in the city for over 10 years.
Months after Joyโs disqualification in Ohio, the Mahoning County Board of Elections struck down a similar challenge against Republican Tex Fischer, a cisgender man who changed his legal name. They allowed him to stay on the ballot.
Tracz says a judge would likely find selective enforcement like this questionable.
โ[That rule is] applicable to any candidate, and the question then becomes โIs this only being enforced against a select group of candidates?โโ he says. โWhy are we only investigating a specific type of candidate? I think that will give some courts pause.โ
Making existing challenges worse
Trans candidates face hurdles beyond eligibility challenges. A June report from the LGBTQ+ Victory Institute found that nearly two-thirds of LGBTQ candidates face in-person harassment and nearly 80 percent of them face online harassment.
โWhether itโs threats of violence, coordinated harassment campaigns, attempts to remove people from the ballot, the cumulative effect is the same: public service becoming more difficult and less accessible to the LGBTQ community,โ says Hernandez of the Victory Fund.
Whaley says the increased attention from Liberatiโs challenge brought even more harassment her way. She says she reports death threats to the police weekly and has a security detail at every public appearance. Security has become her second-largest campaign expense, and for good reason; in October, her team intervened when a man wearing a Make America Great Again hat followed her around with a gun at a No Kings rally.
โAt the end of the day, I want to get home to tuck my kids in bed,โ Whaley says. โWe could be using that money for other things, but weโre having to use it to just keep me alive.โ
Eligibility challenges distract from the candidatesโ policies. Childrey remembers one woman telling her she couldnโt vote for her because sheโs โonly about the rainbow people.โ
โMost of what [Iโm] talking about is affordability, funding for our public schools … bread and butter issues,โ Childrey told Uncloseted Media. โThere is an assumption, because weโre trans, that thatโs all it is.โ
Barriers also pile up intersectionally.ย Nearly one-thirdย of trans people experience homelessness at some point in their lives, a rate eight times higher than the general population. This means barriers for unhoused people disproportionately affect trans candidates.
โTrans youth, trans people of color, students, those who are unhoused like [Korgood] was, or who are disabled or low-income โ those barriers only compound,โ Allred says.
What could change?
Zein Murib, a political science professor at Fordham University, says these incidents demonstrate the need for more leniency with official documentation, arguing that a candidateโs deadname or legal sex arenโt relevant information. Today, 45 states accept common-law names, or the name a person uses in everyday life regardless of their ID, for other legal procedures, and Whaley says this should apply to campaigns as well.
Besides these policy changes, Allred says LGBTQ advocacy groups should allocate more funds to defend trans candidates from eligibility challenges. And Hernandez says that more people should condemn these tactics and show support for those targeted.
โWe need to make sure that we set the expectation that everyone โฆ is rejecting these tactics that are disproportionately burdening our trans candidates,โ he says. โWe have to call it out when we see it, and we have to make sure that we are not just letting candidates fight these fights themselves.โ
Mua says that she doesnโt see a future for herself or other trans people with the Democrats unless the party stands up for them. โI refuse to put myself into a party where I donโt see my safety and protection being vital.โ
While Korgood says she is saddened by this outcome, she doesnโt intend for her political career to end.
โIโm incredibly proud of what we were able to accomplish, and while I am beyond disappointed and frustrated that this is how this is ending, I am so grateful that I earned the support and the attention of thousands of people in this race.โ
Uncloseted Media also reached out to the Stark and Mahoning County Boards of Elections as well as the office of the Secretary of State in Ohio, and the Elections division of the Secretary of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, under which the State Ballot Law Commission serves. None replied.
Congress
Political drama in Angie Craigโs Minn. Senate race heats up
Lesbian lawmaker running to succeed retiring U.S. Sen. Tina Smith
After an historic and expensive July 4th fireworks display capped Donald Trumpโs self-indulgent commemoration of Americaโs 250th birthday, voters are now watching state races explode into political pyrotechnics as Democrats fight to win majorities in Congress and Republicans plan to keep buying power.
With the midterm elections just over three months away and several primary races still undecided, most pundits predict the decline in Trumpโs approval ratings will result in Democrats winning the House, if infighting doesnโt turn off voters.
Democratsโ dream of taking the U.S. Senate, however, turned into a nightmare with the scandalous Graham Platner debacle in must-win Maine. Energized party leaders hope to put on a master class in democracy as they pick a new candidate before July 27.
The hike to Senate victory is still steep. Republicans have a 53-47 advantage โ meaning Democrats must win eight of 11 competitive races, including defending seats currently held in Minnesota, Michigan, New Hampshire, and Georgia, for a net gain of four seats.
LGBTQ people intent on reversing Project 2025โs prolific erasure might focus on lesbian U.S. Rep. Angie Craigโs race in Minnesota.
With the retirement of Democratic U.S. Sen. Tina Smith, The Cook Political Reportโs out guru Amy Walter labeled the open seat โlikelyโ Democrat but with only a +3-point advantage.
New York Times Polling data reporter Alex Lemonides notes that โTrump lost Minnesota by four percentage points in 2024, and Minnesotans have not sent a Republican to the Senate since the 2002 midterms, so a Republican win in the general election would buck the trend.โ
But this whole election cycle is about bucking trends. With so many Democratic Socialists defeating establishment candidates, โsocialistโ is no longer a slur, forcingย Trump to switch to the old Cold War charge of Communist!
In Minnesota, U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.)-backed candidate Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan is out-polling Craig, a more centrist Democrat who flipped a battleground House seat in 2018. Their primary is on Aug. 11.
Republicans are salivating over challenging Flanagan for her administrative role in the scandal that forced Gov. Tim Walz to forgo a third term and deal with widespread fraud in social programs.
Former NBCโs Sunday Night Football sideline reporter and current political podcaster Michele Tafoya has a built-in โbroโ audience. The announcement of her Republican candidacy was featured on ESPN.com.
โAs Minnesotaโs senator, I will clean up the system, fighting corruption, ending the fraud, and protecting your tax dollars,โ Tafoya said. โI will protect whatโs fair and safe, standing with our law enforcement officers, deporting dangerous criminals, and keeping female sports for female athletes.โ
Craig responded quickly. โTrumpโs hand-picked candidate just jumped in the race for U.S. Senate,โ she said on social media. โMinnesota needs a Senator who will stand up and fight for our state – and we know it wonโt be MAGA Michele.โ
Craig tells LGBTQ+ Freedom Fighters that she has been happy toย represent Minnesotaโs Second Congressional Districtย in the U.S. House of Representatives since 2019. Now she wants to represent the entire state as a U.S. senator.
โThe state of Minnesota has been so good to me and my family,โ says Craig, who chose to move to the state because it would accept her family.
Craig grew up in a mobile home park in Arkansas, one of three children of a single mother. She worked her way through the University of Memphis, earning a degree in journalism, and became a reporter with the Memphis Commercial Appeal.
She has a long history of fighting for LGBTQ rights, including her own. In the late 1990s, while living in Tennessee, Craig and her then-partner, Debra Langston, adopted their first son, Joshua. Under Tennessee law at the time, only one of them could be recognized as an adoptive parent; Craig was listed as Langstonโs roommate.
The birth mother wanted the couple to have Joshua, but her parents intervened, seeking to adopt him. The courts had to decide if Langston and Craig were โfitโ parents. One appellate court judge objected to the boy being raised by โopen, practicing lesbians,โ but his two colleagues disagreed, and Langston and Craig won the precedent-setting case in 2000, albeit with lots of caveats.
โThe issue in this case is not whether the members of this court approve the homosexual lifestyle or the adoption of children by homosexuals, but rather whether the adoption of this child by this prospective parent is in the childโs best interest. As in any adoption case, the determinative issue was and remains what is in the childโs best interest,โ wrote Judge Alan E. Highers in his opinion concurring with the majority in ruling In re: ADOPTION OF M.J.S. in the Tennessee Court of Appeals.
By then, Craig was working in corporate communications for Smith & Nephew, a multinational maker of medical equipment, and the couple had another son, Jacob, born to Craig through alternative insemination. She and her family moved to London, where the company was based, in the early 2000s. They returned to the U.S. in 2005; Craig went to work for another medical equipment company, St. Jude Medical, in the suburbs of Minneapolis. She later said it was the least lucrative job offer she had, but she took it because she knew the area was welcoming to LGBTQ people.

Craig and Langston separated in 2006, and Craig married Cheryl Greene in California in 2008. They have four sons and three grandsons, with a fourth on the way. Greene is a former middle school teacher still involved with youth programming.
Craig worked for LGBTQ equality within her company and for statewide marriage equality in Minnesota. She also fought against an anti-marriage equality constitutional amendment in 2012, which voters rejected. The state legislature passed a marriage equality bill the following year that Gov. Mark Dayton signed into law.
In 2016, when she ran for Congress in Minnesotaโs 2nd District, a Republican stronghold for more than a decade, she told the Twin Cities Pioneer Press that the fight for custody of Joshua gave her strength.

โWhether I win or lose on Election Day, I know that that wonโt be the hardest thing or the biggest challenge that Iโve ever faced,โ said Craig, then 44. โWhen you get up every day and wonder, โAm I going to (still) have my child the next day?โ you get pretty good at being focused on the big picture.โ

โIโve always talked about my family openlyโ on the campaign trail and in office, Craig, co-chair of the Congressional Equality Caucus, tells LGBTQ+ Freedom Fighters. Often at events in her district and around the state, sheโll meet someone who mentions they have an LGBTQ family member, she notes. She finds that if she listens to constituents and addresses whatโs important to them, her identity isnโt an issue.
What Craig has addressed for constituents includes health care costs, such as capping the out-of-pocket cost of insulin and limiting overall out-of-pocket drug costs for people on Medicare. These came from a bill introduced by Craig and became provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act, signed into law by President Joe Biden in 2022. She also wants a public option for health insurance, an increased child tax credit, and she introduced a bill to eliminate federal taxes on Social Security benefits.

In a June 19 SurveyUSA poll, Minnesotans say their single most important issue is inflation (39%) and cost of living, followed by health care, immigration, gas prices, and the war in Iran.
But immigration may soon jump to the front as more information leaks out about U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents shooting and killing Lorenzo Salgado Araujo during a traffic stop in Houston on Tuesday morning, July 9. Homeland Security says the father, with no criminal record, driving to work, ignored verbal instructions and tried to ram their vehicle. ICE shot him in self-defense โ the same excuse ICE used on Jan. 7, 2026, when an ICE agent killed nonviolent protester Renee Good. Inย both instances, video footage proved ICE lied.

Also caught on tape was Craigโs angry confrontation with Republican Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-Minn.) on the House floor the day Good was killed after Emmer supported ICE on social media. The story and her response went viral.

But Craig continues to be criticized for voting for the Laken Riley Act, named for a woman who was killed by an undocumented immigrant. It allows for undocumented immigrants to be detained or deported if they are simply accused of crimes, even nonviolent ones. Critics say she has never apologized โ but she has.
In a commentary for The Minnesota Star Tribune in May, Craig wrote, in part:
โThe text of the bill did not include the word deportation. I made the difficult decision to vote for it. Democrats like Sens. Mark Kelly and Ruben Gallego, Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff โ leaders I deeply respect โ all came to the same conclusion.
But as I stood side by side with protesters on the streets of Minneapolis and opposite dozens of armed Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents at the Whipple Federal Building after Renee Goodโs killing โ and again after the killing of Alex Pretti โ I couldnโt help but question whether I made the right call last year … Itโs also become clear that supporting any bill that gives ICE new authority in this administration was the wrong decision. And I regret my vote.โ
โWhat happened under Operation Metro Surge was horrific,โ Craig tells LGBTQ+ Freedom Fighters. The U.S. can secure its borders in a humane fashion while providing a path to citizenship for undocumented people, those brought here as children, and others, she adds.
On LGBTQ rights, Craig says the Equality Act has been a huge priority of hers in the House and would remain so in the Senate.
Since 2019, Craig has introduced the John Lewis Every Child Deserves a Family Act that โwould ban discrimination based on sexual orientation, gender identity, religion or marital status in those programs, prohibit the use of federal funds for so-called โconversion therapyโ and create a resource center for LGBTQ+ foster and adoptive youth within the Department of Health and Human Servicesโ Administration for Children and Families,โ according to a press release.

Another priority is passage of the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, named for the late civil rights activist and longtime congressman. โI was lucky enough to serve with John Lewis,โ she says.
Additionally, Craig supports campaign finance reform. The recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling that further loosened restrictions was โjust another blow to our democracy,โ she says. She supports limits on Supreme Court terms.
On foreign policy, she condemns Trumpโs war of choice in Iran. โThe administration has had zero strategic objectives,โ she says, adding that the war has caused โtremendous economic damage,โ such as the spike in gas prices.
And though Craig supports a two-state solution to the ongoing Israel-Palestinian conflict, with Palestinians having their own state, her campaign does not accept direct donations from AIPACโs political action committee โ the pro-Israel group held fundraisers for her before her Senate announcement โ another point exploited by primary opponent Flanagan.
On gender-affirming care for transgender youth, Craig says politicians should not interfere with decisions made by young people and their parents. Regarding trans girls and women in sports, she says the matter is best handled locally โ and that local conversations can foster understanding.
But Craig has had a strong public reaction to federal transphobia. After that, then-U.S. Reps. Tulsi Gabbard (D-Hawaii) and Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.) introduced the Protect Womenโs Sports Act in December 2020. Craig released the following statement:
โAs a lesbian woman, I am no stranger to prejudice and intolerance โ but this legislation is beyond the pale. Plain and simple, theย Protect Womenโs Sports Actย is transphobic โ and this type of discrimination has no place in the halls of Congress. Especially at a time when the transgender community is suffering from a tragic rise in suicide rates and experiencing a surge of transphobic violence, such a bigoted and appalling effort is simply unacceptable. Queer and transgender women must stand together in the face of intolerance โ and I am proud to do so today by emphatically denouncing this narrow-minded and hateful legislation, which is harmful not only to transgender women but to the LGBTQ community at-large.โ

Craig has been endorsed by prominent LGBTQ groups, including the LGBTQ+ Victory Fund, the Human Rights Campaign PAC, Equality PAC, and LPAC. She has also beenย endorsed by Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey and St. Paul Mayor Kaohly Her,ย plusย many nationally known political figures,ย such as former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.), House Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), and House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.).
Flanaganย has the endorsementย of Smith and her predecessor, Al Franken, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, and, from outside the state, U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Sanders, among others. U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota and the stateโs governor, Tim Walz, so far havenโt made endorsements.
โIโm ready on day oneโ to serve in the Senate, says Craig, noting her four terms in the House, her substantial career before going into politics, and her two votes to impeach Trump. โIf we can take the House and Senate, we can put a cap on this administration.โ
This is a cross-post from Karen Ocamb’s LGBTQ+ Freedom Fighters Substack.
Rehoboth Beach
Suzanne Goode wants efficient spending, better infrastructure for Rehoboth
Mayoral candidate has clashed with colleagues over city finances
(Editorโs note: This is the second installment in a three-part series profiling the candidates for mayor of Rehoboth Beach, Del.: Commissioners Suzanne Goode, Susan Stewart, and Craig Thier; a fourth candidate, William Raak, filed to join the race but has not responded to Blade inquiries.)
Rehoboth Beach City Commissioner Suzanne Goode, a candidate for mayor, told the Blade sheโs running on a platform prioritizing efficient spending, improving infrastructure, and increasing affordability.
A Maryland native, Goode became a full-time resident of Rehoboth Beach with her husband in 2016. The two have been homeowners in Rehoboth since 2006. Goode became involved with Rehoboth politics soon after moving to town full time.
โI started attending meetings back in 2018 right after we moved here full time. I feel that the city needs to change desperately. They really are in trouble.โ
โI never expected to get involved, but once I saw how dysfunctional everything was, that’s what inspired me.โ
Goode said that her background in economic consulting makes her qualified to oversee how the city spends taxpayer dollars.
โI’m an economist, that’s my background. I present data at some of these meetings, but no one is willing to analyze the data or even respond as to why we arenโt doing things differently,โ said Goode.
โWe have other commissioners who are so unwilling to make the hard decisions and cut spending,โ said Goode.
โWe have so much wrong with the way money is being spent to defend the bureaucracy and not to give back power to the voters, the taxpayers,โ said Goode.
But the cityโs budget numbers contradict Goodeโs claims about financial mismanagement.
The city reported that it ended fiscal year 2025 with a $1.21 million surplus. The 2027 budget was adopted in March and projects an operating surplus of about $875,000.
Elected as a city commissioner in 2024, Goode says she has made an effort to limit spending. She has had multiple public disagreements with fellow commissioners, in particular, Susan Stewart, who is also running for mayor.
In a March 9th commissionerโs meeting, Stewart publicly disclosed a series of Goodeโs emails, outlining allegations of misconduct and harassment, all of which Goode denied and claimed were false.ย
The emails alleged racially and sexually demeaning remarks from Goode about city staff and officials, including City Manager Taylour Tedder.ย
Goode has criticized the cityโs decision to give Tedder a $750,000 forgivable home loan and a $250,000 salary, which is $90,000 more than the previous city manager.
โUnder his stewardship, he has handed out excessive pay packages, including benefits to his immediate deputy administrators, all with taxpayer money,โ Goode said.
The Blade has reached out to Tedder for comment.
Goode spoke against the decision to hire City Solicitor Lisa Borin Ogden and has made attempts to reduce her $200,000 annual salary.ย
Goode also disagrees with Tedderโs hiring of consultants for the city: โMy goal is to cut the endless stream of consultancies that the city manager contracts, which do not seem to improve the quality of life for the average resident or visitor to Rehoboth Beach.โ
โI don’t believe we need additional advice about how to run things,โ said Goode. โWe just need to improve infrastructure at this point, cut back on some of the excessive compensation packages, not to the working class among our employees, but to the executives and the administrators,โ said Goode.
Goode also disapproves of Tedderโs โReimagine Rehobothโ master planning initiative and says that it โwould come to an immediate haltโ if she were elected mayor.ย
โYou have to hope that we make better decisions going forward. It would be a benefit to everyone, to visitors, to homeowners, both second homeowners and full-time residents.โ
Goodeโs platform focuses on expanding and improving the infrastructure throughout Rehoboth. She says she would like to work to โimprove infrastructure to include replacement of crumbling and uneven sidewalks.โ
She shared that as a resident, she has experienced hazardous conditions when trying to walk or bicycle at night due to what she calls an insufficient amount of streetlights.
Goode also has her sights set on improving Rehobothโs wastewater treatment system.
โWe have complex issues with wastewater treatment. I will continue to advocate against Rehoboth Beach becoming the destination where treated wastewater is sent from areas outside Rehoboth.โ
โI want to fully support the working class, the line people, the sanitation workers, the people on city staff who keep the city running and who are the most important workers in many ways,โ said Goode.
Goode also addressed her approval of efforts to construct a venue for Clear Space Theatre Company in town, saying, โI think it’s a wonderful use of some city-owned land.โ
However, she is cautious about talks to give Clear Space money toward construction of the theater, saying the decision should go to public referendum.
The Blade asked Goode if maintaining Rehobothโs perfect score on the Human Rights Campaignโs Equality Index would be a priority as mayor. She said that it would be a priority and that she is proud of Rehobothโs relationship with the LGBTQ+ community. However, she bemoaned the lack of racial diversity among Rehoboth homeowners.
โWhile we have LGBTQ+ diversity, we have little racial diversity among the property owners with very few African Americans owning homes in Rehoboth. That is, in my view, a bad thing.โ
โWe want diversity of demographics and race. In order to do that, in order to make Rehoboth more affordable to everyone.โ
Goode also responded to claims that she opposes the rainbow sidewalks in town by saying that she thinks they are โattractiveโ but is worried that they โnecessitate more labor.โ
โMy priorities are safety and affordability,โ said Goode. โUnfortunately, the rainbow crosswalks have potentially reduced the upkeep of the conventional crosswalks. But the rainbow crosswalks are attractive in and of themselves, and they do add to our recognition of Rehobothโs longstanding status as a gay-friendly town.โ
Goode said that she noticed recently at the intersection of First Street and Baltimore Avenue that the two rainbow crosswalks were freshly painted for the spring while the two white crosswalks were โfaded and unsafe.โ
The election will take place on Aug. 8, from 10 a.m.-6 p.m. at the Convention Center.ย
