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[1]Skip to content[2]Skip to site index
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[4]Today’s Paper
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[5]Opinion|Sarah McBride on Why the Left Lost on Trans Rights
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https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/17/opinion/
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ezra-klein-podcast-sarah-mcbride.html
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Opinion
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The Ezra Klein Show
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Sarah McBride on Why the Left Lost on Trans Rights
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June 17, 2025
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[19]Ezra Klein
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By [20]Ezra Klein
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Video
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transcript
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Back
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0:00/1:33:30
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-0:00
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transcript
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How to Beat Back Trump on Trans Rights — and Much Else
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Representative Sarah McBride reckons with the trans rights movement’s
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shortcomings, and how to win hearts and minds through a politics of grace.
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Donald Trump, in his inauguration speech, was perfectly clear about what he
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intended to do. [CLIP] “As of today, it will henceforth be the official
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policy of the United States government that there are only two genders:
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male and female.“ Starting the day of that speech, Trump launched an all
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out effort to roll back trans rights using every power of the federal
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government had, and some that it may not have. [CLIP] President Trump has
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signed an executive order which declares the US government will no longer
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recognize the concept of gender identity. [CLIP] President Trump, directing
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the Secretary of Education to create a plan to cut funding for schools that
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teach what he calls gender ideology. [CLIP] This afternoon, President Trump
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makes a move to ban transgender athletes from competing in women’s sports.
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[CLIP] Ban on gender-affirming care for transgender kids. [CLIP] A ban on
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gender-affirming care for transgender inmates in federal prisons. [CLIP] A
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ban on transgender troops serving in the military. [CLIP] These executive
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orders, many of them, have not actually gone into effect yet. But when I
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look across the country, we’re already hearing the stories of impact.
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[CLIP] It’s a complete dehumanization of transgender people. It’s about
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privacy and dignity. For me to be able to change my passport to male,
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[CLIP] It’s going to come along with having to out myself to border patrol
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agents. [CLIP] We are begging to be allowed to continue our service and
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you’re just going to wash us away. A lot of the things Trump is doing in
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this term have put him on the wrong side of public opinion, but not this.
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In a recent poll where Trump’s approval rating was around 40 percent, 52
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percent of Americans approved of how he’s handling trans issues. And if you
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look more deeply into polling on trans rights, the public has swung right
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on virtually every policy you can poll. Banning trans medical care for
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minors? That’s a majority issue now. A few years ago, it wasn’t. Trump
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didn’t just win the election. He — and the movement and ideology behind him
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— have been winning the argument. Sarah McBride is a freshman Congresswoman
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from Delaware, where she was formerly a state senator. She is the first
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openly trans member of Congress, and her view is that the trans rights
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movement and the left more broadly, has to grapple with why their strategy
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failed. How they lost not only power, but hearts and minds. [CLIP] We have
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to grapple with the reality of where people are beyond this room or this
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city or my state. Meeting people where they are is not selling out. It’s
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what this work is. I was struck, talking to McBride how much, she was
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offering a theory that goes far beyond trans rights. What she’s offering is
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a counter to the dominant political style that emerged as algorithmic
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social media collided with politics, a style that is more about policing
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and pushing those who agree with you than it is about persuading those who
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don’t. Sarah McBride, welcome to the show. Thanks for having me. So I want
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to begin with some polling. Pew asked the same set of questions in 2022 and
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2025. And what it found was this collapse in, I would call it persuasion.
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So they polled the popularity of protecting trans people from
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discrimination in jobs, housing, public spaces that had lost 8 points in
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those three years requiring health insurance companies to cover gender
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transition, lost 5 points requiring trans people to use bathrooms that
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match their biological sex gained 8 points. When you hear those results,
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what to you happened there. By every objective metric, support for trans
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rights is worse now than it was six or seven years ago. And that’s not
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isolated to just trans issues. I think if you look across issues of gender
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right now, you have seen a regression. Marriage equality support is
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actually lower now than it was a couple of years ago in a recent poll. We
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also see a regression on around support for whether women should have the
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same opportunities as men compared to 5, 10, 15 years ago. And so there’s a
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larger regression from a gender perspective that I think is impacting this
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regression on trans rights. But I think it has been more acute, more
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significant in the trans rights space. I think just candidly, I think we
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lost the art of persuasion. We lost the art of change making over the last
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couple of years. We’re not in this position because of trans people. There
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was a very clear, well coordinated, well-funded effort to demonize trans
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people, to stake out positions on fertile ground for anti-trans politics
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and to have those be the battlegrounds rather than some of the areas where
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there’s more public support. We’re not in this position because of the
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movement or the community, but clearly what we’ve been doing over the last
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several years has not been working to stave it off or continue the progress
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that we were making 8, 9, 10 years ago. And I think a lot of it can be
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traced to a false sense of security that I think the LGBTQ movement and the
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progressive movement writ large began to feel in the post-marriage world. I
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think there was a sense of cultural momentum that was this unending
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cresting wave. I think there is this sense of a cultural victory that led
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us into a false sense of security, and I think in many ways shut down,
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needed conversations. And I think we the support that we saw for trans
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rights in 2016, 2017. It was a mirage of support in some ways, because I
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think there was in the post-marriage world, there was a transfer of support
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from the LGB to the tea. I think for two reasons. One, I think people said,
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well, the tea is part of the acronym, so I support gay people, so I’ll
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support trans people. It’s all the same movement. But two, I think in those
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early days after marriage, a lot of people regretted having been wrong on
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marriage in the 90s and in the 2000. And they went I didn’t understand what
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it meant to be gay, and therefore I didn’t support marriage. And I regret
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not supporting something because I didn’t understand it. So I’m going to
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without understanding, support trans rights because I don’t want to make
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that same mistake again. And I think that resulted in a lot of us, a lot of
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our movement stopping the conversation and ceasing doing the hard work of
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opening hearts and changing minds and telling stories that over 20 years
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had shifted and deepened understanding on gay identities that allowed for
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marriage equality to be built on solid ground. And I think that allowed for
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the misinformation, the disinformation, that well-coordinated, well-funded
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campaign to really take advantage of that lack of understanding and the
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support on trans rights was a house built on sand. I want to connect to
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things you said there, because I hadn’t thought about this exactly before.
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So you made this point that there’s been a generalized gender regression,
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which is true. And you also made this point that people had this metaphor
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in their minds that I was wrong about gay marriage. I didn’t understand
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that experience. So maybe I’m wrong here, too. But that one thing maybe
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that’s different here is there’s a set of narrow policies here
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non-discrimination and then a broader cultural effort. Everybody should put
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their pronouns in their bio or say them before they begin speaking out at a
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meeting. It was more about destabilizing the gender binary. And there
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people had a much stronger view. I do know what it means. I’ve been a man
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all my life. I’ve been a woman all my life. How dare you tell me how I have
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to talk about myself or refer to myself. And that made the metaphor break.
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Because if the gay marriage fight was about what other people do, there was
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a dimension of this. It was about what you do and how you should see
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yourself or your kids or your society. I think that that’s an accurate
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reflection of the overplaying of the hand in some ways that as a coalition,
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went to trans 201, trans 301 when people were still at very much trans 101
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stage one and then two, I think there was. There were requests that people
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perceived as cultural aggression, which then allowed the right to say we’re
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punishing trans people because of their actions rather than we’re going
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after innocent bystanders. And I think some of cultural mores and norms
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that started to develop around inclusion of trans people were probably
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premature for a lot of people. We became absolutists, not just on trans
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rights. I think across the progressive movement. We became absolutist and
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we forgot that in a democracy we have to one grapple with where the public
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authentically is and actually engage with it. And I think we and part of
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this is fostered by social media. We decided that we now have to say and
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fight for and push for every single perfect policy and cultural norm right
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now, regardless of whether the public is ready. And I think it
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misunderstands the role that politicians frankly, social movements have in
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maintaining proximity to public opinion of walking people to a place. We
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should be ahead of public opinion, but we have to be within arm’s reach. If
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we get too far out ahead, we lose our grip on public opinion. And we can no
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longer bring it with us. And I think a lot of the conversations around
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sports, and also some of the cultural changes that we saw in expected
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workplace behavior, et cetera, was the byproduct of maybe just getting too
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far out ahead and not actually engaging in the art of social change. Making
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the position for more maximalist demands is one that you need to be in a
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hurry. Trans people are dying now, suffering now and that there isn’t time
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for decades of political organizing here. And also that maybe it works. Or
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maybe there’s a reason to believe it works. So you’ve been in more of those
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spaces in May. How would you describe how this more maximalist approach in
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culture evolved and why. Well, first off, I think you’re right. It is
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understandable. I mean, this is a scary moment. I’m scared as a trans
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person. I am scared and I recognize that when the house is on fire, when
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there are attacks that are dangerous, very dangerous, that it can feel like
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we need to scream and we need to sound the alarm, and we need everyone to
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be doing exactly that. I get that instinct, I understand it, I understand
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that people would say, if you give a little bit here, they’ll take a mile.
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We’re not negotiating with the other side, though, in this moment we have
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to negotiate with public opinion. And, and and we shouldn’t treat the
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public like they’re Republican politicians. And when you recognize that
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distinction, I think it allows for a pragmatic approach that has the best,
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in my mind, the best possible chance of shifting public opinion as quickly
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as possible. It would be one thing if screaming about how dangerous this is
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right now had the effect of stopping these attacks. But it won’t. You call
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it a abandonment of persuasion became true across a variety of issues for
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progressives, also for people on the right. And sometimes I wonder how much
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that reflected the movement of politics to these very unusually designed
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platforms of speech, where what you do really is not talk to people you
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disagree with, it’s talk about people you disagree with, two people you
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agree with, and then see whether or not they agree with what you said. And
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there’s a way in which I think that breeds very different habits in the
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people who do it. I think that that’s absolutely right. I mean, again,
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we’re not in this place because of our community or our movement, but
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clearly we aren’t in this place because we weren’t shaming people enough,
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because we weren’t canceling people enough, because we weren’t yelling at
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people enough, because we weren’t denouncing anti-trans positions enough. I
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think the dynamic with social media is that the most outrageous, the most
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extreme, the most condemnatory content is what gets amplified the most.
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It’s what gets liked and retweeted the most, and people mistake getting
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likes and retweets as a sign of effectiveness. And those are two
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fundamentally different things. And I think that whether it’s subconscious
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or even conscious, rewarding of unproductive conversations has completely
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undermined the capacity for us as individuals or politically, for us to
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have conversations that persuade that open people’s hearts and minds that
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meet them where they are. And I think the other dynamic that we have with
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social media is that there’s two kinds of people on social media. The vast
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majority of people are doom scrollers. They just go on and they scroll
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their social media 20 percent maybe are doom posters 10 percent on the far
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right, 10 percent on the far left, the people who are so, so strident and
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angry that they’re compelled to post and that content gets elevated. But
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what that has resulted in for the 80 percent who are just doom scrollers is
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this false perception of reality. Take a person. Let’s say they’re center
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left, and it gives them a false perception of everyone on the left believes
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this, and it pulls them that way, and then it gives them a false perception
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that everyone on the right believes the most extreme version of the right.
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And it creates this false binary extreme perception of availability bias.
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Because all of the content we’re seeing is reflective of just the 20
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percent and it’s warped our perception of reality. It’s warped our
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perception of who people are and where the public is. One of the best
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things about being an elected official is that I have to break out of that
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social media echo chamber, that social media extreme world and interact
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with everyday people. And you see yeah, there are real disagreements, but
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that 80 percent of the doom scrollers or the people who aren’t even on
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social media are actually in a place where we can have a conversation with
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them. When I ask this question, I don’t just mean on trans issues, but you
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represent Delaware, which is a blue state, not Massachusetts blue, but
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blue. If you took your sense of what Democrats want or what the country
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wants from your experiences on social media versus your sense from
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traveling around your state, how would they differ. I think they would
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differ in two ways. One, they would differ in the issues that we would
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focus on. What you hear on social media is a preoccupation with the most
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inflamed culture war issues that you almost never hear when you’re out
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talking to voters in any part of the state. What you hear is a
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understandable catastrophizing around democracy, which you don’t hear
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nearly as much when you’re out talking to voters. What you hear when you’re
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talking to voters is you hear about the cost of living. You hear about the
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bread and butter issues that are keeping people up at night, people who
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aren’t on social media or aren’t posting on social media. And so you hear a
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difference in priorities, but then you also hear a difference in approach.
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People are hungry for an approach that doesn’t treat our fellow citizens as
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enemies, but rather treats our fellow citizens as neighbors, even if we
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disagree with them. An approach that’s just an approach that’s filled with
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grace. And I think on social media, we have come to this conclusion,
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rightfully so, that people’s grace has been abused in our society that the
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grace of marginalized people, the patience of marginalized people, has been
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abused. And that is true. But on social media, the course correction to
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that has been to eliminate all grace from our politics. It’s how dare you
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have conversations with people who disagree with you. How dare you be
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willing to work with people who disagree with you. How dare you compromise.
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How dare you seek to find common ground with Republicans. And I think when
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you go out into the real world, Democrats, independents and Republicans,
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there is a hunger for some level of grace for us to just not be so angry at
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one another and miserable. They want to see and know that we actually do
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have more in common, and therefore, it gives you hope that persuasion is
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not only necessary, but can actually still be effective. What does grace in
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politics mean to you, and when have you either seen it or experienced it. I
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think Grace in politics means. One creating room for disagreement. Assuming
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assuming good intentions. Assuming that the people who are on the other
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side of an issue from you aren’t automatically hateful, horrible people. I
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think it means creating some space for disagreement within your own
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coalition. I think it’s a kindness that just feels so missing from our body
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politic and our national dialogue. And look, I saw it in the Delaware State
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Senate on both sides of the aisle, whether it’s in Republicans in Delaware
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joining on to be co-sponsors on an LGBTQ panic defense bill that I was the
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prime sponsor of whether it was the discourse being much kinder and more
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civil on a whole host of even culture war issues. I saw that grace have the
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effect of lowering the temperature, removing some of the incentives to go
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after vulnerable people in this country, in our state. I saw it with my
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colleagues on the Republican side of the aisle who didn’t vote for bills
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that were deeply personal to me, and yet we still found ways to work
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together. We still found ways to develop friendships. And look, I know that
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place is more of a burden on me than it does on them. I know that when
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you’re asking a marginalized person to extend grace in a conversation,
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you’re asking much more of that marginalized person. But change making
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isn’t always easy, and it’s not always fair. And why would we expect that
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the extra burdens and barriers of marginalization would ceasefire at the
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point of overcoming the marginalization of creating the change necessary to
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eliminate prejudice and create equal opportunity in our society. No, that’s
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where the barriers are going to be greatest. That’s where the burdens are
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going to be greatest. It reminds me of a line that I feel. I hear it less
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now, but I used to see it a lot, which is it’s not my job to educate you.
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And I always thought about that line because on one level I understood it.
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I mean, it’s probably not your job to educate anyone. And then if you’re in
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politics, if what you’re trying to do is political change. I always found
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that line to be almost anti-political. Yeah right that if what you want to
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do is change a law, change a society, change a heart, and you’re the one
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who wants to do it. Well, then whose job is it. And who are you expecting
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to do it. It’s an understandable frustration, but it’s the only way
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forward. And look, I don’t believe that every person from an
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underrepresented or unrepresented community needs to always bear the brunt
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and burden of public education. I don’t believe that every LGBTQ person has
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to be out and sharing their story, and doing all of that hard work. But for
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the folks who are willing to do it, we need to let them. And one of the
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problems we’ve had is that we’ve gone from it’s not my job as an individual
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person who’s just trying to make it through the day to educate everyone to
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no one from that community should educate. And frankly, we should just stop
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having this conversation, because the fact that we are having this
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conversation at all is hurtful and oppressive, and maybe it is hurtful, but
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you can’t foster social change if you don’t have a conversation. You can’t
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change people if you exclude them. And I will just say you can’t have
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absolutism on the left or the right without authoritarianism, right. The
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fact that we have real disagreements, the fact that we have difficult
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conversations, the fact, the fact that we have painful conversations is not
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a bug of democracy. It’s a feature of democracy. And Yes, that is hard and
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difficult. But again, how can we expect that the process of overcoming
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marginalization is going to be fair. And I think the discourse has taken
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this understandable critique of society and the way we operate and the
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burdens we place on marginalized people. And we’ve somehow said, well, the
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one place that we have control over whether we allow for that
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marginalization is in the strategies we use to overcome it. We’re not going
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to engage in that because it’s self oppression. And I think that is such a
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self-defeating and counterproductive approach. I’ve been thinking in the
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past couple of months, because we are in the most illiberal era of my
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lifetime in American politics. And I mean liberalism in the sense of
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supporting or not supporting universal health care, but in terms of due
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process, in terms of tolerance, in terms of the basic practice of politics
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and living amidst each other. And it’s also made me think about the need to
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clearly define what the practice of liberalism itself is. What do you think
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it is. I think it is the recognition that in a free society, we are going
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to live and think differently. I think it is the allowance of that
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disagreement in the public square, and the tussle of that disagreement in
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the public square and that is uncomfortable. That is not easy. And Yes,
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there are going to be people in that conversation for whom it’s going to be
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more difficult and more uncomfortable. But in the internet world, you can’t
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suppress diversity of thought. It will always bubble up. But it will bubble
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up if suppressed with an extra bitterness and an extremism fostered in that
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echo chamber that it’s been suppressed to. It’ll inevitably bubble up like
|
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a volcano. And I think that’s what we’re seeing right now. I will say, I
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think while the left made this mistake of fostering an illiberalism based
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on a false sense of cultural victory, I think now the right is making the
|
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exact same mistake. I think they’re overplaying their hand. I think they’re
|
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interpreting the 2024 election to be a cultural mandate that is much
|
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greater than what it actually is. And I think that if they continue to do
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that, there will be a backlash to the illiberalism, the cultural
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illiberalism, not just the legal illiberalism, the cultural illiberal
|
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liberalism of the right, in the same way that there’s been a backlash to
|
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the cultural liberalism of the left, I couldn’t I think, agree with that
|
||
more. We’re going to get to that. I want to talk for a minute about the
|
||
2024 election in the aftermath. So there’s been a lot of rethinking and
|
||
self-recrimination among Democrats. One of the comments that got a lot of
|
||
attention came right after the election when Seth Moulton, who’s your
|
||
colleague, Democratic Congressman from Massachusetts, said, quote,
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||
Democrats spend way too much time trying not to offend anyone, rather than
|
||
being brutally honest about the challenges many Americans face. I have two
|
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little girls. I don’t want them getting run over on a playing field by a
|
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male or formerly male athlete. But as a Democrat, I’m supposed to be afraid
|
||
to say that. What did you think when you heard that. One, that it wasn’t
|
||
the language that I would use. But I think it came from a larger belief
|
||
that the Democratic Party needed to start to have an open conversation
|
||
about our illiberalism, that we needed to recognize that we were talking to
|
||
ourselves. We were fighting fights that felt viscerally comforting to our
|
||
own base, or fighting fights in a way that felt viscerally comforting to
|
||
our own base, rather than maintaining proximity to the public and being
|
||
normal people. I think the sports conversation is a good one because I
|
||
think there is. There’s a big difference between banning trans young people
|
||
from extracurricular programs, consistent with their gender identity, and
|
||
recognizing that there’s room for nuance in this conversation. And I think
|
||
the notion that we created this all on or all off mentality, that you had
|
||
to be perfect on trans rights across the board, use exactly the right
|
||
language. And unless you do that, you’re a bigot. You’re an enemy. And when
|
||
you create a binary all on or all off option for people, you’re going to
|
||
have a lot of imperfect allies who are going to inevitably choose the all
|
||
off option. And what ends up happening is the left excommunicates will
|
||
excommunicate someone who not only Seth voted against the ban on trans
|
||
athletes, but we would excommunicate someone who uses imperfect language.
|
||
Yes look again. Not language I would use, but we would excommunicate
|
||
someone who’s saying that there’s nuance in this conversation and uses
|
||
language that we don’t approve of yet still votes. The quote, the right way
|
||
is exactly what’s wrong with our approach. And look, Seth’s not going
|
||
anywhere. But for a lot of everyday folks, if they think how Seth thinks or
|
||
if they think that there’s room for nuance in this conversation and we tell
|
||
them you’re a bigot, you’re not welcomed here, you’re not part of our
|
||
coalition, we will not consider you an ally. The right’s done a very good
|
||
job of saying, listen, you have violated the illiberalism of the left. You
|
||
have been cast aside for your common sense. Welcome into our club. And then
|
||
human nature starts to be. Once you then get welcomed into that club, human
|
||
nature is well, I was with the Democratic Party on 90 percent of things,
|
||
maybe against them on 10 percent of things, or in the middle on 10 percent
|
||
once you get welcomed into that other club, human psychology, you start to
|
||
adopt those positions. And instead of being with us on 90 percent of things
|
||
and against us on 10 percent of things, that person now. Welcomed into the
|
||
far right club starts to be against us on 90 percent of things and with us
|
||
on only 10 percent of things. And I think that dynamic is part of the
|
||
regression that we have seen. And not only the regression we’ve seen, but
|
||
the hardening of the opposition that we’ve seen on trans issues. We have
|
||
been an exclusionary tent that is shedding in perfect allies, which is
|
||
great. We’re going to have a really, really miserable, self-righteous,
|
||
morally pure club in the gulag we’ve all been sent off to. I think this
|
||
goes to your point in a way. So after he made those comments the times
|
||
reported that a local party official and an ally had compared him to a Nazi
|
||
collaborator. There were protests outside his office. I was always struck
|
||
by which part of his comments got all that attention. It was the part I
|
||
just read to you. But he also said this having reasonable restrictions for
|
||
safety and competitive fairness in sports seems like, well, it’s very
|
||
empirically a majority opinion. He’s right on that. But should we take
|
||
civil rights away from trans people so they can just get fired for being
|
||
who they are. No he was expressing opposition to what was about to be
|
||
Donald Trump’s agenda. Yeah and this space of his divergence from an
|
||
already an issue that had already been lost. That was the polling was
|
||
terrible on it. That was where people on the left focused. And his
|
||
expression of support and allyship, as I saw it, barely ever got reported
|
||
or commented on. It struck me as telling. I think it absolutely is telling.
|
||
And I think it’s. The best thing for trans people in this moment is for all
|
||
of us to wake up to the fact that we have to grapple with the world as it
|
||
is, that we have to grapple with where public opinion is right now, and
|
||
that we need all of the Allies that we can get. Because if you again, Seth
|
||
voted in against the bans, if we are going to defend some of the basic
|
||
fundamental rights of trans people, we are going to need those individuals
|
||
in our coalition. If you have to be perfect on every trans rights issue,
|
||
for us to say you can be an ally and part of our coalition, then we’re
|
||
going to have a cap of about 30 percent on our coalition. If we are going
|
||
to have percent plus 1, or frankly, more necessarily 60 percent or more in
|
||
support of nondiscrimination protections for trans people, in support of
|
||
our ability to get the health care that we need. By definition, it will
|
||
have to include a portion of the 70 percent who oppose trans people’s
|
||
participation in sports. And right now, the message from so many is you
|
||
don’t you’re not welcome. You and your support for 90 percent of these
|
||
policies is irrelevant. The fact that you diverge on one thing makes you
|
||
evil. And it also misunderstands the history of civil rights in this
|
||
country. I mean, you can’t compromise on civil rights is a great tweet. But
|
||
tell me which civil Rights Act delivered all progress and all civil rights
|
||
for people of color in this country. The civil Rights Act of 1957, the
|
||
Civil Rights Act of 1960, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Voting Rights
|
||
Act of 1965, the Civil Rights Act of 1968, or any of the Civil Rights Acts
|
||
that have been passed since the 1960s. That movement was disciplined. It
|
||
was strategic. It picked its battles, it picked its fights, and it
|
||
compromised to move the ball forward. And right now, that compromise would
|
||
be deemed unprincipled, weak and throwing everyone under the bus. And that
|
||
is so counterproductive. It is so harmful. And it completely betrays the
|
||
lessons of every single social movement and civil rights movement in our
|
||
country’s history. And we have an example of a very successful social
|
||
movement in recent history with marriage equality. Where would we have been
|
||
in 2007 and 2008, if not only we had not tolerated the fact that Barack
|
||
Obama was ostensibly not for marriage equality then, but if we had said to
|
||
voters if you’re not comfortable, even if you vote against the marriage
|
||
ban, but aren’t quite comfortable with marriage yet, that you’re a bigot
|
||
and you don’t belong in our coalition, where would that movement have had
|
||
been. The most effective messengers were the people who had evolved
|
||
themselves. We had grace personified in that movement, and it worked beyond
|
||
even the advocate’s wildest expectations in terms of the speed of both
|
||
legal progress and cultural progress, because we created incentives for
|
||
people to grow. We created space for people to grow, And we allowed people
|
||
into our tent, into that conversation who weren’t already with us. You
|
||
mentioned the period in 2008 when Barack Obama was running for president,
|
||
and at the very least, his public position. Many of us suspected it was not
|
||
his private position, but his public position was that he opposed gay
|
||
marriage. That was the mainstream position at that point in the Democratic
|
||
Party. And there was a compromise position they all supported, which was
|
||
civil unions. Is there an analogy to the Civil unions debate or position
|
||
for you now. I think on the sports conversation, it’s local control. It’s
|
||
allowing for individual athletic associations to make those individual
|
||
determinations. And in some cases, they’ll have policies that strike a
|
||
right balance. In some cases, they’ll have policies that are too
|
||
restrictive. And I think that is the equivalent to the Civil unions
|
||
position in that debate by allowing for Democratic voters, independent
|
||
voters, hell, even some elected officials to take that civil unions
|
||
position, one that met voters where they were, it gave some of our
|
||
politicians who needed it an off ramp, so that they didn’t have to choose
|
||
between being all on or all off. And it allowed that conversation to
|
||
continue and prevented more harm from being inflicted on to pick up on the
|
||
polling. So there’s this YouGov polling from January that looked at all
|
||
these different issues, and there are a lot of issues around trans rights
|
||
that actually poll great. Yes so protection from trans people against hate
|
||
crimes plus 36 net approval banning employers from firing trans people
|
||
because of their identity. Plus 33 allowing transgender people to serve in
|
||
the military, which Donald Trump is trying to rescind. Plus 22, requiring
|
||
all new public buildings to include gender neutral bathrooms. This
|
||
surprised me. Plus seven. Then there’s the other side. Everybody knows that
|
||
the sports issue is tough in the polling, but banning people under 18 from
|
||
attending drag shows, that’s popular. Banning youth from accessing puberty
|
||
blockers and hormones. That’s very popular. Banning public schools from
|
||
teaching lessons on transgender issues. That’s popular requiring
|
||
transgender people to use bathrooms that match their biological sex that is
|
||
popular. When you look at these lists of issues, what do you see as
|
||
dividing them. What cuts the issues that you could win on now from those
|
||
that have heavy disapproval. Well, I think that there’s very clearly a
|
||
distinction that the public makes between young people and adults. I think
|
||
that there is a distinction that is made in many cases when it comes to
|
||
what people feel like is government support of or funding of versus. Just
|
||
allowing trans people to live their lives, allowing trans troops who are
|
||
qualified to continue to serve, allowing trans people who are doing great
|
||
jobs in their workplace to continue to work. It all goes back to this
|
||
notion of get government out. Let people live their lives and let families
|
||
and individuals make the best decisions for themselves. And I think that
|
||
should be through line of our perspective. A libertarian approach to
|
||
allowing trans people to live fully and freely, that there are some
|
||
complicated questions, but that those questions shouldn’t be answered by
|
||
politicians who are trying to exploit those issues for political gain. I
|
||
was struck by your use of the word libertarian there, because when I look
|
||
at this polling, what I see is something quite similar, which is Americans
|
||
by and large aren’t cruel, and their view here is pretty live and let live.
|
||
Yes, they have different views which we can talk about in a minute on
|
||
minors. But where the question is the government coming in and bothering
|
||
you. You being any trans person, they don’t really want that. What they
|
||
don’t want to do is change their lives or think something is changing for
|
||
them in their society. And maybe those two things are not in all ways
|
||
possible. Certainly over the long term. But there are a lot of places where
|
||
they are possible. It seems to me that in 2024 and over the last couple of
|
||
years, what Republicans did very well, their approach to persuasion was to
|
||
pick the right wedge issues. And you would think that the entire debate
|
||
over trans policy in America was about NCAA swimmers this was the biggest
|
||
problem facing trans people, the biggest problem in some ways facing the
|
||
country. When it’s a pretty edge case issue and questions like
|
||
nondiscrimination and access to health care are much more widespread. But
|
||
what they did was they used their wedge issue and they’re now attacking
|
||
those majority positions. Trump is attacking discrimination. He wants
|
||
people discriminated against. He doesn’t want trans people to be able to
|
||
put the identity they hold and present as on their passports. It’s not a
|
||
huge winning issue for him. And so there’s this question of picking the
|
||
right wedge issues. Is there a wedge issue for you that you wish Democrats
|
||
would pick. Well, listen, I think that we do much better when we keep the
|
||
main thing the main thing. Defending Medicaid in this moment is the main
|
||
thing for everybody, for everyone, for everyone. And look, I think abortion
|
||
to some degree had been a wedge issue that was to the Democrats’ advantage,
|
||
not to the Republicans’ advantage. But I think we have to reorient the
|
||
public’s perception of what our priorities are as a party. And I think when
|
||
we lean into the culture wars and lean into culture war wedge issues, even
|
||
if they benefit us, they reinforce a perception that the Democratic Party
|
||
is unconcerned with the economic needs of the American people. When you ask
|
||
a voter, what are the top five priorities of the Democratic Party. What are
|
||
the top five priorities of the Republican Party, and what are the top five
|
||
priorities for them as a voter. Three out of the five issues that are the
|
||
top issue for that voter appear in what their perception of the top five
|
||
issues for the Republican Party, only one of their top five priorities,
|
||
appear in their perception of what are the top five priorities for the
|
||
Democrats. That’s health. And it was fifth out of five. The top two were
|
||
abortion and LGBTQ issues. And I don’t care what your position is on those
|
||
two issues, you are not going to win an election. If voters think that
|
||
those two issues are your top issues, rather than their ability to get a
|
||
good wage and good benefits, get a house and live the American dream. And I
|
||
think we have to in this moment, reinforce what is our actual priority as a
|
||
party, which is making sure that everyone can pursue the American dream,
|
||
which has become increasingly unaffordable and inaccessible, that everyone
|
||
should be able to get the health care they need be able to buy a home, be
|
||
able to send their child to child care without breaking the bank if they
|
||
can even get a spot. That needs to be our focus, and I think when we have
|
||
this purity politics approach to LGBTQ issues or abortion, what we
|
||
communicate, even if we’re not talking about those issues, is we
|
||
communicate. Those are threshold issues. And therefore the voter reads that
|
||
as those are priority issues. And the only way to convince the voter that
|
||
those are not our priority issues, that’s not what we’re spending our
|
||
capital and time on, but rather giving them health care and housing is to
|
||
make it abundantly clear to people that our tent can include diversity of
|
||
thought on those issues. Something that I notice in the broad coalition of
|
||
groups and people and funders who identify as or support Democrats is that
|
||
they all want the issue they care most about to be the issue that gets
|
||
talked about the most people who fund anything from climate to trans
|
||
rights, to all kinds of the hotter issues in American life. You could
|
||
actually imagine a strategy where those groups and that money went to
|
||
making every election about Medicaid, because Medicaid is just a killer
|
||
issue for Democrats. And then the people who get elected are better on
|
||
those other issues, too. But it doesn’t that money, those groups that are
|
||
organizing what they often want Democrats to do is publicly take unpopular
|
||
positions on their issues. I think all the time about the ACLU
|
||
questionnaire that asked candidates and in this case, Kamala Harris.
|
||
Whether she would support the government paying for gender reassignment
|
||
surgery for illegal immigrants in prison. Even if your whole position in
|
||
life is, your point is to make that possible. The last thing you would want
|
||
is for anybody to claim it out in public. You would want nobody to ever
|
||
think about that question ever at all. And it’s something I’ve heard
|
||
Democrats talking about more after the election. Just rethinking on some
|
||
level, this question of, is the point of all this organizing to get
|
||
politicians to commit to the most maximalist version of your issue set. Or
|
||
is the point of this organizing to somehow figure out how to win Senate
|
||
seats in Missouri and Kansas. So you have very, very, very moderate
|
||
Democrats who nevertheless make Chuck Schumer, the Senate Majority Leader
|
||
rather than John Thune. I think that there is an incentive from money and
|
||
from social media, and those also go hand in hand, sometimes with
|
||
grassroots donations that incentivize the groups to want to show their
|
||
influence and their effect by having politicians fight the fights that they
|
||
want them to fight in ways that feel viscerally comforting to their own
|
||
community that they’re representing. And look, I get that, I understand
|
||
that. One, we have to be better as elected officials in saying no and
|
||
saying public opinion is everything. And if you want us to change, you need
|
||
to help foster the change in public opinion before you’re asking these
|
||
elected officials to betray the fact that they are, at the end of the day,
|
||
representatives that have to represent, in some form or fashion, the views
|
||
of the people that they represent. Like at some point you will represent
|
||
the people’s positions or they will find someone else who will. And so it
|
||
is just an unsustainable dynamic for the groups to continue to ask elected
|
||
officials to take these maximalist positions to ignore where their voters
|
||
are. They have to do the hard work of persuasion. And there can be there’s
|
||
always going to be a tension between the groups and elected officials.
|
||
Everyone has to do their own job, but there has to be some degree of
|
||
understanding. How do you hold that tension. I always think this is such an
|
||
interesting question for politicians to work with, because there is the
|
||
internal and the external push to authenticity. Yeah we don’t want these
|
||
poll tested politicians. Yeah and it’s also your job to represent. Yes on
|
||
know she’s personal to you on issues not as personal to you. How do you
|
||
think about balancing. They elected you versus are their servant. Yeah
|
||
look, all of these decisions inevitably require a balancing of my own
|
||
views, my own principles and the views of the people that I represent. But
|
||
I think one thing you always have to do is you have to go, O.K, here’s an
|
||
issue that I feel very strongly about. I vote against this. What are the
|
||
second, third, and fourth order consequences of voting against or voting in
|
||
favor. You might abstractly agree with something as an ideal, but if you
|
||
were to pursue that or implement that policy, it would have, in the medium
|
||
to long term, a regressive effect, because there’s a backlash to pushing
|
||
too hard or taking too maximalist of a position by the mainstream in our
|
||
politics. One of the problems we’ve had is that we have said, not only you
|
||
have to vote the way we want you to vote, but then you have to speak the
|
||
way we want you to speak. And I always have said, even when I was an
|
||
advocate, if we can, if we can get the policy vote that we want and the
|
||
compromise we are accepting is essentially a rhetorical compromise that is
|
||
a pretty darn good deal. And again, I think we have to be willing to have
|
||
these conversations out in the open. We have to recognize that there’s
|
||
complexity, there’s nuance, and that means not just in the policy space but
|
||
in the political space. And that’s authentic to say, these are some really
|
||
difficult conversations. And sometimes I’m going to get it right and
|
||
sometimes I’m going to get it wrong, and sometimes I’m voting exclusively
|
||
with what I think is the right thing to do, even if my voters disagree. But
|
||
also sometimes I’m going to have to take a balanced view of this. And
|
||
that’s democracy. I want to pick up on speech. It’s true on trans and
|
||
gender issues. It’s also true on a bunch of other issues in the past couple
|
||
of years that a huge number of the fights that ended up defining the issue
|
||
were not about legislation, they were about speech. I’ve always myself
|
||
thought this reflects social media, but I mean, the number of people who
|
||
have talked to me about the term birthing persons, which I think virtually
|
||
nobody has used or Latinx was a big one like this. There is in general,
|
||
this extreme weighting of can you push changes of speech onto the people
|
||
who agree with you and possibly onto society as a whole, and that the
|
||
strategy worked backwards from the speech outcome, not the legislative
|
||
outcome. How do you think about that weighting of speech versus votes. I
|
||
think look, there is no question in my mind that the vote is much more
|
||
important than the rhetoric that they use. We have discoursed our way into,
|
||
if you talk about this issue in a way that’s suboptimal from my
|
||
perspective, you’re actually laying the foundation for oppression and
|
||
persecution. And I just think maybe academically that’s true, but welcome
|
||
to the real world. Like, we are prioritizing the wrong thing. It’s an
|
||
element of virtue signaling. Like I’m showing. I’m showing that I am the
|
||
most radical. I’m the most progressive on this issue, because I’m going to
|
||
take this person who does everything right substantively and crucify this
|
||
person for not being perfect in language. It’s a way of demonstrating that
|
||
you’re in the in-group, that you understand the language, that you
|
||
understand the mores and the values of that group. And it’s a way of
|
||
building capital and credibility with that in-group. I think that’s what it
|
||
is. And I just think it’s inherently exclusionary. And I think that that’s
|
||
part of the thing that’s wrong with our politics right now, which is that
|
||
all of our politics feels so exclusionary. The coalition that wins the
|
||
argument about who is most welcoming will be the coalition that wins our
|
||
politics. I think that’s such an interesting point, and I think probably
|
||
true. I’d also be curious for your thoughts on this. I think there’s a very
|
||
interesting way that speech and its political power confuse people, because
|
||
it’s two things at once. It’s extremely low cost and extremely high cost.
|
||
So pronouns, for instance, I think are correctly it’s a very, very easy
|
||
thing. And basically, if you won’t use somebody’s preferred pronouns, I
|
||
think you’re an asshole. That’s my personal view of it. But having trying
|
||
to execute a speech change where everybody lists their pronouns in their
|
||
bio, where every meeting begins with people going around the circle and
|
||
saying their name and their pronouns. That feels very different to people.
|
||
It seems small. I mean, you don’t have to pay anything out of pocket. You
|
||
don’t have to go anywhere. And yet the language we use is very, very
|
||
important to us. Yeah I think you’re absolutely right. There And I think
|
||
the thing with pronouns, too, is a prime example of where we’ve lost grace,
|
||
though. Me calling people assholes, it’s not graceful. Well, no. No, I
|
||
think there is a difference between someone who’s intentionally
|
||
misgendering someone. So people who make mistakes. And I think that there
|
||
has been, whether warranted or not, the perception that people are going to
|
||
be shamed if they make mistakes. But then I think you’re absolutely right,
|
||
too, that there is a distinction between treating me the way I want to be
|
||
treated and everyone changing their behavior and requiring this, again,
|
||
in-group language that exceeds just calling the person in front of you what
|
||
they want to be called. And I think it gets to something we were talking
|
||
about earlier, which is a way that there are two pieces to the politics of
|
||
this. One is fairly popular, at least for now, and the other is a much
|
||
tougher lift, which is I think most people have that basic sense of
|
||
politeness. If you want to be referred to in a certain way, Yes, I might
|
||
slip up. But if I’m being a decent person, I’m going to try. Yeah versus
|
||
the move around pronouns to the move for calling, things cisgender. That
|
||
was a much bigger effort than in some ways, wasn’t described as such. And I
|
||
feel like there’s been a dimension of the politics here, where things that
|
||
were very academic arguments became political arguments, and then people
|
||
were a little bit unclear on what political what the political win would be
|
||
to destabilize the fundamental gender binary that people understand is
|
||
operating is touching something very deep in society versus treating other
|
||
people with respect and courtesy and decency and grace. Yeah is a much is a
|
||
much easier sell. And I think it’s O.K to want to do the former. But I
|
||
think people kept mixing up which their actual project was at the end of
|
||
the day. The thing that we lost is that we’re just talking about people
|
||
trying to live their lives, trying to live the best lives they can. We got
|
||
into this rabbit hole of academic intellectual discourse that doesn’t
|
||
actually matter in people’s lives. We got into this performative fighting
|
||
to show our bona fides to our own in-group, and we lost the fundamental
|
||
truth that all of those things are only even possible once you’ve done the
|
||
basic legwork of allowing people to see trans people as people, when you
|
||
allow trans people to be seen as human beings who have the same hopes and
|
||
dreams and fears as everyone else. Once that basic conception of humanity
|
||
exists, then all the other things, all the other conversations, fall into
|
||
place. Language inevitably changes across society, across cultures, across
|
||
time, but it is a byproduct of cultural change. And I just think we started
|
||
to have what maybe were conversations that were happening in academic
|
||
institutions or conversations that were happening in the community, and we
|
||
started having those out in public on social media. And then demand that
|
||
everyone else has that conversation with us, and then incorporates what the
|
||
dominant position is in that conversation, in the way they live their
|
||
lives. And it’s just like, that’s not how this happens. Let’s just talk
|
||
about human beings who want you to live by the Golden rule. Let’s just talk
|
||
about the fact that trans people are people who can be service members and
|
||
doctors and lawyers and educators and elected officials and do a damn good
|
||
job in that. That is the gateway to everything else. And it has always been
|
||
in every social movement, the place where it is complicated and the place
|
||
where not just the politics, but I think the answers are complicated, is
|
||
around children. And we talked about the NCAA swimmers and the edge case
|
||
nature of that. But schools are broader, and a lot of what the Trump
|
||
administration is doing, a lot of what you see Republicans are doing in
|
||
states is around schools and minors, and that’s tougher. Parents want to
|
||
know what their kids are doing. On the one hand if you’re a kid with gender
|
||
dysphoria and taking puberty blockers early matters. On the other hand,
|
||
there are a lot of things parents don’t let their kids do young because
|
||
they’re not sure what they’re going to want in a couple of years. How do
|
||
you think about that set of issues. The leave them alone makes a lot of
|
||
sense for adults, but we don’t leave kids alone. Kids exist in a
|
||
paternalist system where their parents have power over them, their schools
|
||
have power over them. And so the question of policy there becomes very
|
||
profound. Yeah, I think first off, in that instance, we acknowledge the and
|
||
rightfully acknowledge the important role that parents play in decisions
|
||
for their children. Look, you can recognize that there’s nuance here. You
|
||
can say that there need to be stronger standards of care, that maybe things
|
||
got too lenient. But ultimately, politicians aren’t the people who should
|
||
be making these decisions. The family should be making these decisions. The
|
||
family, in consultation with a doctor, should be making these decisions.
|
||
And I think that is a fair balance in recognizing the need for every child
|
||
to get medical care and also the right of parents to make decisions,
|
||
including health care decisions for their children. But you do see right
|
||
now in some European countries, the government setting tighter standards,
|
||
there have definitely been a lot of arguments about whether or not the
|
||
research was good, whether or not the research was ideologically
|
||
influenced. So there’s some government role here, some role for
|
||
professional associations, some context in which families and doctors make
|
||
these decisions. What is that role. Well, I think you just hit on that
|
||
distinction, which is that in many European countries, the distinction
|
||
between the health care system and the government is fuzzier in many cases.
|
||
You have government operated hospitals here. You have health care systems.
|
||
You have standards of care developed by providers in those medical
|
||
associations, and that is where those decisions should be left up to in
|
||
terms of establishing the standards of care. And then when applying those
|
||
standards of care, allowing those the application, the practical
|
||
application of those standards of care to happen between patients,
|
||
families, and providers, because it’s fundamentally a different kind of
|
||
system. I think the critique that the fear of the right that I hear that
|
||
some of these same dynamics towards pushing out people who question the
|
||
evidence towards there being things you can say and things you cannot say
|
||
took hold, and that the results of that can’t be trusted, that everything
|
||
you said is happening in politics is also happening in medicine and
|
||
elsewhere. I think that we actually started to see a pretty difficult but
|
||
important conversation within WPATH, the World Professional Association for
|
||
Transgender Health, about the standards of care for youth care before
|
||
government started intervening, where they started having a conversation
|
||
about how to adjust the standards of care, recognizing perhaps that they
|
||
needed to tighten them. And that’s true across health. I mean, standards of
|
||
care across different forms of care are constantly evolving. That
|
||
conversation was starting to happen. You cannot tell me that it’s the role
|
||
of the government to preempt those conversations. Those conversations
|
||
should not be settled in legislative bodies by politicians who aren’t
|
||
looking at the data, I don’t understand the data, and certainly aren’t
|
||
objectively interpreting the data. And look, I think all of this changes,
|
||
though the conversation changes, I should say, when people understand what
|
||
it means to be trans, because I think right now we think of it as a choice.
|
||
We think of it as an intellectual decision, right. Like, I want to be a
|
||
girl. I want to be a boy, and I want to do this because of these rewards,
|
||
or I don’t want to do it because of these risks. That’s not what gender
|
||
identity is. It is much more innate. It is a visceral feeling. It’s not the
|
||
same as whether you get a tattoo or what you have for dinner. It’s not a
|
||
decision. It’s a fact about who you are. And I think the challenge in the
|
||
conversation around gender identity that differs from sexual orientation is
|
||
that most people who are straight can understand what it feels like to love
|
||
and to lust, and so they’re able to enter into conversations around sexual
|
||
orientation with an analogous experience. And the challenge in the
|
||
conversation around gender identity is that people who aren’t trans don’t
|
||
know what it feels like to have a gender identity that differs from your
|
||
sex assigned at birth. For me, the closest thing that I can compare it to
|
||
was a constant feeling of homesickness, just an unwavering ache in the pit
|
||
of my stomach that would only go away when I could be seen and affirmed as
|
||
myself. And I think that because we stopped having that conversation,
|
||
because we stopped creating space for people to ask questions for people’s
|
||
understandable, perhaps invasive, but understandable curiosity to be met
|
||
with an openness and a grace not by everyone, but just the people who were
|
||
willing to do it. We stopped people having an understanding of what it
|
||
means to be trans, and it allowed them to start to see it, or it allowed
|
||
for their pre-existing perception that this is some intellectual choice to
|
||
manifest. And in some cases, the perfect quote discourse started to
|
||
reinforce that. See how that we started to get to this place where you
|
||
couldn’t be like, I’m born this way that we policed the way even LGBTQ
|
||
people or trans people talked about their own identities to be this perfect
|
||
academic. Why can’t you say I’m born this way. Because it was. I’m not. No,
|
||
no, I’m not saying you’re saying it, but I this is AI think there was been
|
||
aware of there was an academic perception of like people have different
|
||
people should have agency over their sexual orientation and gender
|
||
identity, even if it’s not innate, and that there was this acceptance of a
|
||
mainstream perception of sexual orientation and gender identity that was a
|
||
one size fits all narrative around LGBTQ people. That didn’t necessarily
|
||
include people whose understanding was more fluid, or their understanding
|
||
evolved over time, or for whom they feel like they want to transgress
|
||
gender norms because of a reason that’s not this innate sense of gender.
|
||
And I think when you take that capacity for us to authentically talk about
|
||
our experience away from us, because it’s not academically the purest that
|
||
creates space and room for every single different lived experience within
|
||
that umbrella. You give people justification to say or think this is a
|
||
choice, and if it’s a choice, the threshold to allow for discrimination
|
||
becomes lower. I’ve known a number of people who’ve transitioned as adults,
|
||
and it’s always the degree to which most of us avoid doing anything that
|
||
would cause us any social discomfort at all times is so found how much we
|
||
live our lives trying to not make anybody look at us for too long that it’s
|
||
always struck me as it. It must be such a profound need to make that
|
||
decision to come to your family, to your wife or your husband, to your
|
||
kids, to your parents. And so this the right wing meme that emerged around
|
||
it that people are transitioning because they opportunistically want to be
|
||
in another bathroom. Yeah or another locker room or get some kind of
|
||
cultural affirmative action. Always struck me as not just absurd, but
|
||
deeply unempathic not thinking for a moment what it must mean to want that
|
||
much. And so then it’s interesting to hear you say that there was almost
|
||
like a pincer movement on that because it hasn’t struck me as a thing,
|
||
people. I mean, I’m sure there is agency and people make decisions here,
|
||
but the pull from inside of everybody I’ve known is really profound.
|
||
Usually they’ve been trying to choose the other way for a long time and
|
||
eventually just can’t anymore. That’s exactly what my experience was. I
|
||
mean, it’s funny because sometimes there’s discourse that I the only reason
|
||
why I’m an elected official is because I’m trans. Like, I see on the right
|
||
this notion that I’m a diversity hire. I was like, well, voters, voters
|
||
chose me. It’s kind of an insult to voters that they didn’t choose me
|
||
because they think that I’m the best qualified or the best candidate or
|
||
reflective of what they want, but they just chose me because of my
|
||
identity. But it also just undersells such a larger truth, which is that my
|
||
life would be so much easier if I wasn’t trans. Now I’m proud of who I am.
|
||
I’m proud that this is my life experience for a whole host of reasons. But
|
||
this is all a lot harder because I’m trans. Are there moments where I get a
|
||
microphone or am I sitting here. If I was a non-trans freshman Democrat,
|
||
would I be sitting here. Maybe not. Maybe I would maybe not. We probably
|
||
would be having a different conversation. But navigating this world as a
|
||
trans person has always been an even more so. Now it’s incredibly hard, and
|
||
all any of us are asking, or at least all that most of us are asking, is to
|
||
just let us live the best life we can. A life with as few regrets as
|
||
possible. A life where we can be constructive, productive, contributing
|
||
members of society. You might not understand us. It is hard to step into
|
||
the shoes of someone who is trans, and to understand what that might feel
|
||
like. But I spent 21 years of my life praying that this would go away, and
|
||
the only way that I was finally able to accept it was one realizing this
|
||
was never going to go away. Two becoming so consumed by it that it was the
|
||
only thing I ever really was able to think about because the pain became
|
||
too all encompassing. And 3, the only way I was able to come out was
|
||
because I was able to accept that I was losing any future. I had to go
|
||
through stages of grief, and the only way I was able to come out was to
|
||
finally get to that stage of acceptance over a loss of any future. It’s
|
||
really scary and it’s really hard. And right now, it is particularly scary
|
||
and hard. And I think to your point earlier, most people are good people
|
||
and they just want to treat other people with respect and kindness. But
|
||
unfortunately, in this moment, in our politics, we were recently at
|
||
something where someone gave us some information. And they said that when a
|
||
voter was asked to describe the Democratic Party and the Republican Party,
|
||
it was crazy for the Republican Party and preachy for the Democratic Party.
|
||
I think that undersells something that’s more true, which is that a voter
|
||
will look and say the Republican Party are assholes to other people. I
|
||
don’t like that. But the Democratic Party is an asshole to me. And if I
|
||
have to choose between the party, that’s an asshole to me because I’m not
|
||
perfect or a party that’s an asshole to someone else. Even if I don’t like
|
||
it, I’m going to choose the party that’s an asshole to someone else. When
|
||
you entered Congress, you were quite directly targeted by some of your
|
||
Republican colleagues, led by Nancy Mace, on which bathrooms you could use,
|
||
a thing that would not have happened if you were not a trans legislator.
|
||
And this is the majority party in the House. You have to work with these
|
||
people. You’re on committees with them. What has your experience been like.
|
||
Both absorbing that and then trying to work with people who may or may not
|
||
have given you much grace in that moment. Well, the first thing I’d say is
|
||
that the folks who were or are targeting me because of my gender identity
|
||
in Congress, those are folks who at this point are really not really
|
||
working with any Democrats and can barely work with their own Republican
|
||
colleagues. I’ve introduced several bills. Almost all have been bipartisan.
|
||
I’ve been developing relationships with colleagues on the other side of the
|
||
aisle. Part of my responsibility in this moment is to show that when
|
||
someone likes me me, gets elected to public office, we can do the whole
|
||
job. And that means working with people who disagree with me, including on
|
||
issues that are deeply personal. The folks who are coming after me. I mean,
|
||
look, that’s been hard, but I know that they’re coming after me not because
|
||
they are deeply passionate about bathroom policy. They’re coming after me
|
||
because they are employing the strategies of reality TV. And the best way
|
||
to get attention in a body of 435 people is to throw wine in someone’s
|
||
face. That gets you a little attention. But if that person that you’re
|
||
throwing wine in their face, if they respond by throwing wine in your face,
|
||
it creates a beef which gets you a season long story arc. I knew that they
|
||
were trying to bait me into a fight to get attention, and I refused to be
|
||
used as a political pawn. I refuse to give them not only the power of
|
||
derailing me, but the incentive to continue to come after me. And this is I
|
||
think this was a prime example. This was a prime example of how to fight
|
||
smart, that is demonized on our own side. Because the grace that I didn’t
|
||
get, it wasn’t just on the right. There was a lot of critique on the left.
|
||
And I understand when you’re a first, people viscerally feel your highs and
|
||
they also viscerally feel your lows. But what would me fighting back in
|
||
that moment have done. It wouldn’t have stopped the ban, and it would only
|
||
have incentivized further attacks and continued behavior like that. And
|
||
sometimes we have to understand that not fighting, not taking the bait,
|
||
that’s not a sign of weakness. It’s not unprincipled. Discipline and
|
||
strategy are signs of strength. And I think in the social media world, we
|
||
have lulled ourselves into thinking the only way to fight is to fight. It’s
|
||
to scream, and it’s to yell, and it’s to do it on every instance. And any
|
||
time you don’t do it, you’re normalizing the behavior that’s coming your
|
||
way, which is both a ridiculously unfair burden to place on every single
|
||
human being to have to fight every single indignity. But by that logic, the
|
||
young Black students who were walking in to a school that was being
|
||
integrated in the late 50s and 60s, who were walking forward calmly and
|
||
with dignity and grace into that school as people screamed slurs at them.
|
||
By that definition, that student was normalizing those slurs by not
|
||
responding. Instead, what that student was doing was providing the public
|
||
with a very clear visual, a very clear contrast between unhinged hatred and
|
||
basic dignity and grace, which is fundamental to humanity. And I think for
|
||
me, one of the things that I struggled with after that was the lack of
|
||
grace that I got from some in my own community who said that I was
|
||
reinforcing that the behavior of the people who were coming after me, that
|
||
I was not responding appropriately to the bullying that I was facing when
|
||
the reality is that behavior has diminished significantly because I removed
|
||
the incentive for them to continue to do it, because the incentive was so
|
||
blatantly about attention, and I wasn’t going to let them get the attention
|
||
that they wanted. You remind me of something I heard Barack Obama say many,
|
||
many years ago when he was getting criticized for trying to negotiate,
|
||
trying to reach out to people who by that point, many, many on the left
|
||
thought he was naive for trying to work with. And he said something like
|
||
that. He had always felt that the American people could see better if the
|
||
other side had clenched their fist, if he opened his hand. I thought there
|
||
was a lot of wisdom in that. Yes, absolutely. I early on in those first few
|
||
weeks, I had some folks text me as I was responding the way that I was. And
|
||
they said, you should watch 42, which is the movie about Jackie Robinson.
|
||
And I am not comparing my experience to Jackie Robinson at all. At all. But
|
||
there’s a scene in that movie that’s so, I think illustrative of these
|
||
dynamics, which is he’s meeting with the owner of the Brooklyn Dodgers and
|
||
the owner of the Brooklyn Dodgers. Says it’s trying to provoke him into
|
||
anger. And when he succeeds, the owner says to him, basically have to
|
||
understand that when you are a first, if you respond to a slur with a slur,
|
||
they’ll only hear yours. If you respond to a punch with a punch, they’ll
|
||
say you’re the aggressor. If we go in and say to these folks, we’re never
|
||
going to work with you because you’re never going to work with us, then we
|
||
get the blame for never working with them, not them. If we go in and we
|
||
respond to their hatred with vitriol and anger, they’re going to blame us.
|
||
And that’s the reality of the double standard in our politics. That’s the
|
||
reality that a first always has to navigate. Let them. Let them put their
|
||
anger, their vitriol on full display. Let us provide that contrast with our
|
||
approach. Look, it’s not going to always work out. And it’s not always
|
||
going to create the outcome that you desire. But people need us to
|
||
demonstrate that contrast to them, for us, for them to truly see it. I’ve
|
||
been having a conversation in a very different context than this, but I’m
|
||
curious to hear your answer to it. I’ve been having this conversation about
|
||
whether or not good politics always requires clear enemies. Do you believe
|
||
it does. No I believe that. You can tell a compelling story with an enemy.
|
||
There’s no question. It sometimes is an easy out in our politics. But I
|
||
think that there’s something to be said about a politics that is rooted in
|
||
opposition to an enemy that is fundamentally regressive. That anger is
|
||
fundamentally conservative in its political outcome. Barack Obama and Bill
|
||
Clinton, for that matter, did a good job of putting forward an aspirational
|
||
politics that wasn’t defined by who we are against, but by what we are for
|
||
and about who we can be. And I think that is a more successful path for
|
||
progressive politics than an enemies based politics, which so often
|
||
devolves to anger, which I think more often than not facilitates in the
|
||
medium and long term a regressive politics. Look, I’m not saying it can’t
|
||
always be effective politics, but that you can have effective politics and
|
||
good politics and better outcomes with an aspirational politics, with a
|
||
politics that isn’t just about what it’s opposed to but about what it can
|
||
build and about who we can be. Because I think everyone has this own
|
||
internal struggle between their own better selves and their better angels
|
||
and their base instincts. Much earlier in the conversation, I’d asked you
|
||
about liberalism, which was a little bit of a weird question to drop in
|
||
there, and I don’t really have a question. It’s just something I’m thinking
|
||
about. But you actually strike me as one of the most liberal, as a
|
||
temperament liberal in the classical sense, politicians I’ve talked to in a
|
||
long time, and I’ve been starting to read a lot of older books about
|
||
liberalism, because it feels to me that it is a thing, an approach to
|
||
politics that even liberals lost. Yeah and one of the reasons I think we
|
||
lost it. I very much count myself as a liberal was a feeling that
|
||
liberalism’s virtue was its vice, that its openness to critique, its
|
||
constant balancing, its movement towards incremental solutions, and its
|
||
skepticism of total solutions that those had been these conditions under
|
||
which problems never truly got solved, systemic racism and bigotry
|
||
festered. And I think as it began to absorb that critique, it lost a lot of
|
||
confidence in itself. And in a way, it had had Barack Obama, who was like
|
||
the apex of the Liberal leaders, and he hadn’t brought about utopia. And so
|
||
it seemed exhausted. And I think alongside that, there’s some way in which
|
||
I cannot I still need to figure this out, but I’ll say it because I believe
|
||
it’s true. I think there’s something about the social media platforms that
|
||
is illiberal as a medium. I think the reason that we now have x and we have
|
||
blue sky and we have threads and none of them are good. They all lead to
|
||
bad habits of mind. Because simplifying your thoughts down to these little
|
||
bumper stickers, then having other people who agree with you, retweet them
|
||
or mob you is just. It doesn’t lend itself to the pluralistic balancing
|
||
modes of thought that liberalism is built to prize. They’re illiberal in a
|
||
fundamental way. And so I don’t think it’s an accident. That is, liberalism
|
||
began to lose its own moorings. Illiberalism roared back. And just one
|
||
experience I’ve had of this whole period with Donald Trump. The second term
|
||
is realizing that the thing that we were trying to keep locked in the
|
||
basement was really dangerous. Yeah, really, really profoundly dangerous
|
||
the even compared to his first term. I mean, the attacks on due process,
|
||
the trying to break institutions that if you let that out, if you let the
|
||
disappearance machine get started, that things can go really badly. And
|
||
there’s something about liberalism that is so unsatisfying. I mean, the
|
||
work you just described having to do, it sounds so unsatisfying and
|
||
frustrating and yet something, I guess just that. And yet and yet it is the
|
||
approach and the system that, while imperfect, is the most likely and most
|
||
proven to actually lead to the progress that I and I know so many others
|
||
seek. Look, people have one life, and it is completely understandable that
|
||
a person would feel I have one life. And when you ask me to wait, you are
|
||
asking me to watch my one life pass by without the respect and fairness
|
||
that I deserve. And that is too much to ask of anyone. And that is. It is
|
||
our job to demand. Now, in the face of people who say never, but it’s also
|
||
our job to then not reject the possibility for a better tomorrow as that
|
||
compromise. I truly believe that liberalism, that our ability to have
|
||
conversations across disagreement, that our ability to recognize that in a
|
||
pluralistic, diverse democracy, there will be inevitably people and
|
||
positions that hurt us. But when you’re siloed and when you suppress that
|
||
opposition underground in that basement, to use your word, they’re alone in
|
||
there. And not only does that sense of community, loneliness, breed
|
||
bitterness, but it also breeds radicalization. Liberalism is not only the
|
||
best mechanism to move forward, but it is also the best mechanism to rein
|
||
in the worst excesses of your opposition. Yes, the compromises. You don’t
|
||
get to do everything you want to do, but that is a much better bet than the
|
||
alternative, which is what we have developed now, which is an illiberal
|
||
democracy in so many ways in our body politic, one where, Yes, we might
|
||
have temporary victories, but as we are seeing right now, those victories
|
||
can be fleeting and the consequences can be deadly. Was this always your
|
||
political temperament or was it forged. I have grown and changed. I think
|
||
there are things that I did and said 5, 10, 15 years ago that I look back
|
||
and regret because I think that they were too illiberal, because I think I
|
||
bought into a culture online that didn’t always bring out the best in me.
|
||
But I do think that those were exceptions. And even when I was an advocate,
|
||
I was always perceived as one the more mainstream respectability advocates.
|
||
I was always considered someone who was too willing to work across
|
||
disagreement and engage in conversations that we shouldn’t be having. I was
|
||
always considered someone who was too willing to work within the system. I
|
||
think I fundamentally always had the same perspective, and fundamentally
|
||
have always believed that we cannot eliminate grace from our politics and
|
||
our change making. And that’s rooted in watching my parents grow and change
|
||
after I came out. Look, I went into that experience knowing my parents were
|
||
going to look. They are progressive people. They embraced my older brother,
|
||
who’s gay, without skipping a beat, but I knew when I shared that I was
|
||
trans with them, it was going to be devastating, to use a word that my
|
||
mother uses. And I knew that if I responded by shutting down the
|
||
conversation, by refusing to walk with them, by refusing to give them grace
|
||
and assume good intentions when they would inevitably say and do things
|
||
that might be hurtful to me, I would stunt their capacity to take that walk
|
||
with me. And I saw us as a family, move forward with a degree of grace
|
||
toward each other that we were all going to inevitably say and do things
|
||
that we would come to regret that might hurt a little bit, but that if we
|
||
assumed good intentions and intentions and walk forward, that my parents
|
||
would go from saying, what are the chances that I have a gay son and a
|
||
trans child from a place of pity to a place of awe in the diversity of our
|
||
family and the blessings that have come with that diversity. And that only
|
||
came from grace. And then I saw it working in Delaware, passing
|
||
nondiscrimination protections. I’ve seen it time and time again. And so I
|
||
just I have borne witness to change. That once seemed so impossible to me
|
||
as a kid that it was almost incomprehensible, not only become possible, but
|
||
become a reality in large part because of grace in our politics. And Yes,
|
||
because I was willing to extend that grace to others. Grace blessings.
|
||
Witness her. Or are these for you. Religious concepts. They tap into my
|
||
religion. I’m Presbyterian, I’m an ordained elder in the Presbyterian
|
||
Church. But I think they go to something for me that transcends religion
|
||
and faith and tap into just my sense of beauty toward the world and my
|
||
beauty and my sense of beauty at life and the joy that I get to live this
|
||
life, that I get to be myself and that I get to live a life of purpose. And
|
||
I know I’m lucky in that respect. And I want everyone to have that same
|
||
opportunity. And I have seen that approach and that grace. It’s allowed me
|
||
to be a better version of myself, a happier version of myself, which I
|
||
think has actually unlocked those opportunities. Is it a practice, when you
|
||
say that it’s allowed you to be a better version of yourself. It’s a
|
||
podcast, so everything is ultimately self-help. Is that something that
|
||
intentionally you cultivate, and if so, how. Yes, I think it’s often an
|
||
intentional choice. So many of the problems that we face are rooted in the
|
||
fact that hurt people, hurt people. And I think we are in this not to go
|
||
down a rabbit hole. I think that we are in this place where we are in this
|
||
fierce competition for pain, where the left says to the right, what do you
|
||
know about pain. White, straight, cis man. My pain is real as a queer
|
||
transgender person. And then the right says to the left, what do you know
|
||
about pain. College educated, cosmopolitan elite. My pain is real. In a
|
||
post-industrial community ravaged by the opioid crisis. And we are in this
|
||
competition for pain. When there is plenty of pain to go around. And every
|
||
therapist will tell you that the first step to healing is to have your pain
|
||
seen and validated. And while it requires intentionality and effort,
|
||
sometimes I think we would all be better off if we recognized that we don’t
|
||
have to believe that someone is right for what they’re facing to be wrong.
|
||
But I also think that there’s one other aspect of this that I think we have
|
||
lost, which is the intentionality of hope. And I think. We have fallen prey
|
||
in our online discourse and our politics, to a sense that cynicism is in
|
||
vogue, that cynicism shows that we get it. And I think one of the things
|
||
that we have to recognize is sometimes hope is a conscious effort, and that
|
||
sense of inevitability, that organic sense of hope that we felt in this
|
||
post 1960s world. That is the exception in our history. And you have to
|
||
step into the shoes of people in the 1950s, people in the 1930s, people in
|
||
the 1850s. And to move past the history that we view with the hindsight of
|
||
inevitability, and go into those moments and recognize that every previous
|
||
generation of Americans had every reason to give up hope. And you cannot
|
||
tell me that the reasons for hopelessness now are greater than the reasons
|
||
for hopelessness, then. So you’re saying there’s something audacious about
|
||
hope. There is something audacity in it. There is. You have to summon it.
|
||
You have to summon it. And I think if we allow ourselves to recognize that
|
||
hope isn’t about optimism is about circumstance. It’s about evaluating
|
||
likelihood. Hope is something that transcends that. And when we allow
|
||
ourselves, when we lull ourselves into the sense of cynicism and we give up
|
||
on hope, that is when we lose. My editor has this habit of these very
|
||
Delphic sayings that I have to then think about for a while afterwards, and
|
||
a week ago he said to me that cynicism is always stupidity. And in the
|
||
conversation we were having I didn’t ask him about it, but I think, and
|
||
he’s not here to tell me I’m wrong, that what he meant is that it always
|
||
includes a cynicism is the posture that we both know what is happening. And
|
||
we know what is going to happen that we’ve seen through the performance
|
||
into the real grimy, pathetic backstage and we know it’s rigged. We know
|
||
it’s plotted and planned. And so it’s this posture, this knowing posture of
|
||
idiocy. I think it’s also it’s that and it’s just it’s easy. It’s easy. I
|
||
think that’s the place to end. Always our final question. What are three
|
||
books you would recommend to the audience. So to this conversation, I think
|
||
one of the best books on political leadership and understanding how to
|
||
foster public opinion change is “Team of Rivals” by Doris Kearns Goodwin.
|
||
It’s one of my favorite books. Two, I’ve been reading over time. It’s not
|
||
new. “These Truths” by Jill Lepore, a one-volume history of the United
|
||
States, which helps to reinforce that so many of the challenges and
|
||
dynamics that we face in this moment are actually not unique, even if the
|
||
specifics are. How cyclical all our challenges are and our history is. And
|
||
then the final one that I’m actually rereading. I read it in the first term
|
||
of Trump is “The Final Days,” the sequel to “All the President’s Men.” And
|
||
you realize, reading that, how often it felt like Nixon was going to get
|
||
away with everything, that he’d stay in office and it’d be fine for him.
|
||
And how many instances that it appeared to be done and that he had won
|
||
until August 9, 1974 happened and he resigned. And I think for me, it’s a
|
||
helpful reminder that it often seems impossible until it’s inevitable.
|
||
Congresswoman Sarah McBride, thank you very much. Thank you.
|
||
|
||
Video player loading
|
||
Representative Sarah McBride reckons with the trans rights movement’s
|
||
shortcomings, and how to win hearts and minds through a politics of grace.
|
||
CreditCredit...The New York Times
|
||
|
||
How to Beat Back Trump on Trans Rights — and Much Else
|
||
|
||
Representative Sarah McBride reckons with the trans rights movement’s
|
||
shortcomings and how to win hearts and minds through a politics of grace.
|
||
|
||
This is an edited transcript of an episode of “The Ezra Klein Show.” You can
|
||
listen to the conversation by following or subscribing to the show on the [25]
|
||
NYT Audio App, [26]Apple, [27]Spotify, [28]Amazon Music, [29]YouTube, [30]
|
||
iHeartRadio or [31]wherever you get your podcasts.
|
||
|
||
President Trump, in his inauguration speech, was perfectly clear about what he
|
||
intended to do.
|
||
|
||
Archived clip of President Trump: As of today, it will henceforth be the
|
||
official policy of the United States government that there are only two
|
||
genders: male and female.
|
||
|
||
Starting the day of that speech, Trump began an all-out effort to roll back
|
||
trans rights, using every power the federal government had and some that it may
|
||
not have.
|
||
|
||
Archived clip: President Trump has signed an executive order which declares
|
||
the U.S. government will no longer recognize the concept of gender
|
||
identity.
|
||
|
||
Archived clip: President Trump directing the secretary of education to
|
||
create a plan to cut funding for schools that teach what he calls gender
|
||
ideology.
|
||
|
||
Archived clip: This afternoon, Trump makes a move to ban transgender
|
||
athletes from competing in women’s sports.
|
||
|
||
Archived clip: Ban on gender-affirming care for transgender kids.
|
||
|
||
Archived clip: Ban on gender-affirming care for transgender inmates in
|
||
federal prisons.
|
||
|
||
Archived clip: Ban on transgender troops serving in the military.
|
||
|
||
Archived clip: These executive orders, many of them have not actually gone
|
||
into effect yet, but when I look across the country, we’re already hearing
|
||
stories of impact.
|
||
|
||
Archived clip: In a time when we are struggling to find people to volunteer
|
||
to do this, we are begging to be allowed to continue our service, and
|
||
you’re just going to wash us away. So today I’m not OK.
|
||
|
||
Archived clip: It’s a complete dehumanization of transgender people. Years
|
||
and years and years into who I am, and I’m supposed to out myself? It’s
|
||
about privacy and dignity for me to be able to change my passport to male.
|
||
|
||
A lot of the things Trump is doing in this term have put him on the wrong side
|
||
of public opinion — but not this.
|
||
|
||
In a recent poll where Trump’s approval rating was around 40 percent, 52
|
||
percent of Americans approved of how he’s handling trans issues. Another poll
|
||
showed that was more than approved of Trump’s handling of immigration. Far more
|
||
than approved of his handling of tariffs. And if you look more deeply into
|
||
polling on trans rights, the public has swung right on virtually every policy
|
||
you can poll.
|
||
|
||
Trump didn’t just win the election. He and the movement and ideology behind him
|
||
have been winning the argument.
|
||
|
||
Sarah McBride is a freshman congresswoman from Delaware, where she was formerly
|
||
a state senator. She’s the first openly trans member of Congress, and her view
|
||
is that the trans rights movement and the left more broadly have to grapple
|
||
with why their strategy failed — how they lost not only power but hearts and
|
||
minds, and what needs to be done differently to protect trans people and begin
|
||
winning back the public starting right now.
|
||
|
||
I was struck, talking to McBride, by how much she was offering a theory that
|
||
goes far beyond trans rights. What she’s offering is a counter to the dominant
|
||
political style that emerged as algorithmic social media collided with politics
|
||
— a style that is more about policing and pushing those who agree with you than
|
||
it is about persuading those who don’t.
|
||
|
||
We are having trouble retrieving the article content.
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