LGBTQ Advocates Slam Outrageous Proposal from North Carolina Republican Leaders

LGBTQ Advocates Slam Outrageous Proposal from North Carolina Republican Leaders

Equality North Carolina and the Human Rights Campaign strongly condemned a Republican-led proposal that would double down on some of the most discriminatory provisions of North Carolina’s HB2 and add a “super RFRA” to the discriminatory law. Rather than focusing on repealing HB2, Republicans Phil Berger and Tim Moore attempted tonight to mislead the people of North Carolina, continuing their quest to shift the political blame they alone bear for the discriminatory legislation they hastily passed. With Thursday’s impending NCAA deadline, Moore and Berger are engaging in bizarre political theater instead of repealing HB2.

The radical new proposal being pushed by Berger and Moore attempts to double down on discrimination by continuing to prevent local municipalities from passing meaningful non-discrimination protections ensuring that transgender people have appropriate access to restrooms, and allowing discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity to continue. Their egregious proposal would also provide a broad license to discriminate against LGBTQ people that is even more extreme than the Indiana law that sparked a national outcry and an economic backlash.

“This is not a repeal proposal, and it’s not going to do anything to address the discrimination contained in HB2 or bring the NCAA and business back to our fine state. This is the most blatantly transparent attempt they’ve made yet to shift the blame to anyone other than themselves,” said Chris Sgro, Executive Director of Equality NC. “Tonight’s political stunt by Phil Berger and Tim Moore is yet another unfortunate example that North Carolina voters deserve more from their leaders.”

“Phil Berger and Tim Moore are fighting fire with gasoline. This proposal masquerading as a solution is really an extreme license to discriminate — the last thing that North Carolina needs,” said Cathryn Oakley, HRC Senior Legislative Counsel. “They are literally proposing to pile a ‘super RFRA’ on top of some of the most egregious parts of HB2. It’s outrageous, poorly conceived, and a divisive distraction from the matter at hand – that Republican leadership is refusing to allow the full and unequivocal repeal of HB2.”

So-called Religious Refusal Restoration Acts (RFRAs) are generally known as “License to Discriminate” bills, and this particular proposal would be especially egregious. It is more extreme than the law that brought Mike Pence down in Indiana, it is more extreme than the bill vetoed in Arizona, and it is more extreme than the federal RFRA which has been invoked in one legal challenge after another in recent years – largely in relation to the rights of women and LGBTQ people.

The last thing that North Carolina needs is additional reputational damage because of one more divisive, costly, outrageous law. The voters of Indiana overwhelmingly felt that the state was on the wrong track after its RFRA debacle in 2015 – and that law was amended after just a week of national outcry. After a year of devastating financial losses for North Carolina, the last thing the state needs is another embarrassment on the national stage.

www.hrc.org/blog/lgbtq-advocates-slam-outrageous-proposal-from-north-carolina-republican-lea?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

Trump Administration is erasing the LGBTQ community from the USA

Trump Administration is erasing the LGBTQ community from the USA

Sarah Kate Ellis, President and CEO of GLAAD, released the following statement after reports showed that the Trump Administration canceled plans to add the LGBTQ community to its upcoming 2020 U.S. Census, a survey conducted every decade by the federal government to help collect data about living Americans and the United States of America.

“By erasing LGBTQ Americans from the 2020 U.S. Census, the Trump Administration is adding a disgusting entry to a long list of tactics they’ve adopted to legally deny services and legitimacy to hard-working LGBTQ Americans. The Trump Administration is trying hard to erase the LGBTQ community from the fabric of America, but visibility has always been one of the LGBTQ community’s greatest strengths.”

BACKGROUND INFORMATION: Timeline – The Trump Administration’s Attempt to Erase LGBT Americans from the United States

3.28.17: The Trump Administration cancels plans to add the LGBTQ community to its upcoming 2020 U.S. Census, a survey conducted every decade by the federal government to help collect data about living Americans and the United States of America.

3.28.17: Under his proposed budget for the U.S. Congress, The Trump Administration offered to cut HIV and AIDS research funding under the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

3.24.17: President Trump appointed anti-LGBTQ activist and former Heritage Foundation employee Roger Severino to lead the Health and Human Services Civil Rights Office, putting the LGBTQ community at risk of losing access to critical and affordable health care. 

3.20.17: Trump Administration erases the LGBTQ community from The National Survey of Older Americans Act Participants and the Annual Program Performance Report for Centers for Independent Living, key surveys that are used to help provide care to American seniors – including disability, transportation, and caregiver support needs.

2.22.17 – With help of Attorney General Sessions, President Trump rescinded Title IX protections for transgender students in our nation’s schools. 

2.02.17: ABC News reports that after previously committing to protecting LGBTQ Americans from discrimination, President Trump and his administration had drafted a “License to Discriminate” executive order, which would usher in across-the-board discrimination against the LGBTQ community. 

1.27.17: President Donald Trump issued an executive order to indefinitely ban Syrian refugees from entering the United States. This ban includes LGBTQ refugees fleeing the nation in fear of discrimination. 

1.20.17: Minutes after Donald Trump was sworn into office, any mention of the LGBTQ community were erased from White House, Department of State, and Department of Labor websites. 

###

 

 

March 28, 2017
Issues: 
Tags: 

www.glaad.org/blog/trump-administration-erasing-lgbtq-community-usa

The NCAA Just Gave North Carolina a 48-Hour Deadline to ‘Resolve’ HB2 or They’re Out Until 2022

The NCAA Just Gave North Carolina a 48-Hour Deadline to ‘Resolve’ HB2 or They’re Out Until 2022

ncaa_nc

After repeated warnings, including one last week, the NCAA has reportedly given North Carolina 48 hours to “resolve” the anti-LGBT HB2 law or it will pull all its sports events from now through 2022.

WNCN reports:

Scott Dupree, executive director of the Greater Raleigh Sports Alliance, said in a statement that he has been informed by NCAA officials that they have set a 48-hour deadline for the state to change HB2.

I have confirmed with a contact very close to the NCAA that its deadline for HB2 is 48 hours from now. If HB2 has not been resolved by that time, the NCAA will have no choice but to move forward without the North Carolina bids. The NCAA has already delayed the bid review process once and has waited as long as it possibly can, and now it must finalize all championship site selections through spring of 2022.”

RELATED: The Anti-LGBT HB2 Law Will Cost North Carolina a Staggering $3.76 Billion: AP Analysis

The economic impact to the state would be at least $250 million. The legislature has no current plans to move on HB2 any time soon.

A recent AP analysis of the economic impact of HB2 on the state estimated it at $3.76 billion.

Watch a report from WNCN:

The post The NCAA Just Gave North Carolina a 48-Hour Deadline to ‘Resolve’ HB2 or They’re Out Until 2022 appeared first on Towleroad.


The NCAA Just Gave North Carolina a 48-Hour Deadline to ‘Resolve’ HB2 or They’re Out Until 2022

Rep. Eric Swalwell: Devin Nunes’s Behavior Looks Like a ‘Cover-Up to a Crime’ — WATCH

Rep. Eric Swalwell: Devin Nunes’s Behavior Looks Like a ‘Cover-Up to a Crime’ — WATCH

Eric Swalwell MSNBC

Rep. Eric Swalwell of California’s 15th Congressional District, a Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, continued to call for its chairman Republican Devin Nunes, also of California, to step down from leading an investigation into ties between the Trump campaign and Russia, describing his behavior as “what a cover-up to a crime looks like.”

On the MSNBC program Morning Joe, Swalwell said that the work of the committee leading into last week had now been compromised. Nunes, a member of the Trump transitional team, had by his own admission visited the White House prior to his confused press conference on Friday that he had seen evidence that members of the Trump team had been under surveillance. The ranking Democrat on the Committee, Rep. Adam Schiff (D-PA), has also asked for Nunes to recuse himself given his sharing of information with the White House while it is under investigation. It also has emerged today that Nunes canceled a scheduled hearing with former acting attorney general Sally Yates to avoid her disclosure of information related to the Russia probe.

Swalwell pointed out that a meeting at the Capitol and with more members of the committee of both parties would have been more proper, with its own facilities for reviewing classified information, and that visiting the White House is not undertaken lightly even by members of Congress: “This was done because the White House wanted it to be done, and this is what the cover-up to a crime looks like. We are watching it play out right now.”

The Hill adds:

Swalwell also raised questions as to why Nunes hasn’t wanted to share his source behind surveillance claims.

“A lot of [lawmakers] have said that we don’t need an independent commission because we’re doing the work in the House committee, on the Intelligence Committee, and so that’s always been the out for not having an independent commission,” Swalwell said. “So I’ve heard frustration that they don’t have that out anymore. So where do we go now?”

The post Rep. Eric Swalwell: Devin Nunes’s Behavior Looks Like a ‘Cover-Up to a Crime’ — WATCH appeared first on Towleroad.


Rep. Eric Swalwell: Devin Nunes’s Behavior Looks Like a ‘Cover-Up to a Crime’ — WATCH

GLAAD announces inaugural Rising Stars Grant Recipients

GLAAD announces inaugural Rising Stars Grant Recipients

 

GLAAD is pleased to announce the recipients of its 2017 inaugural Rising Stars Grants.

The GLAAD Rising Stars program, presented by Delta Airlines, Coca Cola Company, and Barilla Group, empowers and invests in the next generation of LGBTQ change makers, whose advocacy is changing their local communities and the culture at large. Grants are awarded annually to LGBTQ youth and support initiatives that champion intersectional LGBTQ issues, including racial justice, immigration rights, trans equality, and more.

All recipients will be recognized at the Rising Stars Luncheons taking place at the Beverly Hilton in Los Angeles on March 31, 2017 and the Hilton in New York City on May 5, 2017.

The Rising Stars Luncheon will be hosted by Hannah Hart with presenters Troye Sivan, Victoria Justice, Alexandra Grey, and Gigi Gorgeous, and featuring special appearances by Harmony Santana, Isabella Gomez, Angelica Ross, Zoey Luna, Elliot Fletcher, Cetine Dale, Jacob Tobia, Trevor Moran and Bobby Brooks, all of whom are notable for their contributions to LGBTQ visibility and fair representation in the media.

Recipients of GLAAD Rising Stars Grants will also attend the 28th Annual GLAAD Media Awards in New York City and Los Angeles, which honor media for fair and accurate representations of LGBTQ people and the issues that impact their lives.

Congratulations to the recipients!

2017 Rising Stars grant recipients

 

Aisha Bibbs

Aisha Bibbs is a senior majoring in Communications at the University of Louisville in Louisville, Kentucky. She currently serves as the marketing director for U of L’s LGBT Center, an organization dedicated to meeting the needs of LGBTQ identified students in the city. She plans to continue her studies in an MBA program this upcoming fall. As a Rising Stars Grant recipient, she will work to create mass media content, including the design of branding, training, and student resource materials, for both the university and the city of Louisville to further promote equality and inclusivity.

 

Lizeth Urdiales

Lizeth Urdiales is a senior majoring in Mexican American Studies with a certificate in Social Entrepreneurship and Nonprofits at the University of Texas in Austin, Texas. Lizeth is a Queer, Undocumented, Latinx, differently-abled student, and her work at UT Austin has predominantly surrounded assistance for Undocumented communities. Upon graduation, Lizeth will pursue an MBA in Entrepreneurship, and will use her role as a Rising Stars Grant recipient to empower Undocumented communities in the workplace by by creating awareness for workers’ rights abuses, and by building stronger relationships between Undocumented and U.S. Resident and Citizen allies regardless of gender identity, sexual orientation, class, nationality, ability, and citizenship status.

 

C Mandler

C Mandler is a junior double majoring in Philosophy and Written Arts at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York. They run a campus DIY music venue called the Root Cellar, sing in their school’s sole a cappella group, and work as an Event Coordinator at the Difference and Media Project. They recently presented at Princeton University’s Compass Philosophy Workshop, which was specifically held for women, non-binary, and trans people in Philosophy, and are in the process of self-publishing their third book of poetry. C will use their role as a Rising Stars Grant recipient to continue to bring queer and trans musicians of color to Bard to perform, lecture, and workshop with students and faculty on campus and beyond.

 

Kylan Kester

Kylan Kester is a junior majoring in Business Marketing with a minor in International Affairs at Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia. On campus, Kylan serves as a fierce advocate for innovation and inclusion, and serves as an editor at large with LinkedIn’s Student Voices platform and The Huffington Post. Kylan prides themself as a global citizen who has been recognized for intersectional leadership and outstanding achievement by the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, Apple, Proctor & Gamble, the Human Rights Campaign, and the National Black College Hall of Fame. As a Rising Stars Grant recipient, Kylan will build a holistic multimedia platform that speaks to the mission of diversifying the LGBTQ narrative by covering underrepresented stories on politics, entrepreneurship, world-travel, and technology.

 

Monique Swirsky

Monique Swirsky is a junior majoring in Environmental Studies with a focus on sustainable food production, and minors in entrepreneurship, leadership studies, and philosophy at Elon University in Elon, North Carolina. In her community, Monique is a member of the NAACP, and is currently doing research on how to create more empowering college campuses for LGBTQ+ students in NC in the wake of House Bill 2. As a Rising Stars grant recipient she will establish an online and print news source focused specifically on highlighting stories of marginalized communities, such as LGBTQ people, people of color, and religious minorities, and emphasizing what allies of these communities can do to get involved and help combat active hate groups in Elon.

 

Joon Park

Joon Park is a junior majoring in Economics at Boston College in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Intersectionality is Joon’s favorite word: they believe that the intersections of being a first generation college student from an immigrant family and their gender non-binary, queer, Asian, and Korean-American identities have played a pivotal role in shaping their lived experiences. Much of their activism focuses on fostering intersectional spaces, specifically for Queer/Trans People of Color. As a Rising Stars Grant recipient, Joon plans on strengthening the relationship between the queer alumni network and the current undergraduate LGBTQ+ student body at Boston College, and creating a robust, united front that can help facilitate the ongoing creation of intersectional and LGBTQ-inclusive spaces at their university.

March 28, 2017
Issues: 

www.glaad.org/blog/glaad-announces-inaugural-rising-stars-grant-recipients