最新蜜桃影像

最新蜜桃影像
Pride parage colorful car
A colorfully decorated car drives Pride Parade participants through Baltimore in June, 2024. Courtesy Myla Pirmann

Increase in calls to hotlines for the LGBTQ+ community in the wake of Trump鈥檚 inauguration, actions

Advocates worry that ongoing challenges could further curtail LGBTQ+ rights.

By Norah Aycock

LGBTQ+ hotlines haven鈥檛 stopped ringing since November, advocates say, from callers concerned about the legality of same-sex marriages and access to gender-affirming care.

Worries for transgender rights and other issues have been a top concern for callers, according to Aaron Almanza, executive director of the LGBT National Help Center. On Donald Trump鈥檚 inauguration day, Jan. 20, and for at least a week after, call volume to the National LGBT Hotline was 鈥渕ore than double a normal day,鈥 Almanza said.

Lance Preston, executive director of Rainbow Youth Project, an Indiana-based nonprofit with a national LGBTQ+ crisis hotline, said the hotline received roughly 8,000 calls in November and December.

鈥淎s of January 30th, we have answered 9,102 calls already this month 鈥攁 stark contrast to our monthly average of 3,765 calls prior to November,鈥 Preston said.

He added that the organization鈥檚 referral rate for mental health services from November to January 鈥渉as escalated from 17% to 38%, indicating a dire need for intervention.鈥

The trend mirrors the jump in calls for several weeks after Trump was elected, when crisis hotlines were flooded with LGBTQ+ people seeking support, according to Almanza. The Trevor Project, an LGBTQ+ suicide prevention organization, also released a statement reporting a call volume spike of almost 700% on Nov. 6.

Transgender people are most vulnerable

LGBTQ+ Americans say top concerns include the potential of a nationwide halt on gender-affirming care for adolescents and the possible overturning of Obergefell v. Hodges. This 2015 case legalized same-sex marriage nationally, according to reporting in . 

Pride parade in Baltimore
Pride parade participants walking through Baltimore on June 10, 2024. Courtesy Myla Pirmann

Transgender individuals appear to be the most vulnerable, targeted group within the LGBTQ+ community. On Jan. 28, Trump announced an executive order that the government would not support efforts at gender-affirming care for people under 19.

On Feb. 5, Trump signed an executive order aimed at banning transgender athletes from participating in women鈥檚 sports.

Same-sex couples wed pre-inauguration 

According to KCCI 8, a local chaplain helped dozens of couples marry in Des Moines, Iowa. In Cincinnati, a public library organized an event where nine same-sex couples got married, according to The Cincinnati Enquirer.

鈥淲e often only need to look at the past to predict the future. Hope for the best, but plan for the worst,鈥 said Kara Taylor Curran, 36, who is lesbian, soon after the election. Taylor Curran is a third-year University of Houston Law Center law student.

Same-sex couples who wed point to Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas鈥 concurring opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which stated that the Supreme Court 鈥渟hould reconsider鈥 its ruling in Obergefell.

Taylor Curran married her wife on Nov. 10 because she feared Obergefell could be overturned. In December, she said it would likely be at least two years before Obergefell could be overturned because a legal challenge must first be brought.

The Idaho House passed a on Jan. 27 calling for the Supreme Court to reconsider Obergefell. Rep. Heather Scott introduced the petition, 鈥嬧嬧淢emorial On Who Defines Marriage,鈥 as Idaho鈥檚 session鈥檚 first piece of action. It is not the same as a law. It was on its

During her December interview, Taylor Curran said Obergefell will likely be overturned over the next two to four years.

鈥淒o I think it’s probable? No. Do I think it鈥檚 possibility is high enough to take action now to protect my family? Yes.鈥

Others think the timetable is longer.

Rutgers Law School Professor Katie Eyer said, 鈥淲hile this may be a genuine risk at some point in the future, I don鈥檛 think it is likely to transpire in the next four years.鈥

Eyer specializes in constitutional law and civil rights, among other areas, and with the Constitutional Accountability Center, wrote a 鈥渇riend of the court鈥 brief arguing for the position that the Supreme Court adopted in Bostock v. Clayton County, protecting gay and transgender individuals from workplace discrimination.

Eyer based her prediction on two main factors.

First, that it would be 鈥渁n administrative nightmare鈥 to overturn Obergefell, which she thinks will sway at least some conservative justices. Second, there isn鈥檛 an especially active movement to overturn Obergefell, 鈥渨hich almost always is a historical precursor to a major legal decision like this.鈥

Kazze Kaiser, 20, a journalism major at American University who identifies as nonbinary and pansexual, described what same-sex marriage means to them.

鈥淎s somebody who doesn鈥檛 really identify with a gender, it kind of certifies it,鈥 by not forcing them into the binary of a heterosexual marriage, said Kaiser.

Latest focus: gender-affirming care

Almanza said that concerns of National LGBT Hotline callers in 2016, at the start of Trump鈥檚 first presidency, centered around same-sex marriage.

鈥淲e鈥檝e seen those questions this time around too, but not nearly as much as gender-affirming care and other transgender rights,鈥 he said in a recent interview.

U.S. Supreme Court
U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, DC

Experts say the likelihood of a national ban being implemented hinges on the Supreme Court鈥檚 decision in U.S. v. Skrmetti, a case considering the validity of a Tennessee law that bans gender-affirming care for trans youth.

On Dec. 4, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments for Skrmetti, and the conservative majority seems ready to uphold the ban. However, it remains unclear whether the Court will hold that heightened judicial scrutiny is required under the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Supreme Court is expected to rule by June, before the end of the current term.

Trump administration鈥檚 quick impact

In the meantime, announced on Jan. 30 that they had paused gender-affirming care for young people to evaluate Trump鈥檚 executive order, according to the Associated Press.

On Feb. 5, the attorneys general of 15 states released a reaffirming their commitment to protecting access to gender-affirming care.

The joint statement reads, “Gender-affirming care is essential, life-saving medical treatment that supports individuals in living as their authentic selves.鈥

This coalition of states includes California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Nevada, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Wisconsin.

Eyer believes the new targeting of minors receiving gender-affirming care has broader implications.

鈥淢y best guess is that this is an attempt to push the envelope toward a ban on care for adults,鈥 said Eyer. 鈥淭hat has always been the goal of many of the more extreme actors in the conservative legal movement.鈥

Preston saw the executive order in more expansive terms.

鈥淸It] stands in stark contradiction to the administration’s professed emphasis on parental rights,鈥 he said. He also urged people to recognize that the order is motivated by 鈥渂igotry and the desire to impose Christian Nationalism on Americans.鈥

Actions on Day 1

On Trump鈥檚 first day in office on Jan. 28, he signed another anti-trans claiming, 鈥淚t is the policy of the United States to recognize two sexes, male and female.鈥 This order effectively paused gender marker update applications and requests for the 鈥淴鈥 gender marker on passports for nonbinary individuals.

Almanza said that during Trump鈥檚 first presidency, there was a sense of uncertainty about where attacks on the community would be. Still, now it鈥檚 clear that trans individuals are in the current administration鈥檚 crosshairs, so we are seeing a much larger number of calls, chats, and emails concerning the executive orders.

Brittany Dyer, 34, of Missouri, is the community organizer for the Missouri Democratic LGBTQ Caucus and the Springfield captain for the Missouri Equity Education Partnership, a non-profit organization focused on inclusion and equity for all people.

鈥淲hat we are hearing from youth right now is that they are terrified and struggling to see a future with them in it. At that age, it鈥檚 so difficult to see long-term,鈥 said Dyer.

Christopher Sederburg, a trans man and leader of the Transcend Advocacy Group for Rainbow Youth Project, said feelings of fear and anxiety caused by anti-trans discrimination 鈥渁re daunting for adults, (but) they can be devastating for teenagers.鈥

Eyer, Kaiser, Dyer and Taylor Curran expressed concern for trans individuals because of the proven link between restrictions on gender-affirming care and the suicidality of trans and nonbinary youth, as detailed in a .

鈥淭ransgender individuals and youth seem to be the first target, and also the most vulnerable,鈥 said Dyer.

Kaiser expressed concern for queer people of color, saying they 鈥渁re now going to have to not only just fear for who they are on the outside 鈥 but also who they are on the inside, and that is just criminalizing an entire person.鈥

Wash staff

A group of hard-working student journalists from American University covering DMV neighborhoods.

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