By John Riley on November 12, 2024 @JRileyMW
Two sitting Democratic congressmen came out publicly against allowing transgender females to compete on women’s sports teams.
This continues an alarming trend of people on the political Left blaming LGBTQ visibility as one of the reasons for Republican victories in this year’s elections.
Following Donald Trump’s win in the presidential race and the start of post-election analyses to determine why most voters shifted heavily away from the Democratic party, U.S. Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-N.Y.) told The New York Times that the party “have to stop pandering to the far left.”
Unsurprisingly, Suozzi, who represents a socially conservative swath of Long Island once represented by former Republican U.S. Rep. George Santos, fixated on transgender issues as the chief cause of voters’ widespread rejection of Democrats.
Suozzi appeared to dismiss the role that other factors — including a sluggish economy, inflation, higher prices of consumer goods, or concerns about unchecked immigration and perceptions of rising crime — played in voters’ rightward shift, despite those issues being much more omnipresent in people’s daily lives than transgender rights — especially since a majority of Americans have told pollsters they have never met a transgender person.
“I don’t want to discriminate against anybody, but I don’t think biological boys should be playing in girls’ sports,” Suozzi said. “Democrats aren’t saying that, and they should be.”
Meanwhile, U.S. Rep. Seth Moulton (D-Mass.) lambasted members of his party for kowtowing to political correctness.
“Democrats spend way too much time trying not to offend anyone rather than being brutally honest about the challenges many Americans face,” Moulton told the Times. “I have two little girls, I don’t want them getting run over on a playing field by a male or formerly male athlete, but as a Democrat I’m supposed to be afraid to say that.”
Moulton previously co-sponsored proposed legislation for a “Transgender Bill of Rights” that would have allowed trans athletes to compete on sports teams that align with their gender identity.
He also voted against a bill to change Title IX — the law governing sex-based discrimination in educational settings and sports — to recognize the term “sex” as “based solely on a person’s reproductive biology and genetics at birth,” which was approved by House Republicans on a party-line vote.
A spokesperson for Moulton’s office said his comments to the Times were meant to illustrate Democrats’ over-reliance on identity politics, but refused to answer questions about whether Moulton has changed his previous positions on transgender participation in sports or transgender issues in general.
Suozzi and Moulton’s comments come after an election in which Republicans, including President-elect Donald Trump, spent at least $215 million on attack ads using transgender athletes in sports and support for gender-affirming care for transgender people as wedge issues.
Shocking no one, many allegedly “liberal” pundits piled on, with Bari Weiss, founder and editor of The Free Press — who has promoted anti-transgender narratives in the past — accusing Democrats of running on “niche issues like gender fluidity and ‘defund the police.'”
Weiss’s claim ignores the fact that Kamala Harris and other Democrats largely shied away from addressing transgender issues — mentioning transgender rights in only one speech before the LGBTQ rights group the Human Rights Campaign — and that many Democrats, from Harris down to local-level politicians attempted to cast themselves as tough on crime and in favor of stricter border policies.
However, what Weiss may be referring to is that the Democratic “brand” is viewed by most voters as inseparable from not only transgender rights but identity politics and political correctness.
Similarly, people who support transgender rights were subjected to a hectoring lecture from MSNBC Morning Joe hosts Joe Scarborough and Mike Brzezinski about how transgender issues cost Democrats the election, as reported by The Advocate.
Scarborough said that the anti-transgender ads run by Republicans this election cycle, particularly Trump’s attack against Harris for supporting gender-affirming care for trans prisoners, “had a bigger impact than any ad than ran.”
He implied that the ads resonated with many groups that shifted heavily towards Trump, including rural voters, younger males, and Hispanic and Black voters. Scarborough also opined that the issue alienated even Democratic-leaning voters who are opposed to trans visibility but fear being “canceled” for saying something “politically incorrect.”
Brzezinski also read aloud an op-ed from New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd lecturing Democrats for caving to “wokism” and “identity politics,” citing transgender athletes in sport as one of the drivers of this anti-Democratic sentiment.
When confronted with the rhetoric blaming Democratic losses on the party’s perceived stances on transgender-related issues, Brandon Wolf, press secretary of the Human Rights Campaign, told The Hill in a statement, “We will spend years analyzing the results of this election and building a winning coalition for the cycles to come, but we know this: blaming those who have long been in the MAGA crosshairs won’t help us build the path forward.”
Wolf also cited exit polling showing that only 4% of voters considered opposition to transgender athletes and gender-affirming care as the most important issue in the election.
At the same time, while trans issues may not have been a top issue for most voters, Republican attacks using transgender issue as a “stand-in” or “shorthand” for Democrats’ perceived leftward shift on cultural issues — such as diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) efforts, identity politics, political correctness, and language-policing — may have found fertile ground in the minds of some voters.
According to a post-election survey by the Democratic firm Blueprint, the top three reasons why voters chose not to vote for Kamala Harris were, in order, that “inflation was too high under the Biden-Harris Administration,” that “too many immigrants illegally crossed the border under the Biden-Harris Administration,” and that “Kamala Harris is focused more on cultural issues like transgender issues rather than helping the middle class,” with 67% of respondents picking the latter as one of their top reasons for voting against the Democratic presidential nominee.
Transgender advocates are pushing against the scapegoating rhetoric.
“Please do not blame trans issues or trans people for why we lost,” Sam Alleman, the Harris campaign’s LGBTQ engagement director, wrote on X. “Trans folks have been and are going to be a primary target of Project 2025 and need us to have their backs now more than ever.”
Similarly, transgender journalist Erin Reed noted on her “Erin in the Morning” Substack that the fight for transgender equality — and ultimately, societal acceptance — was always going to be a longer, more drawn-out, generational fight.
She urged her followers to continue to push for change, and urged them to take care of themselves, even advising trans people to stockpile medication and update their identity documents to protect themselves against future legislation furthering restricting transgender rights.
“I don’t know how long this setback will last,” Reed wrote, “and I’m almost certain it won’t be our last.”
By John Riley on November 4, 2024 @JRileyMW
READ THIS STORY IN THE MAGAZINE
"I'm not in elected office right now, but I'm the happiest I have ever been."
Brian Sims is reflecting on his life path outside of politics following an unsuccessful bid for lieutenant governor, including his engagement to fiancé Alex Drakos and his current role as CEO of the pro-LGBTQ political action committee Agenda PAC.
"Being in office was not a pathway to happiness at all," the former Pennsylvania State Representative says during an hour-long interview with Metro Weekly. "It was a very hard job. It was a very dangerous job. I was in a bulletproof vest for a lot of years due to that job.
By John Riley on November 5, 2024 @JRileyMW
Delaware State Sen. Sarah McBride (D-Wilmington) has made history by becoming the first out transgender person elected to Congress.
McBride, best known for her former role as spokesperson for the Human Rights Campaign, was declared the projected winner by NBC News with 70% of the vote reporting. The Associated Press has not yet called the race, but McBride was leading James Whalen III, a former police officer, by a margin of 58% to 42% for Delaware's sole congressional seat.
A former White House intern during the Obama administration, employee of the Center of American Progress, and board member of Equality Delaware, McBride has been credited as one of several influential activists who successfully lobbied for the passage of Delaware's comprehensive nondiscrimination law protecting the rights of LGBTQ individuals.
By John Riley on November 11, 2024 @JRileyMW
While he ran up greater margins of victory or increased his share of almost every demographic group, President-elect Donald Trump actually bled support among members of the LGBTQ community in this year's election.
According to an NBC News exit poll, 86% of lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender voters cast their ballots for Democratic nominee Kamala Harris, a 22-point increase over 2020, when Biden won 64% of the LGBTQ vote.
Only 12% of LGBTQ voters cast ballots for Trump, a 15-point decline from four years ago, reports The Hill. The GOP presidential ticket captured fewer than 20% of LGBTQ male voters and just 8% of LGBTQ female voters.
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