Politics
Meet the LGBTQ candidates running in key races from U.S. Senate to state houses
Baldwin in tight contest; McBride poised to make history in Delaware
U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) became the first openly LGBTQ senator with her election in 2012, having previously served as U.S. representative from Wisconsinโs 2nd Congressional District as the first non-incumbent LGBTQ member elected to the chamber. She is running against Republican mega-millionaire Eric Hovde, whose campaign has targeted her sexual orientation with negative advertising, in a race that Cook Political Report considers a toss-up.

Delaware State Sen. Sarah McBride (D) became the first openly trans state senator and the highest-ranking trans official in U.S. history with her election in 2020, having previously worked in LGBTQ advocacy and authored a memoir. She is running for Delawareโs sole seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, where she would be the first transgender Member of Congress. She is favored to win her race.

Mondaire Jones served as U.S. representative for New Yorkโs 17th Congressional District from 2021 to 2023, during which time he was often described as a rising star in the progressive wing of the Democratic Party, serving on the Progressive, Black, and Equality Caucuses. Jones was one of the first two openly gay Black members of Congress. He is running to reclaim his seat representing NY-17.

Gay Democratic U.S. attorney Will Rollins is gunning for U.S. Rep. Ken Calvertโs (R-Calif.) seat after narrowly losing to the GOP incumbent in 2022. His victory is key for Democrats to retake control of the House, with Cook Political Report characterizing their race as a toss-up and POLITICO writing it will be one of the most โclosely watched and expensive battleground slugfests in the country.โ
U.S. Rep. Angie Craig (D) is the first LGBTQ member of Congress from Minnesota and the first lesbian mother to serve in either chamber. In the House, Craig has opposed Republican-led efforts to implement anti-LGBTQ policies, especially in schools. She is facing off against Republican Joe Teirab in a race that, according to Cook Political Report, is shaping up in her favor/lean Democratic.

U.S. Rep. Eric Sorensen (D) is a former meteorologist and the first openly gay member of Congress from Illinois. While he is the first Democrat to represent portions of the stateโs 17th Congressional District in decades, particularly the towns of Rockford and Peoria, Sorensenโs race is โlikelyโ Democratic, per Cook Political Report. He is running against Republican Joe McGraw, a judge and former prosecutor.

U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids is a former mixed martial artist and attorney serving as the first Democrat to represent a Kansas congressional district in Congress in more than a decade. She is also the first LGBTQ Native American and one of the first two Native American women (along with Interior Secretary Deb Haaland) elected to the chamber. Her race is โlikelyโ Democratic according to Cook Political Report.

U.S. Rep. Chris Pappas (D) is the first openly gay man from New Hampshire to serve in Congress following his election in 2018 and reelection in 2020 and 2022. He is running against Republican Russell Prescott in a race that Cook Political Report expects will be โlikelyโ Democratic. New Hampshire Public Radio called Pappas the 1st Congressional Districtโs most successful Democrat in more than four decades.

There are four other openly LGBTQ members of Congress, all serving as co-chairs of the Equality Caucus under chair Mark Pocan, Democratic U.S. representative from Wisconsin: U.S. Reps. Robert Garcia and Mark Takano, Democrats from California, Ritchie Torres (D-N.Y.), and Becca Balint (D-Vt.). They are all expected to win their bids for reelection.
Gay Pennsylvania State Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta (D) is running for auditor general of the Keystone State, squaring off next week against incumbent Republican Tim DeFoor and three third-party candidates. Appointed by President Joe Biden to chair the Presidential Advisory Commission on Advancing Educational Equity, Excellence and Economic Opportunity for Black Americans, Kenyatta is considered a rising star in the Democratic Party.
Tampa native and mother of two teen boys, Ashley Brundage has built programs to help educate people and facilitate economic empowerment for entrepreneurs, earning a โSpirit of the Community Awardโ for her work from Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. And if she wins her race next week to serve in the Florida House of Representatives, Brundage would be the stateโs first out transgender elected official.
Aime Wichtendahl is the first transgender official elected in the state of Iowa, serving on the city council of Hiawatha, a suburb northwest of Cedar Rapids, since 2015. Her work has focused on expanding infrastructure, reducing property taxes, and helping small businesses. If elected to the Iowa House of Representatives next week, Wichtendahl would be Iowaโs first openly trans state legislator.
2026 Midterm Elections
Ken Paxton wins Texas Republican primary runoff
LGBTQ rights opponent will face Democrat James Talarico in November
Attorney General Ken Paxton won the Republican Senate primary in Texas on Tuesday, ousting incumbent U.S. Sen. John Cornyn.
Paxton won the primary against the four-term incumbent in large part due to President Donald Trumpโs endorsement. Despite Cornyn voting with Trump more than 90 percent of the time, political insiders say being supportive isnโt enough to win Trumpโs endorsement anymore โ Republican candidates need to embrace the full MAGA image, something Paxton has done.
Paxton has served as Texas attorney general since 2015 and, before that, worked as a Texas state representative. He has approached both roles with what LGBTQ activists call a โconsistently Anti-LGBTQ+ Record.โ Following the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision in Obergefell v. Hodges โ the case that made same-sex marriage the law of the land โ Paxton advised Texas county clerks they could refuse marriage licenses to same-sex couples on religious grounds.
His anti-LGBTQ crusade doesnโt stop at fighting against marriage equality.
Paxton has repeatedly demanded medical records for transgender youth in multiple states โ including Texas, Georgia, and Washington โ in hopes of making the practice illegal. His anti-trans actions go far past medical records. Paxton issued an opinion barring trans Texans from changing the sex on their driverโs licenses and birth certificates, claiming any changes made were โunlawfully altered,โ and helped the DOJ reach an agreement with a Texas’s children’s hospital for providing minors gender-affirming care, eventually leading to a 10 million dollar settlement. He also authored a non-legally binding opinion equating gender-affirming healthcare for youth to child abuse.
In addition to his long history of anti-LGBTQ policy in the Lone Star State, Paxton is no stranger to controversy.
Multiple impeachment efforts brought against him in the state House of Representatives for โabuse of officeโ โ with the state Senate later acquitting him โ allegations that he used his office to assist large campaign donors, namely Nate Paul, and a widely publicized separation from his wife, state Sen. Angela Paxton, all impacted his run for the U.S. Senate seat โ but not enough to keep him from the office.
Lynne Bowman, vice president of campaigns at the Human Rights Campaign, issued a statement following the announcement of Paxtonโs primary win.
โTexans have a clear choice this fall, and an opportunity to reject failed policies that hurt all families,โ Bowman sent to the Blade via email. โKen Paxton is so out of step that he has fought to undercut marriage equality and spent time demanding personal medical records for young people who do not even live in Texas, all while becoming the most corrupt politician in America. The more than 2 million Equality Voters in Texas will send him packing.โ
Paxton will face off against Democratic hopeful and vocal Trump critic James Talarico in the fall.
Talarico, who won the Democratic primary in April against Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett, has been a vocal supporter of LGBTQ rights, citing his ministry work as the source of his support for the community.
The race for Texasโs Senate seat will be decided on Nov. 3.
2026 Midterm Elections
Bree Framโs congressional campaign ends but her fight continues
Former highest-ranking trans military member steps back from Va. congressional race
After being forced to retire, Bree Fram couldnโt stop. Restless even after giving everything she had to make the United States Air Force โ and later the Space Force โ better in every way she could, Fram quickly turned toward a new mission: public office.
The same tenacity that fueled her rise from Air Force researcher to the highest-ranking openly transgender officer in the United States Armed Forces would eventually carry her onto the campaign trail in Virginia.
Now, after months of campaigning, countless conversations with voters, and abrupt shifts in Virginiaโs political landscape, Fram has stepped back from her congressional run.
Fram sat down with the Blade to discuss her decision to step away, what she learned on the campaign trail, and what comes next.
Earlier this month, the Virginia Supreme Court struck down a voter-approved Democratic congressional redistricting plan that likely would have created multiple additional Democratic-leaning seats in the U.S. House. The ruling dramatically altered the district Fram had built her campaign around and left little time for candidates to adjust before voting began.
โThat decision really was the end of my campaign, that there was not the chance after that ruling, particularly so late in the game, for me to meaningfully pivot back to a different district and have a conversation with voters with just five weeks to go until early voting started,โ Fram said. โI do feel that the will of the people has been ignored over a technicality regarding the date of Election Day.โ
For Fram, the ruling was not only politically devastating, but personally frustrating after months spent building relationships with voters and shaping a campaign around the districtโs needs.
โWhat was incredibly disappointing about it was that none of the facts about the case had changed from the beginning of the year until when they made the ruling,โ she said.
Still, Fram entered the race with a platform centered on affordability, government accountability, and protecting fundamental rights, pledging โto protect our rights, make opportunity affordable, and build a government that works for the people.โ
That message focused heavily on affordability โ one of the defining political issues of 2026 โ and lowering costs for Virginians across ideological, geographic, and generational divides. Fram said voters responded warmly to that vision, even if it ultimately did not lead to an office in the Rayburn House Office Building on Capitol Hill.
โThe experience on the trail was fantastic. As a first-time candidate, you never know what you’re really getting yourself into, but any chance I had to get out there and talk with people was amazing,โ Fram said. โI had the opportunity to change folks’ minds about trans people, about people from Northern Virginia.โ
One conversation with a rural Virginia voter especially stayed with her.
โI called someone who runs a rural art shopโฆ and he started talking about Democrats messaging on trans issues being such a problem,โ Fram recalled. โAnd Iโm like, do you know that you’re talking to one?โ
Throughout the campaign, Fram said she often found herself breaking down preconceived notions about both transgender people and military service. The impact of that visibility became especially clear during another interaction on the trail that still stays with her.
โI had a young person, maybe 20 years old, come up to me. I could tell there was something on their mind,โ Fram said. โI preempted them by saying โIf you were about to ask if Iโm trans, the answer is yes.โโ
The young person, she said, appeared visibly relieved.
โAs we made small talk I could tell there was something else he wanted to ask,โ Fram continued. โEventually they got it outโ that they think they might be too.โ
The moment quickly turned emotional.
โAnd then I asked, do you need a hug, they leaned in at first and then just hung on for dear life,โ she said. โSo what it means to our community to have that kind of representation out there, and to hopefully inspire others, was incredibly important.โ
For Fram, those moments became some of the most meaningful parts of the campaign.
โMy experience, I think, helped just shape what was our strategy,โ she said.
The campaign also came at a uniquely difficult moment in Framโs life. The Human Rights Campaign honored Fram alongside four other transgender military officials during a Jan. 8 event in Washington commemorating the forced retirement of transgender service members following President Donald Trumpโs Executive Order 14183, โPrioritizing Military Excellence and Readiness,โ which directed the Pentagon to prohibit transgender, nonbinary, and gender-nonconforming people from serving openly in the military.
Even while navigating the fallout from the discriminatory policy that forced her retirement, Fram launched a campaign rooted heavily in direct voter engagement and personal storytelling.
Her decades in the military, she said, fundamentally shaped how she approached campaigning and leadership.
โAs an officer, particularly the more senior you become, you get more and more training on โwhat does it mean to match your ends’ ways and means,โโ Fram said. โMy end goal was get into office โฆ and constantly reassess what it looks like.โ
Fram also said her military background informed her progressive politics more than many voters expected.
โMy military background was interesting, because I was running as the progressive candidate,โ she said. โPeople think you were in the military, how can you possibly be the progressive person?โ
Her answer, she said, often surprised people.
โWell, where did you think I learned this stuff?โ Fram said. โNo matter who we were at the same rank, no matter what our job was, we all got paid the same. We all had government-provided health care where we never needed to worry about a medical bill.โ
For Fram, and those who talked with her on the trail, military service reinforced the idea that good governance allows people to thrive.
โYou actually learn a lot about progressive policies and good governance that lets people be their best self in the military,โ she said. โWe understand that military officers’ oaths don’t expire when their time in uniform does, and I think that resonated with a lot of people, that veterans can be part of the solution in getting us out of the situation that we are in today.โ
Before launching her campaign, Fram built one of the most extensive careers of any openly transgender military officer in U.S. history, serving in senior leadership roles across the Air Force, Space Force, and intelligence community.
Most recently, she served as chief of the Requirements Integration Division at Headquarters, Space Force, after previously leading acquisition policy for the Air Forceโs space programs. Earlier in her career, she oversaw advanced weapons and cyberspace programs at the Air Force Research Laboratory, managed billions in foreign military sales and intelligence-related operations, worked on Capitol Hill as a legislative fellow, and directed major engineering and national security programs at the National Reconnaissance Office.
Fram also co-led the Department of the Air Forceโs LGBTQ+ Initiatives Team and deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. She holds a masterโs degree from the Air Force Institute of Technology and is a distinguished graduate of the Naval War College.
Despite stepping away from the race, Fram said she remains optimistic about the future.
โWhen I look at the big picture of what we did and how we ran a campaign, that is what I’m most proud of,โ she said. โIt really is the strategy that my team and I were able to craft, the messaging that we were able to share, that was all about connecting our personal story, the story of America to something that says we need a vision of what can be.โ
Fram rejected the idea that ending her congressional campaign means ending her public life altogether.
โI can absolutely guarantee that I will not get off the stage. It is just a question of what stage or stages do I jump to,โ she said.
She also encouraged LGBTQ people โ especially transgender Americans โ to stay politically engaged despite increasingly hostile rhetoric and legislation nationwide.
โJust do it,โ Fram said. โIt is incredibly important to show at every level that people can engage with the political process and make a meaningful difference.โ
Congress
Eight Democrats break with party as House advances โDonโt Say Transโ bill
Measure not expected to pass in Senate
The U.S. House of Representatives passed a federal โDonโt Say Transโ bill on Wednesday, attempting to force teachers to out transgender students nationwide.
The bill, House Resolution 2616, also called the โStopping Indoctrination and Protecting Kids Act,โ would require schools to get parental consent before allowing students to use their preferred, rather than originally assigned, gender markers, pronouns, or preferred name on any school form, and to use any sex-based accommodations, including locker rooms or bathrooms.
The bill amends Section 8526 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, legislation that allows for federal aid to help elementary and secondary education programs โ particularly those under its lowest-income Title I-A program โ to stop allocating funds to any education that teaches concepts โrelated to gender ideology.โ
This is directly related to Executive Order 14168, also known as the โDefending Women From Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Governmentโ order, one of President Donald Trumpโs first executive orders of his second term. It requires the federal government to recognize only sex assigned at birth and dismiss gender identity rather than sex.
The bill was sponsored by U.S. Rep. Tim Walberg (R-Mich.) and passed by a 217-198 margin. The vote fell mostly along party lines; however, eight Democrats voted for its passage. They were U.S. Reps. Henry Cuellar (D-Texas), Donald Davis (D-N.C.), Cleo Fields (D-La.), Laura Gillen (D-N.Y.), Vicente Gonzalez (D-Texas), Marcy Kaptur (D-Ohio), Marie Gluesenkamp Perez (D-Wash.), and Eugene Vindman (D-Va.).
Proponents of the bill argue a childโs gender identity should be directed by parents at home rather than in public schools.
Critics say this is dangerous and will force students to be outed by their teachers to parents โ some of whom may not be supportive of their gender identity โ which could lead to violence or possibly conversion therapy.
California Congressman Mark Takano, chair of the Congressional Equality Caucus, spoke on the House floor while the bill was being debated.
โRepublicans claim to be the party of small government, but they have no problem bringing the full force of the federal government down against children. The GOP thinks they can legislate transgender people out of existence with this inhumane Donโt Say Trans bill, but all theyโre doing is making life worse for a small minority of already-vulnerable children,โ Takano said. โI spent 24 years as an educator where I worked with hundreds of high school students and their parents. Most children go to their parents when they need help or are struggling โ including transgender children โ but not all parents are accepting. The forced outing provision of this bill puts teachers in an impossible situation by requiring them to out trans kids to their parents in certain situations โ even if the teacher knows the student will likely face physical abuse. Students like these are who Republicans want to put in immediate physical danger with this bill.โ
The Washington Blade talked to Tyler Heck, founder and executive director of the trans advocacy organization and Christopher Street Project PAC, following the billโs passage.
โMost queer kids go to their families when they are figuring out who they are, and then not all queer kids have that option,โ Heck told the Blade. โIf this became law, it would harm those already vulnerable kids who rely on school as a safe place and might not have a safe place at home.โ
They explained this is not about protecting parentsโ rights to know what is going on with their children, but rather the weaponization of trans identity that has become a mainstream Republican ideal pushed by the Trump-Vance administration.
โYoung people deserve the space to figure out who they are without the federal government interfering in their lives,โ they said. โIt is beyond the pale, or rather it should be beyond the pale, and has become a norm for Republicans in Congress to villainize kids, because I mean, this bill targets kids, it’s in the name of the bill, and it’s in the implications.โ
Heck continued, saying that amid the rising cost of everyday necessities โ from gas to groceries โ and while the Trump-Vance administration continues to defund programs intended to help the most vulnerable Americans while creating slush funds for political allies, this is not what Congress should be focusing on.
โAt a time when people are really struggling, and politicians need to be focused on lowering costs, they’re using queer and trans kids as political pawns,โ Heck said. โThey want to divide and conquer this country, and we need to stand up against them and unite behind values of inclusion and of trust in our teachers.โ
David Stacy, the Human Rights Campaignโs vice president of government affairs, provided a statement to the Blade.
โTrans kids are not a political agenda โ they are students who deserve safety and affirmation at school like anyone else,โ Stacy said. โDespite the many pressing issues facing our nation, House Republicans continue their bizarre obsession with trans people. HR 2616 does not protect children. It targets them. This bill is cruel, and we’ll continue to fight to ensure it never becomes law.โ
The bill will move to the U.S. Senate in the coming days and weeks, but it must first be reviewed by a Senate committee before leadership schedules it for a floor vote, where it will need 60 votes to pass.
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