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Veronica Ivy and Evelyn Rios Stafford in front of a blue and pink background

Molly Butler / Media Matters

On CNN and MSNBC, trans advocates debunk right-wing misinformation fueling record number of anti-trans bills in the U.S.

ACLU’s Chase Strangio: “This is a truly dangerous and devastating assault. … We need to have a national outcry over what we're seeing.”

Special Programs LGBTQ

Written by Alex Paterson

Published 04/13/21 12:39 PM EDT

Over the weekend, transgender advocates and elected officials appeared on MSNBC and CNN to debunk the right-wing misinformation fueling the rash of anti-trans bills that have been introduced in legislatures across the country. Media outlets often leave out trans guests when discussing issues that target their community.

According to a March 13 Human Rights Campaign report, state legislators have already introduced over 80 bills targeting trans people so far in 2021, the highest number of anti-trans bills in history -- and the count has only grown since then. The American Civil Liberties Union's Chase Strangio has found that at least 33 state legislatures have introduced anti-trans bills this year. So far, such legislation has been adopted in Arkansas, Mississippi, and Tennessee, and South Dakota Republican Gov. Kristi Noem has signed an anti-trans executive order. 

These bills have been fueled by years of attacks from right-wing media and anti-LGBTQ groups, which demonize and spread misinformation about trans people. In particular, Fox News has aired a relentless anti-trans crusade to its millions of viewers. A Media Matters study found that the network aired 86 segments about trans issues from January 20 through March 18. Most of those segments fearmongered about trans athletes or lied about best practice health care for trans youth -- the two most popular targets of anti-trans legislation right now. 

CNN and MSNBC’s segments featuring trans guests are exceptions to the trend among major media outlets of failing to include any trans people in reporting on issues facing the community. A Media Matters study of the period from March 30 to April 8 found that most broadcast and cable TV news networks -- including CNN -- failed to interview any trans people in their coverage of Arkansas’ ban on best practice medical care for trans youth. MSNBC aired two segments that featured a trans person.

Evelyn Rios Stafford on Republican lawmakers’ dangerous efforts to get between patients and their health care providers

On April 11, Washington County, Arkansas, Justice of the Peace Evelyn Rios Stafford explained on MSNBC that “trans people and the voices of trans people and their families were really sidelined” by the state’s Republican lawmakers, “while they allowed, you know, hate groups plenty of time to spread misinformation.” 

Rios Stafford, who is the first trans person ever elected to office in Arkansas, met with Gov. Asa Hutchinson on March 30 and urged him to veto the state’s ban on best practice health care for trans youth. Hutchinson vetoed the bill on April 5 but was overridden by the state legislature the following day. He did, however, sign two other anti-trans bills into law this session. 

During the Velshi segment, Rios Stafford noted that the state’s slate of anti-trans bills targeting trans youth are part of a “well-funded campaign by hate groups … doing it on the basis of junk science and fearmongering.” Media outlets have reported that extreme anti-LGBTQ groups, including Alliance Defending Freedom and the Heritage Foundation, have provided lawmakers across the country with draft legislation, and the Family Research Council advocated for and testified in favor of Arkansas’ ban.

Rios Stafford said, “Republicans were supposed to be the party of small government, and here we've got nine bills in all in our state that are ... reaching in between families and their doctors, they're reaching in between teachers and their students,” adding, “They're reaching into every aspect of life, and collectively they're just trying to make life impossible for trans people in this state, especially trans youth."

Video file

Citation

From the April 11, 2021, edition of MSNBC's Velshi

EVELYN RIOS STAFFORD (JUSTICE OF THE PEACE): In the committee meetings and things like that leading up to the bill, trans people and the voices of trans people and their families were really sidelined in the whole thing. While they allowed, you know, hate groups plenty of time to spread misinformation and things like that. Unfortunately, this whole thing has been a well-funded campaign by hate groups. The same ones who lost the battle over marriage equality are now pushing these cookie cutter bills in multiple states, and they’re doing it on the basis of junk science and fearmongering and things like that, and talking about, you know, surgeries on young children which never happen and never would happen.

...

ALI VELSHI (HOST): Now, I’m sure you’ll take that as the win, but is that the reason why we should fight back on these anti-trans things, that the government just shouldn’t be involved in stuff, or are you happy with that justification?

RIOS STAFFORD: Well, there was a moment in my meeting with the governor, you know, where we were talking about some of the other bills that he already signed. He asked my opinion about them. I was like, “Well, you already signed them.” But there was a moment where I said to the governor, I was like, “I thought Republicans were supposed to be the party of small government, and here we've got nine bills in all in our state that are doing everything from -- they’re reaching in between families and their doctors. They're reaching in between teachers and their students because there's a bill to allow teachers to misgender students. They're reaching in between coaches and their teams. They're reaching into bathrooms. You know, they're reaching into every aspect of life, and collectively they're just trying to make life impossible for trans people in this state, especially trans youth.” So, I mean in a state like Arkansas, I almost feel like the best thing that could happen right now is for legislators to just leave us alone in a way.

Veronica Ivy debunks the misinformation behind the right-wing campaign to villainize trans athletes 

Professor Veronica Ivy joined CNN’s Smerconish to contextualize and debunk right-wing misinformation targeting trans athletes. Ivy, who is a two-time masters track cycling world champion, explained that efforts to ban trans athletes from competing in sports that align with their gender identity is “a culture war by the Republicans” and “a proxy war for having lost the bathroom bill fight.”

During the April 10 segment, Ivy explained that trans athletes do not pose a threat to women's sports, noting that though the International Olympic Committee has had trans-inclusive policies since 2003, “We’ve had over 54,000 Olympians, and zero trans athletes ever even qualified.” 

Ivy also rebuked the idea that trans athletes should have to compete in a separate category of their own. She explained, “If we want to suggest a nonstarter, separate-but-equal category of trans-only, then I would literally be competing against myself at the world elite level.”

Video file

Citation

From the April 10, 2021, edition of CNN's Smerconish

VERONICA IVY (ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR, COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON): Fairness and inclusion are not in opposition to each other. Inclusion is fairness. So I like to talk about, for example, the International Olympic Committee has an Olympic Charter. It has seven fundamental principles of Olympism. The fourth principle begins that participation in sport is a human right. And they mean competitive sport. 

So inclusion and nondiscrimination is part of the Olympic spirit of mutual understanding and fair play. It means -- and since 2003, the IOC has had trans-inclusion policies. So since that 2003 policy, 2004 Olympics through 2018 Sochi, we’ve had over 54,000 Olympians and zero trans athletes ever even qualified. There hasn't been a single elite athlete that is trans who has won a world championship. Mine is in age group, for example. So we are seeing zero evidence of advantage for trans girls and trans women.

... 

IVY: So, take me, for example. I am literally the only trans woman track sprinter in the world at my level. So if we want to suggest a nonstarter, separate-but-equal category of trans-only, then I would literally be competing against myself at the world elite level. Like, it's a nonstarter argument. 

Why are we seeing this? Frankly, it's a culture war by the Republicans. I think they don't actually care about sport. Largely, this is a proxy war for having lost the bathroom bill fight. Remember the backlash over North Carolina's H.B. 2, for example? So they lost the bathroom bills, they lost the ability to exclude us from bathrooms and certain public facilities. They have now turned their attention to sport. 

Chase Strangio and Del. Danica Roem explain that anti-trans bills are a dangerous assault on the wellbeing of trans youth 

Virginia state Del. Danica Roem and ACLU attorney Chase Strangio, explained on MSNBC’s American Voices with Alicia Menendez how anti-trans bills harm trans youth, a group that already faces disproportionate rates of depression and victimization.

Roem, the first openly trans person to be elected and seated in a U.S. state legislature, said that banning health care for trans youth “is actually going to backfire to a point where you're going to increase suicidal among trans youth in the first place because you're trying to take away this little sliver of hope that they have.” Notably, after Arkansas’ ban on health care for trans youth passed the House, a pediatric doctor in the state reported that there were “multiple kids in our emergency room because of an attempted suicide.”

During the April 11 segment, Strangio noted that the bills are “absolutely a coordinated attack,” including “model bills that were drafted by groups that have spent decades attacking LGBTQ people and have shifted their focus to targeting trans kids.” He added, “What we're seeing now is the most extreme, sweeping, and dangerous assault on trans lives that we've seen in the past several decades,” concluding, “We need to have a national outcry over what we're seeing.”

Video file

Citation

From the April 11, 2021, edition of MSNBC's American Voices with Alicia Menendez

DEL. DANICA ROEM (D-VA): So the thing is legislation like this will not save lives. Legislation like this is actually going to backfire to a point where you're going to increase suicidal ideation among trans youth in the first place because you're trying to take away this little sliver of hope that they have. But if you look at what they're doing in Arkansas, if you look at what's going on nationwide and compare it to what's happening in Virginia, we had these fights in Virginia already. We've been through it. We're on the other side of it now. 

Virginia is now, and I’m proud to say this as a member of the Virginia House of Delegates, one of the nationwide leaders in LGBTQ equality, as we have passed about two dozen pro-LGBTQ bills in the last two years since our Democratic majority took over in 2020. And in doing so, we actually passed one bill to affirm trans kids in schools, to make sure that they're actually welcomed, celebrated, and protected because of who they are, not despite it. And my viewpoint: Constituent service is not just optional for legislators. It is required. And equality is constituent service.

…

ALICIA MENENDEZ (HOST): When you look at all of these pieces of legislation, they have very similar language. Do you get the sense that this is a coordinated attack, and where is that attack coming from?

CHASE STRANGIO (ACLU): Yeah. It is absolutely a coordinated attack. We know that these are model bills that were drafted by groups that have spent decades attacking LGBTQ people and have shifted their focus to targeting trans kids over the last five years. But what we're seeing right now is the most extreme, sweeping, and dangerous assault on trans lives that we've seen in the past several decades, and we are being inundated. Kids are being targeted. 

In Arkansas, they already took away health care for trans youth. They have five more bills pending to make it a felony to provide care for trans youth, to ban trans kids from sports again, to encourage teachers to misgender trans kids, to bar all trans people from restrooms in schools and in government buildings. This is a truly dangerous and devastating assault, and it’s not stopping with trans kids. It’s not stopping with sports. It’s moving on to health care. We have seen escalated bills in Texas and North Carolina that are having hearings in the coming weeks. We need to have a national outcry over what we're seeing.

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